Brown v. Rowland

45 A.2d 592, 137 N.J. Eq. 462, 1946 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 95, 36 Backes 462
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJanuary 31, 1946
DocketDocket 148/422
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 45 A.2d 592 (Brown v. Rowland) 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
Brown v. Rowland, 45 A.2d 592, 137 N.J. Eq. 462, 1946 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 95, 36 Backes 462 (N.J. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

The conclusions of fact in this cause when compounded with the pertinent equitable principles lead to a somewhat unique result.

On April 1st, 1926, the complainant and her husband, Robert C. Brown, acquired from Alfred Realty Corporation by purchase as tenants by the entirety, three lots in the Township of Princeton. On September 29th, 1932, they executed a bond conditioned for the payment of $4,800 to the defendant three years thereafter with semi-annual interest, and they concurrently executed a mortgage covering the three lots and the residence thereon to secure the performance of the bond. The mortgage was evidently recorded at 4:05 P.M. on the day of its execution. The complainant's husband, Robert C. Brown, died on July 24th, 1942. In the present bill filed on April 24th, 1945, the complainant declares her ownership of the property and charges that the bond and mortgage were not and have never been supported by any valid consideration and in fact were never delivered to the defendant. Wherefore the complainant prays that the mortgage be nullified. The defendant not only resists the allegations of the bill, but additionally interposes a counter-claim to foreclose the mortgage.

There are some incidental facts that in some degree illuminate the situation. Robert was the brother of Marion Rowland, the designated mortgagee. The relationship between the complainant and her sister-in-law, the defendant, at the time of the execution of the bond and mortgage is described *Page 464 by the complainant as comparative with that "of two peas in a pod." No payment on account of interest or in reduction of the principal of the alleged mortgage debt has ever been made. No endeavor to collect interest or principal was manifested until the institution of this cause. Indeed it is not evident that the bond and mortgage were ever in the actual possession of the defendant.

The complainant with remarkable candor and frankness has testified that for some period immediately prior to 1932 her husband's business had not been remunerative and that he was being besieged by his creditors and in 1932, most vigorously by one in particular. She relates that the property at Princeton was then their residence and that due to the pressure of the economic decline, she and her husband resolved to place on record a second mortgage (the mortgage here implicated) which they contemplated would in effect emancipate that property from the apprehended claims of creditors. The complainant asserts that such was the sole object of the execution and recording of the mortgage, and that there was no other consideration. She now recalls that the scrivener of the instruments (before whom, incidentally, they were not executed) cautioned her and her husband that in such a pursuit they should "be careful whom you trust." Hence, it is said, the defendant was named as the obligee and mortgagee. The supposition was entertained by the complainant that the mortgage having fulfilled its intended purpose had been in some manner eradicated by her husband before his death. The complainant sought to convey one of the lots in 1945 and was then informed that the mortgage remained unsatisfied of record.

In Blaine v. Krysowaty, 135 N.J. Eq. 355; 38 Atl. Rep. 2d 859, I had occasion to state, with citations of the pertinent authorities: "It is a maxim of equity that he who comes into a court of equity must enter with clean hands, and in the ordinary application of that maxim a court of equity denies its remedies to a complainant who has been guilty of bad faith, fraud, or unconscionable acts in the transaction which constitutes the basis of his suit." *Page 465

The familiar quotation in Hildebrand v. Willig, 64 N.J. Eq. 249 (at p. 259); 53 Atl. Rep. 1035, may be aptly repeated: "Courts of equity will not entertain propositions of this character. They say to all persons who desire to make conveyances with intent to defraud either present or possible future creditors: `You make such conveyances at your own risk; you cannot induce the courts to relieve you from the consequences of your fraudulent acts. It is no ground for relief that, although you intend to cheat creditors if occasion should require, the expected occasion did not happen, and your preparation to defraud creditors was therefore unnecessary.'"

In Semenowich v. Melnyk, 93 N.J. Eq. 615;117 Atl. Rep. 832, Mr. Justice Swayze pertinently remarked: "The rights of fraud-doers are not looked at in the light of the wrong they accomplish but of the wrong they plan."

Obviously, to now grant at the prayer of this complainant some affirmative relief to extricate her from her present involvement would plainly transgress the principle of equity jurisprudence to which reference is made, and also thwart the normal considerations of public policy in such cases.

It is also an ancient maxim that "in pari delicto, potior estconditis defendentis." The defendant, however, proceeded to introduce proofs to sustain the counter-claim. In that posture of the cause, the testimony of the complainant is not only relevant to her own cause of action, but is entitled to be accorded its defensive effect upon the counter-claim of the defendant. It is, of course, conceivable that in a covinous and collusive transaction, both the complainant and the defendant may encounter the same obstacles in their overtures for some form of affirmative assistance in a court of equity. Cf. Cartan v.Phelps, 89 N.J. Eq. 599; 105 Atl. Rep. 240.

In contemplating the merit of the counter-claim, it is not adequately evident that the bond and mortgage which the defendant now desires to enforce were ever delivered to her or to anyone on her behalf. The defendant as counter-claimant was unable to produce either of those instruments. *Page 466 The bond is in the possession of the complainant. She discovered it among the papers retained by her husband at the time of his death. The incipient excursions of the mortgage are divulged, but its ultimate tangible destiny is acknowledged to be unknown. An authenticated copy of it as it remains of record is submitted.

The intent of the parties is an essential constituent of delivery. The recording of an instrument in some circumstances might well generate a presumption of delivery, while in other and different circumstances such a presumption does not arise.

The testimony reveals that George Brown was a brother of the mortgagor, Robert, and that he had some financial investment in Robert's failing business. It was to George that the mortgage was delivered immediately following its execution, and pursuant to the instructions of Robert, he hastened to present the mortgage at the office of the county clerk at Trenton with directions that the instrument be recorded and returned to him. Accordingly, the mortgage was duly recorded and returned to George, who thereupon surrendered it to his brother Robert.

In view of those circumstances I prefer to pursue the reasoning adopted by my learned colleague Vice-Chancellor Bigelow inBlachowski v. Blachowski, 135 N.J. Eq. 425; 39 Atl. Rep. 2d 94, and reject the notion that the occurrences as related manifested an intention by the mortgagor to deliver the instrument to the county clerk as the agent of the mortgagee and thus render it immediately effective.

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Bluebook (online)
45 A.2d 592, 137 N.J. Eq. 462, 1946 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 95, 36 Backes 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-rowland-njch-1946.