Camden Trust Co. v. Haldeman

33 A.2d 611, 133 N.J. Eq. 427, 1943 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 53, 32 Backes 427
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJune 14, 1943
DocketDocket 139/719
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 33 A.2d 611 (Camden Trust Co. v. Haldeman) 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
Camden Trust Co. v. Haldeman, 33 A.2d 611, 133 N.J. Eq. 427, 1943 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 53, 32 Backes 427 (N.J. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

The bill of complaint seeks instruction with reference to various questions which have arisen in connection with the estate of Jennie Cramer, who died testate on August 3d 1930.

Under the terms of Mrs. Cramer's will legacies in a total sum of $3,600 were created. She charged her real estate with the payment of debts, administration expenses and legacies and devised the fee of certain real estate to her five surviving children as residuary legatees. Her personalty consisted of a bank account of approximately $88 which was, of course, insufficient to pay debts, legacies, c. The real estate consisted of two properties, numbers 5 and 11 Haddon Avenue, Camden, New Jersey, appraised for inheritance tax purposes at $21,000. The will provided that the real estate was "to be held for awhile for best possible price or rather not sold immediately in order to close my estate hurriedly."

After testatrix' death the executors named in her will, a daughter and a son, renounced, and the Camden Safe Deposit and Trust Company, hereinafter called Camden Safe, with the consent of the five children, was appointed administrator cum testamentoannexo. This was accomplished in order that the five children might the better conduct arrangements for the handling of the real estate, as hereinafter recited.

It is apparent that the five children, devisees of the real estate, and Camden Safe, investigated the financial condition of the estate and determined that the amount necessary to pay all debts, legacies, administration expenses and other charges against the estate would be a figure slightly less than $7,500, of which $3,550 represented debts, administration charges, c., and $3,600 represented legacies. With these figures in mind the five children and the Camden Safe met and on September 4th, 1930, certain written instruments were executed to carry into effect an agreement which had been reached between the parties thereto. The children executed a deed vesting title to the Haddon Avenue properties in the Camden Safe. Camden Safe executed to the children a declaration of trust setting forth the trusts under which it took title. The children executed to Camden Safe *Page 429 a promissory note for $7,500 and as collateral security for the payment thereof executed to Camden Safe an assignment of all their interest under the declaration of trust and the property, which was the subject-matter thereof. The children also signed an authorization for Camden Safe to pay to itself as administratorcum testamento annexo the proceeds of the $7,500 loan aforesaid, represented by the promissory note signed by the children, payable "at such time and in such amounts as Camden Safe, administrator cum testamento annexo may request."

We now turn to the declaration of trust and find that the purpose of the loan of $7,500 on the note aforesaid to have been in order that the five children might be supplied with the funds necessary for the payment of "taxes, administration expenses, debts and legacies, without the sale of" the Haddon Avenue real estate.

We start out, then, with Camden Safe, administrator, in position to call upon Camden Safe, a banking corporation, for the funds necessary to clear the title to the real estate from all liens against it for testatrix' debts, legacies or otherwise. In pursuance of the expressed agreement between these children devisees and Camden Safe, a banking corporation, Camden Safe as administrator secured from Camden Safe, a banking corporation, $3,550 and paid out these funds in that amount between September 22d 1930, and June 24th, 1931. This sum paid all debts owed by decedent, taxes on real estate and administration expenses as of these dates. The administrator did not pay the legacies of $3,600 or any part thereof but, on the contrary, at some time either on June 21st, 1931, or thereafter, Camden Safe, a banking corporation, advised the five children that it did not intend to make further advances on the $7,500 note; that the real estate market did not justify further advances. The evidence is that the children did nothing to compel Camden Safe, a banking corporation, to live up to its agreement and make the advancements necessary to pay the legacies. The evidence is that the legatee who has appeared in this suit knew nothing of these transactions. Camden Safe continued to manage the real estate under the trust agreement and still *Page 430 continues so to do. The real estate market continued to slump and the trustee endeavored to sell the real estate, first for $7,500, then $5,000, then $4,500, then $4,000, and finally has procured a purchaser for one property at $3,000 and believes it may sell the other property at private sale for $2,500, and if not, that it may realize $1,500 therefor at public sale.

In March of 1937 Camden Safe, as trustee, borrowed from itself in its corporate capacity $2,078.05 and purchased a certificate of tax sale from the City of Camden, taxes having been in default, the income from the real estate not having been sufficient to pay them, as a result of which the city had a tax lien which it threatened to foreclose.

On the filing of this bill one Robert W. Cramer, a grandson of testatrix and a legatee under her will in the sum of $1,000, filed a counter-claim seeking the recovery of his legacy. However, prior to the filing of the bill, to wit, on April 9th, 1938, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, hereinafter referred to as F.D.I.C., had taken over the $3,550 note by assignment from Camden Safe, together with the collateral aforesaid (trust agreement). On April 23d 1942, F.D.I.C. demanded that the trustee sell the real estate and apply the proceeds to the $3,550 note.

It thus appears that Camden Safe, a banking corporation, has a note for $2,078.05 (taxes) and F.D.I.C. has a note for $3,550, and the question presented on this phase of the case is the priority as to these two notes and whether the counter-claiming legatee is or is not entitled to be paid the amount of his legacy before or after the payment of these notes, or either of them.

The recitals of the trust agreement aforesaid clearly show that Camden Safe and the five children determined that an early sale of the real estate was not for the best interest of the five children, and while the will provided that the executors were not called upon to sell in order to close the estate "hurriedly," the legatees were entitled to be paid their legacies and the Camden Safe and the five children determined to obviate any difficulty on that score by withholding the real estate from sale to suit their convenience and pay out *Page 431 of the proceeds of the $7,500 note all taxes due at the time of decedent's death, as well as debts, expenses, c.

The declaration of trust contained recitals to the effect that the real estate largely represented decedent's entire estate; that title to said premises was vested in the settlors by the terms of decedent's will, subject to the payment of taxes, expenses of administration of decedent's estate, her debts and the legacies provided for therein, and that arrangements had been made by the settlors for the payment of said taxes, administration expenses, debts and legacies, without the sale of said real estate.

From the above it is clear that the Camden Safe and the five children treated the two Haddon Avenue properties as real estate which, upon the payment of these legacies, c., would be free and clear of all liens and encumbrances, with the absolute fee in the five children.

A reading of testatrix' will, in view of the character of the estate left by her, discloses that she must have known that it would be absolutely necessary to sell her real estate in order to carry out the provisions of her will.

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Bluebook (online)
33 A.2d 611, 133 N.J. Eq. 427, 1943 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 53, 32 Backes 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/camden-trust-co-v-haldeman-njch-1943.