Buzby v. Rose

169 A. 293, 114 N.J. Eq. 580, 1933 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 21
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedDecember 8, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 169 A. 293 (Buzby v. Rose) 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
Buzby v. Rose, 169 A. 293, 114 N.J. Eq. 580, 1933 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 21 (N.J. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

This matter comes to me on an order of reference after exceptions to a master's report, which report was based on testimony taken ex parte.

Complainant filed a bill to foreclose and, no defense to the mortgage having been urged by any answering defendants, the matter was referred to a special master.

The facts are briefly these:

The bill to foreclose covered a lot in Ventnor City, New Jersey, having a frontage of thirty-eight feet and of that width to the high water line of Inside Thoroughfare, a navigable stream in which the tide ebbed and flowed. The mortgage was dated December 2d 1926, and was executed by *Page 581 Mulford T. Rose and his wife, Roberta C. Rose, to complainant's husband, now deceased.

Complainant's proof, before the master, established that at the time of the execution of the mortgage the land in front of the mortgaged premises below high water line of Inside Thoroughfare was not filled and that the land in front of the property so mortgaged did not cease to be land under water until long after the making, execution and record of the mortgage. It also appeared before the master that the mortgagor and his wife had entered into an agreement prior to the making of the mortgage, under which the mortgagors consented to the filling in of Inside Thoroughfare by one Pedrick, in order that a plaza might take the place of the thoroughfare or stream, this plaza to extend not only along the rear end frontage of the mortgaged premises, but between Portland and Washington avenues (a considerable distance). In order to accomplish the fill, it was necessary that a grant of the lands covered by water be obtained from the state. This grant Pedrick obtained and it was executed and recorded after the execution and record of complainant's mortgage. Pedrick proceeded to fill in the land covered by the grant, so that the lands theretofore flooded by tidal waters were no longer covered thereby.

Pedrick then conveyed all of the land covered by the riparian grant to Ventnor Gardens, Incorporated, and Ventnor Gardens, Incorporated, conveyed thirty-eight by one hundred feet of said lands covered by the riparian grant, immediately abutting complainant's mortgaged premises, to Roberta C. Rose (wife of Mulford T. Rose), on April 14th, 1927, all in pursuance of the agreement aforesaid; that thereafter, in June of 1929, after record of complainant's mortgage, Roberta C. Rose and Mulford T. Rose conveyed the mortgaged premises, together with the lands covered by the riparian grant aforesaid, to one Bunn.

Complainant's bill was filed December 13th, 1932, so at the time of the filing of the bill and the placing of the lispendens upon record, Bunn was the owner of the mortgaged premises (the upland), as well as the filled land (riparian *Page 582 grant to the extent of thirty-eight by one hundred) which, at the time of the execution of complainant's mortgage (as heretofore said) was a navigable stream in which the tide ebbed and flowed.

The question presented is whether the filled land, which was land under water at the time of the placing of complainant's mortgage, is subject to the lien of complainant's mortgage. The master decided that it was not.

Complainant relies on the case of Boon v. Kent, 42 N.J. Eq. 131, and Point Breeze Ferry and Improvement Co. v. Bragaw,47 N.J. Eq. 298.

Taking up the Boon v. Kent Case first, we find that the description of the land mortgaged, after describing it, concluded:

"With all the land attached and appertaining thereto, known as sand beach and guard, down to low water mark" in the river and creek.

It also appeared that: "the owners of the property had * * * exercised the right of fishing, under a claim of several fishery, along the whole front of the property on both the river and creek, from time immemorial. They also claimed the exclusive right to take sand from the bars."

In the Point Breeze Ferry and Improvement Co. v. BragawCase, the description contained the following language:

"Including all land lying under water in the New York bay in front of the upland embraced within the aforesaid boundaries."

In the first above cited case, the court held that subsequent grants by the riparian commission inured to the benefit of the mortgagee and that such grants could not be set up by way of defense to a bill to foreclose the mortgage and thus exclude the grant from the premises to be sold under the foreclosure.

In the second case, the court held:

"On foreclosure of a mortgage given by a riparian owner covering the shore and including the land lying under water in front of the upland, which was afterwards leased from the state and improved by filling below high water mark, before *Page 583 the sale is ordered, the rights of the mortgagee in the land that was submerged at the time the mortgage was given and has since been reclaimed, should be defined," and that the purchaser of the lease of the land under water, who had reclaimed it by filling, had the higher title and superior right to be first paid the price of such purchase and the value of the improvement before it should be sold to pay and satisfy the amount secured by the mortgage. This ruling was an affirmance of the doctrine of the case of Boon v. Kent, supra, i.e., that the riparian grant inured to the benefit of the mortgagee.

In the case sub judice, the description of the property in the mortgage is:

"Beginning in the Northeast corner of Monmouth Avenue and Rosborough Park; thence (1) Eastwardly, in the Northerly line of Monmouth Avenue, thirty-eight feet; thence (2) Northwardly, parallel with Rosborough Park, one hundred feet more or less to Inside Thoroughfare; thence (3) Westwardly, along line of Inside Thoroughfare," c.

It will be observed that the description as above recited differs from the descriptions in the mortgages discussed in the above cases, in that the high water line of Inside Thoroughfare is the limit of the conveyance, while in the Boon v. KentCase the description was "down to low water mark" and in thePoint Breeze Ferry and Improvement Co. v. Bragaw Case, the description was "including all land lying under water in front of the upland."

It is argued that no matter what the description may have been in the mortgages under consideration in the earlier cases, the parties to those mortgages could not have contemplated a conveyance of the lands between high and low water because title thereto was in the state, and that the descriptions in the mortgages simply followed the then custom in conveyancing along navigable waters, i.e., to low water. It was suggested that the question of ownership of the land between high and low water line was in some confusion. This cannot be, because the courts of New Jersey, in Stevens v. Paterson and Newark Railroad Co.,34 N.J. Law 532, decided in 1870, *Page 584 had finally settled the law with respect thereto by holding that the fee was in the state and, by so doing, had eliminated any confusion that may have theretofore existed by reason of Arnold v. Mundy, 6 N.J. Law 1, or Bell v. Gough, 23 N.J. Law 624

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 A. 293, 114 N.J. Eq. 580, 1933 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buzby-v-rose-njch-1933.