Coles v. Osback

92 A.2d 35, 22 N.J. Super. 358
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 23, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 92 A.2d 35 (Coles v. Osback) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coles v. Osback, 92 A.2d 35, 22 N.J. Super. 358 (N.J. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

22 N.J. Super. 358 (1952)
92 A.2d 35

MARY COLES, ADMINISTRATRIX AD PROS. OF WILLIAM J. COLES, PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT,
v.
OSCAR OSBACK, MINNIE L. OSBACK AND EDWIN ERIC OSBACK, DEFENDANTS-RESPONDENTS.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued September 30, 1952.
Decided October 23, 1952.

*359 Before Judges JAYNE, PROCTOR and SCHETTINO.

Mr. John Warren argued the cause for plaintiff-appellant (Mr. Thomas F. Carlin, attorney).

Mr. Walter H. Jones argued the cause for defendants-respondents.

*360 The opinion of the court was delivered by PROCTOR, J.S.C. (temporarily assigned).

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment entered in the Chancery Division in favor of the defendants in an action to set aside an alleged fraudulent conveyance.

On December 18, 1947, William J. Coles was injured in a collision with a motor vehicle operated by the defendant Oscar W. Osback (hereinafter referred to as Oscar). Coles instituted a tort action but died before it was completed, and his wife was substituted as administratrix ad prosequendum. On January 12, 1948 the summons and complaint in the above action were served on Oscar. He and his wife Minnie L. Osback (hereinafter referred to as Minnie) held title to a house and lot at No. 441 Post Avenue, Lyndhurst, which had been conveyed to them by their son Theodore by a bargain and sale deed, dated April 16, 1945. By warranty deed, dated February 16, 1948, Oscar and Minnie conveyed the aforesaid property to their other son, Edwin Eric Osback (hereinafter referred to as Edwin). On December 28, 1949, judgment in the sum of $10,675 was recovered against Oscar.

The judgment in the tort action being unpaid, the plaintiff filed a complaint against Oscar, Minnie and Edwin, seeking to have the last mentioned conveyance set aside as fraudulent and the judgment in the tort action declared a lien upon the premises. Minnie died prior to the trial.

Defendants in their answer admitted the transfer but denied it was fraudulent. They further contended that the property had been purchased in 1940 by Theodore, whose conveyance to Oscar and Minnie in 1945 was to constitute them as trustees for Theodore; that in 1948 Theodore sold the premises to his brother Edwin, and that the conveyance from Oscar and Minnie to Edwin was pursuant to instructions from Theodore to carry such sale into effect.

The trial resulted in a judgment in favor of the defendants, Coles v. Osback, 13 N.J. Super. 367 (Ch. Div. 1951), from which plaintiff now appeals.

*361 The question for our determination is: Who was the real owner of the property at the time of the accrual of the tort action? This requires an examination of the facts and circumstances in relation to the successive conveyances of the property.

In the summer of 1940 the defendant Oscar and his wife Minnie conducted negotiations for the purchase of a home (the premises in question) from the Lyndhurst Building and Loan Association. The negotiations resulted in a sale of the property for $3,000, $300 to be paid in cash and the balance of $2,700 to be covered by a purchase money mortgage. The grantee in the deed was Theodore Osback, a son of Minnie and Oscar. At that time, Theodore was not quite 20 years of age, single and living with his parents. He took no part in the negotiations for the purchase of the property, other than allegedly making the down payment of $300 and signing the bond and mortgage, which likewise were executed by Oscar and Minnie. In relation to the sale Theodore testified:

"At the time I bought the property, I was twenty. My father was about fifty-five. As I understood between my mother and father and myself that his age was against him for getting a loan from the bank, or whatever the reason was, the bank wouldn't make the loan to him, but they would make the loan to me, and I paid the $300 which was the initial payment."

It also appears that at that time there was an unsatisfied judgment against Oscar, docketed in the former Supreme Court.

After the purchase Oscar and his family, including Theodore, moved into the premises. Theodore testified that Oscar made all the payments on the mortgage and also paid the taxes, water rents and insurance premiums. Theodore's interest in the property may be gathered from the following excerpts taken from his testimony:

"He (Oscar) made the payments, and from 1940 on, if he wasn't to finish the payments, I would continue, and then the house naturally *362 would be completely mine. I would pay back to him any — the amount of money, in other words, and if he couldn't make the payments, it was due to illness or age, or he was out of work, then I would give him back in the amount of money which he had paid in, during 1940, and that was originally planned with my mother in 1940. That is true."

"* * * — when we had originally bought the house, if my father couldn't keep up the payment, I was to continue, and, naturally, I had the mortgage, I would make the payments. Now, he made the payments."

"Q. Well, did your father pay you rent? A. He made the payments to the house, and if, in the event, that is the arrangement, if in the event that he could not make payments, I would continue to pay the mortgage. At the end of the time when the house was completely paid, evidently he wouldn't still not be able to work because of age, and I would return to him the money that he had paid into the house, and then the house then fully would be mine, and my mother and father would continue to live there."

Theodore married in May 1941 and with his wife continued to live with his parents. In November 1942 he entered the Navy. On April 16, 1945, while home on a furlough, he and his wife conveyed the premises to Oscar and Minnie. Theodore testified that his reason for so doing was that while at sea he "had a very close call" and that:

"* * * I felt that the house was meant for my mother and father to live in. I had insurance, the $10,000 insurance, which my wife would collect if I was killed, and I turned the house over to my father so that he would have a clear wording in any transactions he might want to do with the house, in the event that I was killed. In other words, my wife would not have anything — she would get the insurance, and my father and mother would have the house. That was the intentions of turning the house over to my parents."

He further testified that upon his safe return the house was to be reconveyed to him.

Theodore was discharged from the Navy in November 1945 and returned to live in the house with his wife and his parents. In June 1947 he moved to a two family house which he had purchased. At this time he and his wife had one child and were expecting another. The title to the Post Avenue house remained in the names of Oscar and Minnie until February 16, 1948, on which date they conveyed the *363 premises by warranty deed to their other son Edwin, who lived with them. Edwin was single and had been discharged from military service in May, 1946. The reason given by Theodore for the conveyance of the Post Avenue property from Minnie and Oscar to Edwin was:

"* * * I had an exemption on my own house, you don't get two exemptions, * * * my mother wanted it in the boy's name, * * *."

"I already had a house in June, I had bought a house, I had an exemption for one. Therefore, we planned this, to turn it to my brother's name, and that house — he is a veteran; he could also claim an exemption on that house — * * *."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 A.2d 35, 22 N.J. Super. 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coles-v-osback-njsuperctappdiv-1952.