Congdon v. Jersey Construction Co.

151 A.2d 390, 55 N.J. Super. 571
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMay 18, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 151 A.2d 390 (Congdon v. Jersey Construction Co.) 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
Congdon v. Jersey Construction Co., 151 A.2d 390, 55 N.J. Super. 571 (N.J. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

55 N.J. Super. 571 (1959)
151 A.2d 390

E. LESTER CONGDON, T/A E.L. CONGDON LUMBER CO., PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT,
v.
JERSEY CONSTRUCTION CO., INC., ET ALS., DEFENDANTS-RESPONDENTS.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued March 23, 1959.
Decided May 18, 1959.

*574 Before Judges PRICE, CONFORD and GAULKIN.

Mr. Harry Dvorken argued the cause for plaintiff-appellant.

Mr. Charles Blume argued the cause for defendants-respondents Betty Maurer and Benjamin Yanowsky (Mr. Benjamin Yanowsky, pro se, attorney).

The opinion of the court was delivered by CONFORD, J.A.D.

We have here for review partial summary judgments entered by the Law Division disposing of part of the complex subject matter involved in a complaint, counterclaim and cross-claim. We do not have the benefit of an opinion by the trial court.

Plaintiff is a lumber dealer who sold building materials to the defendant Frank R. McCauley or his corporate affiliates, Jersey Construction Co., Inc. and Jersey Developers, *575 Inc., allegedly used by them in constructing three houses at White Meadow Lake and two at Denville. The defendant Yanowsky, a lawyer, operating in the name of a law associate, the defendant Boris Seeber, advanced mortgage money for these construction enterprises. After commencement of this action Seeber assigned his interest in the mortgages to the defendant Betty Maurer, an employee of Yanowsky, who thus appears to be trustee for the latter. She was substituted for Seeber as a party defendant.

The complaint is in ten counts. By the first three plaintiff seeks general judgments against the McCauley interests for the price of building materials sold them and used in the White Meadows Lake properties, and an adjudication of a mechanic's lien as to such claims superior to the lien of the Maurer mortgages. By the fourth and fifth counts plaintiff seeks to foreclose mortgages totalling $4,100 on the Denville properties and to have the liens adjudicated to be prior to the Maurer mortgages on these properties. Counts six to nine do not concern us here. In the tenth count plaintiff seeks an accounting of certain alleged obligations owing to the McCauley interests by Yanowsky for the purpose of applying such credits toward the alleged indebtednesses of McCauley and his corporations to the plaintiff.

The defendant Maurer by her answer denies plaintiff's claimed lien rights and disputes their priority as against her mortgages, claiming, inter alia, postponement of plaintiff's liens to her mortgages. She counterclaims and cross-claims for the foreclosure of six mortgages, three on separate lots at White Meadow Lake in the face amount of $13,500 each, and three on two lots at Denville, one lot being encumbered by two mortgages in the respective face amounts of $10,500 and $5,000, and the other by a mortgage for $11,500.

The following summary judgments were entered by the trial court:

(a) in favor of Maurer on the counterclaim and cross-claim (hereinafter referred to as the Maurer judgment) *576 adjudicating the amounts and absolute priority of mortgage liens on the several properties, inclusive of principal, interest, other charges, "attorney's fees" and "counsel fees," aggregating $13,786.67, $7,350.26, $6,710.63, $12,105.51, $4,196.70 and $6,379.28, respectively.

(b) dismissing the tenth count of the complaint wherein plaintiff sought an accounting against Yanowsky (hereinafter referred to as the Yanowsky judgment).

Plaintiff's appeals challenge the propriety of the entry of summary judgment in either of the respects noted. We consider them seriatim.

I. AS TO THE MAURER JUDGMENTS.

Before embarking on the question as to whether the general nature of the factual issues raised and the character of the controversy made it appropriate to enter summary judgment here at all we first indicate our agreement with the plaintiff's position that the amounts fixed as due on the mortgages were at least erroneous to the extent that they included interest accrued from the dates of execution of the mortgages and so-called "attorney's fees."

With respect to interest, it appears that this was allowed on the full face amount of each mortgage from the respective dates of execution notwithstanding that the mortgage moneys were advanced at various dates, some substantially subsequent to the dates of execution of the instruments. The mortgagee defends this mode of computation of interest on the ground that the mortgages recite that "the mortgagor is indebted to the mortgagee in the sum of $ ____ Dollars with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from the date hereof." No authority is cited in support of the contention that the recital is conclusive as to the date as of which interest is payable. The settled rule is that except where the mortgagee holds money for disbursement to the mortgagor at the latter's call at an earlier date, pursuant to agreement, interest is not payable *577 until the mortgage moneys are actually advanced. Homestead Bldg. Co. v. Waverly Building & Loan Ass'n, 99 N.J.L. 276 (E. & A. 1923); and see Kuerzi v. Scott, 74 N.J. Eq. 218 (Ch. 1908).

In the present case the proofs do not indicate whether Yanowsky, whose affidavit indicated that it was he who advanced the mortgage moneys, had been holding the funds available on call for the borrowers at all times on and after the dates of execution of the mortgages. This fact will have to be established at the trial on the remand before interest may be allowed for the entirety of the periods here disputed.

We turn to the matter of "attorney's fees" allowed in the judgment. These aggregated $2,600, being for $500 each as to four of the mortgages, and $400 and $200, respectively, as to the two others. These amounts are exclusive of allowances for "counsel fees" apparently computed on the basis of the scale specified by R.R. 4:55-7(c). We find no authority for allowance of the "attorney's fees." The mortgages themselves are devoid of any provision stipulating for the allowance of an attorney's fee as part of the debt upon default. If there were such a contractual provision its enforcement would be met by the apparent bar of the decision in Bank of Commerce v. Markakos, 22 N.J. 428 (1956). But see Maryland Credit Finance Corporation v. Reeves, 45 N.J. Super. 205, 208 (App. Div. 1957), sustaining the enforceability of a provision in a conditional sales contract for the allowance upon default of a "reasonable attorney's fee," and holding the Markakos case limited to mortgage foreclosure matters, as covered by express rule of the Supreme Court.

The mortgagee seeks sanction for the contested allowance in N.J.S. 2A:44-89, which, in defining the scope of the priority accorded by the Mechanic's Lien Act to mortgagees in certain circumstances as against the claims of materialmen and laborers (N.J.S. 2A:44-87, 88), maintains the mortgage priority, among other situations, "when *578 the mortgage secures or the funds secured thereby have been applied * * * d. to the payment of any premium, counsel fee or other financing charges and costs, the total of which shall not be in excess of 5 per cent of the principal of the mortgage securing the loan upon which they are based * * *." We do not read this statute, as does the defendant counterclaimant, to authorize ipso facto

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