Childs v. Jones

41 N.J. Eq. 74
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 41 N.J. Eq. 74 (Childs v. Jones) 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
Childs v. Jones, 41 N.J. Eq. 74 (N.J. Ct. App. 1886).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

This suit is brought to obtain for the complainants the benefit of a judgment recovered in the supreme court of this state, December 16th, 1876, by the defendant Samuel Jones against George Hedden, for $6,129.48. The judgment is now held by the defendant Maria L. Jones, wife of Samuel Jones, under an assignment thereof to her, dated November 17th, 1879, made by Dr. Willett, one of the complainants, to whom, on the 12th of August of that year, Jones assigned it. It is alleged by Jones and his wife that it was assigned to Willett (who is Mrs. Jones’s brother) merely in order that he might assign it to her, and the assignment from him to her so states. The claim which the complainants make to it is based upon an alleged agreement between them and Jones, made on or about the 11th of August, 1879, by which they were to advance and pay for his benefit $6,0.00 in obtaining the assignment of a mortgage on land (a small farm) in Morris county, given by Jones to the National Iron Bank of Morristown, and $772.27 on account of a decree of foreclosure obtained in this court by Nathan A. Cooper upon a prior mortgage upon the same property, and were to buy the mortgaged premises at the sheriff’s sale under the foreclosure and take a deed for them in their own names. They allege that it was agreed between them and Jones that, in order to secure the repayment to them of the $6,772.27 and the additional sum which they might be required to pay for the property, it was agreed that they should hold the farm, and that Jones should [76]*76•confess a judgment to them for the $'6,772.27 and assign to them the Hedden judgment as collateral security for the same debt. They paid the $6,772.27 and bought in the property August 18th, 1879, at the sheriff’s sale, for $3008.20, which they paid, and took title in their own names. There was repaid to them for error in the decree the sum of $66.65. The judgment against Jones, in their favor, was confessed on the same day for $6,772.-27, and costs. They allege that the assignment of the Hedden judgment by Jones to them was drawn and signed on the 12th •of August, 1879, and that it was left in the office of the lawyer by whom it was drawn, and who acted in the matter both for the complainants and Jones, and that afterwards, Jones’s son, being in the lawyer’s office, and seeing it lying upon a table there, canceled it without any authority to do so, by tearing off Jones’s signature, and they say that then, probably, the lawyer •destroyed it as being of no value. Subsequently the complainants found that Jones’s wife claimed to be the owner of the judgment. The complainants obtained no money upon the confessed judgment. A part of the property (a little less than an acre) bought at the sheriff’s' sale was, with certain water privileges, taken by condemnation by the proprietors of the Morris aqueduct in or about 1880, for which the complainants received $140, and in 1881 they sold to Charles G. Foster another part of it for $4,520, out of which they paid $113 to the real estate agent who found the purchaser, for his commissions, and there is still a part of the property unsold. They pray an account, and that Mrs. Jones may be held to be trustee of the Hedden judgment for them, and may be required to collect the money due upon it, and out of it pay the money due them. The defendants, Jones and wife, have answered. They deny that it was part of the agreement between Jones and the complainants that he should assign the Hedden judgment to them, and allege that the judgment was bona fide assigned to Mrs. Jones to secure her for money due her from her husband; and they allege that it was part of the agreement between the •complainants and Jones that the complainants should not sell the farm without his consent. They allege also that the complain[77]*77ants sold to Foster, not only without Jones’s consent, but against his wish, and that the property was worth two or three times as-much as the price — $4,520—which the complainants obtained for it and they insist that the complainants should be charged in-the account, not merely with the- amount received, but with the-price which they might and ought to have obtained.

The proof does not sustain the allegations of the bill in regard to the assignment of the Hedden judgment to the complainants. It- is true both of the complainants testify that it was part of the-agreement that that judgment should be assigned to them, and Mr. Werts, the lawyer, says that he thinks he drew an assignment accordingly, but he has no recollection of it apart from a charge upon his fee-book against Jones, under date of August 12th, 1879, for drawing an assignment of a judgment from him. to the complainants.

On the other hand, Jones swears that it was not agreed that he should assign the judgment to the complainants. He says-he told them that he had promised to assign it to his wife .when she signed the mortgage to the bank, but that if she would consent, they could have it by paying off the $6,000 to the bank and paying the balance of the judgment to her, and then holding-the farm for the money to be paid upon the Cooper mortgage the proceeds of the farm, when sold, to go to her after paying the-money due them on account of the Cooper mortgage, but he says-they declined to accept that proposal. He says there was an assignment of the judgment from him to Dr. Willett drawn and executed that day, and that as Dr. Willett was anxious to go-home (he lived in German Valley, and the transaction took place at Morristown), and therefore could not stay to execute-the assignment to Mrs. Jones at that time, it was agreed that Mr. Werts should draw it, and that it should be left in Mr. Werts’s office to be signed, and that he (Jones) should bring Dr. Willett in to execute it at some time when the latter should be in Morristown. He further says that afterwards, on the day of the-date of the assignment to Mrs. Jones (November 17th, 1879), he took Dr. Willett into Mr. Werts’s office (he says Mr. Werts was not in at the time) and got the assignment, and Dr. Willett. [78]*78signed it, and he (Jones) took it, with the assignment from Jones to Willett, and gave them to Mrs. Jones on the same day. Mrs. Jones testifies that in the fall of 1879, her husband handed both assignments to her, and that she had them in her possession from that' time until February or March, 1884, when, at Mr. Werts’s request, she brought both of them to him for use, if he should see fit, in connection with supplementary proceedings upon execution against her husband; and that she left them with Mr. Werts, who never returned to her the assignment from Jones to Willett. She is corroborated by Mr. Werts as to bringing them to him and receiving back again only the assignment from Willett to her. There is some corroboration of Jones’s testimony on the subject of his proposal to assign the judgment to the complainants and their refusal to accept it, in the testimony of Mr. Werts that the parties during the negotiations changed their plans.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.J. Eq. 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/childs-v-jones-njch-1886.