Brooks v. Wentz

49 A. 147, 61 N.J. Eq. 474, 16 Dickinson 474, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 50
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 1, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 49 A. 147 (Brooks v. Wentz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. Wentz, 49 A. 147, 61 N.J. Eq. 474, 16 Dickinson 474, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 50 (N.J. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Stevens, Y. 0.

This is a suit for the specific performance of an accepted option to convey land. Performance is resisted on the ground (1) that the land is not described with sufficient definiteness, (2) that the contract was, in whole or in part, abandoned, (3) that if decreed, it can only be on the terms of reviving certain encumbrances which, prior to October 1st, 1890, rested on the land.

As to the first defence, it seems clear that it is not sustained. There is no difficulty in ascertaining exactly what land Lovatt, the owner, agreed to convey. Reasonable certainty in the description is all that is required. Robeson v. Hornbaker, 2 Gr. Ch. 60; Huffman v. Hummer, 3 C. E. Gr. 83; King v. Ruckman, 6 C. E. Gr. 606; S. C., 9 C. E. Gr. 556; Shardlow v. Cotterell, 20 Ch. Div. 90.

The second defence is equally unsustained. The letters of July 18th and 23d, written by Mrs. Brooks, and the notice served upon Mr. Steen on October 1st, only a few days before Dr. Wentz took his deed, show plainly that there was no abandonment of any right which the agreement gave.

The only question about which I have had any doubt is that which relates to the rights of the parties as affected by the situation of the property with respect to encumbrances. The facts pertinent to this part of the case are the following: On August 24th, 1899, John T. Lovatt, being the owner of several [476]*476parcels of real estate at Bed Bank/all of them heavily encumbered, entered into a written agreement with the complainant, Buth L. Brooks, to convey to her a country place near Bed Bank for $11,000. The conveyance was actually made on September 8th, 1899. By the same agreement he gave her the option of purchasing, for the price of $4,000, what was described as “the balance of the hill property, so called,” lying immediately to the north of the property conveyed, and containing about four acres. The survey shows three and sixty-four hundredths acres. The option was “to remain in operation one year,” but written notice that Mrs. Brooks desired to avail herself of it was to be given at least thirty days prior to the expiration of the year. Fotiee, in writing, to that effect was given on July 23d, 1900, and thereupon Lovatt became absolutely bound to convey. Hawralty v. Warren, 3 C. E. Gr. 124. At the time when the agreement was made and up to the latter part of September, 1900, the land was encumbered by four mortgages and two judgments. The mortgages originally amounted to $20,800, and covered other lands as well as the locus in quo, but they had been paid in part. The judgments amounted to $3,475.05. There was, in addition, another mortgage, for $3,642, which did not cover the locus in quo, but did cover part of the other lands.

The option to Mrs. Brooks was given, as I have said, on August 24th, 1899. Before it was accepted, Mr. Lovatt, the owner, by a writing, dated April 20th, 1900, agreed to convey the l$nds covered by this option and an adjoining piece of land, containing about six acres, to Dr. Wentz, for the price of $10,000. Feither Dr. Wentz nor Mr. Lovatt was sworn, and so we do not know positively whether Lovatt then stated to Wentz that he had given this option. The agreement does not mention it. This is, however, immaterial to the present inquiry, because it conclusively appears that Mr. Steen, who acted as attorney for Wentz, very early in the transaction, and before any money was paid to Lovatt or on his account, got actual knowledge of it. With this knowledge, and with knowledge, too, by Mrs. Steen that the complainant had accepted the option, Lovatt gave a deed to Wentz some time between October 1st and October 8th, 1900. The insistment is, of course, that Wentz, [477]*477taking with, notice, is bound to convey the land mentioned in the option, just as Lovatt would have been bound to convey had he remained the owner.

The reason why Lovatt did not convey to Mrs. Brooks was that the option called for “a deed of warranty, with full covenants, conveying the property free and clear of all encumbrances.” Such a title Lovatt thought he was unable to give. The evidence is that the encumbrancers refused to release the four-acre tract on receipt of the price of $4,000, although they were willing to release the ten-acre tract (which included the four-acre tract) on receiving the price of $10,000. Dr. Wentz’s attorney had tried to secure an assignment of the option of Mrs. Brooks and had failed, and the only explanation that suggests itself of his willingness to take title, when he knew that Mrs. Brooks had a superior claim, which she would not surrender, is that he knew that she had refused to take an encumbered title, and that he may have thought that she would not, perhaps, under the circumstances, bé willing to sue for specific performance against the view of her then attorney, Mr. Degnan, who seems to have supposed that her remedy was, under the circumstances, a suit at law for damages. But while Mr. Degnan had, during the summer, expressed this view to Mr. Steen, not as the opinion of Mrs. Brooks, but as his own opinion, he, on October 1st, only five or six days before the conveyance to Dr. Wentz was made, pursuant to the explicit direction of Mrs. Brooks, served a notice on Mr. Steen, which took away all semblance of right on his (Steen’s) part to suppose that Mrs. Brooks’ claim would in any respect be given up. Probably it was thought that Dr. Wentz would not be seriously injured, because he would, in any event, receive the price of the property, and might, in acquiring title, be in a better position to negotiate. He desired to utilize the hill for a stand-pipe, to be erected by a water company in which he was interested, and the risk, he may have, thought, was worth taking.

I-Iis position in the matter is such that I do not think he is entitled to any special consideration at the hands of a court of equity—to anything more than his legal rights.

How, it is perfectly well settled that if an owner agrees to [478]*478sell, and then conveys, in breach of his agreement, to a third party having notice, the grantee stands in no more favorable position than the grantor. This is conceded. But it is said that if the court decrees performance, it should, as against the complainant, regard the encumbrances which rested upon the property just before Lovatt conveyed as still subsisting. The situation was this: On October 6th, or 7th, the attorney of Lovatt and Wentz got together the encumbrancers, or their representatives, obtained from them releases, or, in the case of the bank judgment, a promise of release. Mr. Steen, on behalf of Dr. Wentz, then produced the $10,000, and this was divided among the encumbrancers. All the releases but two were, in terms, made to Lovatt. Two, however—a small judgment for $106 and a mortgage for $1,300, on which $700 was paid, both held by Julia T. Lovatt—were released to Dr. Wentz.

The contention of Dr. Wentz is that, by the agreement of April 20th, 1900, he became the equitable owner of the land, and that when his money was paid it was really paid to protect his interest as such, and that he thereupon became entitled to be subrogated to the rights of the encumbrancers to the extent of his payment. Passing by other objections to this argument, it is plain .that, on the theory that Wentz became the equitable owner of the land by mere force of the agreement, and notwithstanding the prior right of Mrs. Brooks, Lovatt became the equitable owner of the money; and so it was not Wentz's money 'that paid the encumbrancers, but Lovatt's.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 A. 147, 61 N.J. Eq. 474, 16 Dickinson 474, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-wentz-njch-1901.