Busick v. Van Ness

44 N.J. Eq. 82
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 44 N.J. Eq. 82 (Busick v. Van Ness) 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
Busick v. Van Ness, 44 N.J. Eq. 82 (N.J. Ct. App. 1888).

Opinion

Van Fleet, V. C.

The complainant charges the defendant with having obtained title to certain real estate, formerly belonging to her, by fraud, and she brings this action to get the title back. The property [83]*83•consists of a house and six lots fronting on Fairmount avenue, in Jersey Oity, worth about $10,000. The house and lots were sold by the sheriff, on the 13th of December, 1883, under a decree regularly entered in this court, condemning them to sale to pay a mortgage given by the complainant thereon, upon which there was due, at the time of the sale, over $3,250. They were also then subject to taxes, assessments and water-rates, amounting in the aggregate to nearly $5,000. The complainant in this suit, immediately after the sheriff’s sale, obtained an order to show cause why the sale should not be set aside, and while that order was pending, and on the 23d of December, 1883, the parties made an agreement whereby Mrs. Busick was given until the 19th of January following within which to pay the debt and costs due to the complainant in the foreclosure suit and it was further agreed that if such payment was made' within the time limited, the sale should be set aside, but if it was not made, that then the order to show cause should be discharged, the sale confirmed and the mortgaged premises conveyed in fulfillment of the sale. The time within which the decree might be paid was first extended from the 19th of January to the 23d, and after-wards from the 23d to the 30th. There was no agreement that, if the order to show cause was discharged, the complainant in ■the foreclosure suit should take title to the mortgaged premises in satisfaction of his decree, but the agreement was, that in that event the sale should be confirmed and the mortgaged premises conveyed in execution of the sale. The purchaser at the sheriff’s sale had bid $1,000 for the mortgaged premises, and his agreement with Mrs. Busick gave him a right, in case she did not pay, to a conveyance of the mortgaged premises for that sum. The complainant in this suit applied to the defendant for assistance on the 17th of January, 1884. On the 30th of the same month —that being the day on which the right of redemption under the agreement expired — the defendant paid the complainant in the foreclosure suit the amount due on his decree, and took an assignment of his bid, and on the same day, Mrs. Busick and her husband conveyed the mortgaged premises to the defendant. On the 27th of May following, the defendant procured the [84]*84sheriff to convey the mortgaged premises to one James King,, and King, on the same day, conveyed them to the defendant.

The complainant says that the arrangement made between the defendant and herself, on the 17th of January, 1884, and under which the defendant acquired title to the mortgaged premises,, was this: He was to pay the amount'of the decree under which the property had been sold and take title; sell the property during the next three years, and out of the proceeds repay himself,, and also pay the taxes and other charges; if a surplus remained, he was to divide it between the complainant and himself, sire, in the meantime, and until the property was sold, to retain possession, with the right to rent, and take the rents. The defendant denies that any such arrangement was made; on the contrary, he says that the moment the complainant proposed that she should retain an interest in the property after the title had been made to him, he told her he would have nothing to do with the property on any such terms; and that she then solicited him to take title to the properey and pay the amount due on the decree, and thus relieve her from liability for deficiency; that this he consented to do, and that the only advantage or benefit which, it was understood, the complainant should receive from his taking title, was that the mortgage debt should be paid, and she be thus relieved from all liability for deficiency.

The agreement under which the complainant claims, being a mere oral arrangement, not manifested by a writing signed by the defendant, is utterly void and of no effect, as the creation of a trust in land, under the statute of frauds. The defendant, by denying by his answer that any such agreement was ever made, has put it out of the power of the court to give effect to the agreement, as the creation of a trust in land, unless the agreement is proved by some writing signed by the defendant, for it is authoritatively settled, that where a complainant claims that the defendant holds land subject to a trust in his favor, under an agreement creating an express trust, and the defendant, by his answer, denies that he ever made such an agreement, his denial entitles the defendant to the benefit of the statute of frauds, without pleading it, and precludes the complainant [85]*85from claiming any benefit under the agreement, as the creation of a trust, unless he can prove the existence of the agreement by'that kind of^evidence which the statute requires. Van Duyne v. Vreeland, 1 Beas. 142; Walker v. Iiill, 7 C. E. Gr. 513; Wakeman v. Dodd, 12 C. E. Gr. 564. But a complainant may always prove a parol agreement of this kind for the purpose of showing fraud, and that is the purpose'for which the complainant has attempted to make proof of the parol agreement set ■up in this case. The jurisdiction which courts of equity exercise in such cases, rests, as was said in Walker v. Hill, supra, on the ground of fraud and oppression on the part of the purchaser, by means of which he has obtained the property of the debtor at an ■inadequate price, under the assurance of a contract to reconvev ■the property to him, or to hold the same subject to future redemption.

The case presents a simple question of fact: Did the defendant obtain title to the complainant’s property at an inadequate price, under a promise that, until the property should be sold, the complainant should retain possession of it, with a right to rent and take the rents, and that, on its sale, the complainant should be ■entitled to the one-half of any surplus of the proceeds of sale which might remain after the liens thereon were paid ? The burden of proof is on the complainant. Unless she has satisfactorily proved the fraud, which she has charged against the defendant, her case fails, and she must be denied relief.

The complainant claims that, at the time the contract in question was made, the defendant stood in a confidential relation to her, he being her legal adviser. The proofs fail to show that this was the fact. The defendant had, in some previous transactions, given her advice and drawn some papers for her, but he had no connection with the foreclosure suit pending against her, nor with the proceeding which she had set on foot to have the sale of the mortgaged premises set aside. Her interests in that matter were in the hands of other counsel, and the proofs show that in that matter, as well as in the particular transaction now under consideration, she acted under the guidance and direction •of such other counsel. Besides, if the complainant’s evidence is [86]*86true, she, at the time the contract is alleged to have been made, knew enough about the defendant, from his own confession, as she swears, to have made it impossible for her to have reposed tlie slightest confidence in either his veracity or his honesty. She says that the defendant, prior to this time, had confessed to her that he had altered her aunt’s will, after her aunt’s death, by erasing the name of the executor nominated therein, and substituting the name of another person.

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.J. Eq. 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/busick-v-van-ness-njch-1888.