Cornish v. Bryan

10 N.J. Eq. 146
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 10 N.J. Eq. 146 (Cornish v. Bryan) 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
Cornish v. Bryan, 10 N.J. Eq. 146 (N.J. Ct. App. 1854).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The prayer of the bill is, that the bond and mortgage executed by Mumford to Cornish, and by Cornish assigned to the defendant, Bryan, may be declared null and void, and may be decreed to be delivered up to the complainant, and be cancelled.

This relief is resisted upon several grounds.

First. The power of the court is questioned.

Second. Hpon the ground that the allegations of the bill, respecting fraud in procuring the execution and delivery of the bond and mortgage, are not sustained by the proofs.

Third. That the defendant, Bryan, is a bona fide assignee, without any notice as to the consideration upon which the bond and mortgage were executed, and that his rights ought not to be affected by the transactions between the original parties.

Fourth. That whatever payment, or satisfaction of the bond and mortgage, was made by the complainant to Mumford, was after the assignment, and under circumstances to charge the complainant with notice of the assignment.

[151]*151And lastly. That the bond delivered by Mamford to Cornish was a new consideration for the bond and mortgage, and was received as such by the complainant, with full knowledge of the alleged fraud; and that he is thereby estopped from setting it up against the defendant, Bryan, who is a bona fide assignee.

The power of the court to order a bond, or other instrument, to be delivered up to be cancelled, has been too frequently exercised to be now called in question. The authorities were very carefully examined by the Chancellor in Hamilton against Cummings, 1 J. C. R. 517, and the propriety of the court exercising such power in particular cases vindicated. “ This court has the power to order a bond or other instrument to be delivered up to be can-celled, whether such instrument is or is not void at law, or whether it be void on the face of it, or by matter shown by the proofs in the cause; but the exercise of this power rests in the sound discretion of the court, and is regulated by the circumstances of each particular ease.”

The mere fact, that the grounds upon which the jurisdiction of this court is invoked may avail the party in an action at law, and constitute a valid defence by plea, or otherwise, is not a sound objection to the court’s exercising this power. If a party holds an obligation which ought to be cancelled, and persists in holding it for the purpose of harassing the obligor with a suit, he ought not to be permitted to select his own place, time, and circumstances for such prosecution. Where a suit at law is commenced, and the defence at law is complete, then that is a good objection for this court’s refusing to change the forum of litigation. Where, too, the defence is of a character plain and palpable, and within the command of the party at any time, this court ought not to encourage a resort to an expensive litigation in a Court of Chancery. In all cases, the court must exercise a sound discretion, and be regulated in its action by the propriety of the particular case before it. The case made by this bill is one. [152]*152entitling the complainant to relief. The grounds upon which he insists the bond and mortgage should not be enforced, while they might protect him against a recovery in any action at law brought against him, are of a character to render a defence at law embarrassing and hazardous. Besides, if the complainant’s allegations are true, the mortgage ought not to remain an encumbrance, or at least a blemish, upon his title. His only remedy to relieve himself of the embarrassment which this mortgage might occasion him, and of the serious injury to his title, is by a resort to this court. I think the complainant is rightly before this tribunal, and should be relieved, if he has sustained his case by proof.-

As to the bond and mortgage having been procured from the complainant by the artifice and fraud of Mumford, if the complainant’s right to relief turned solely upon this question, his case could not be sustained. The allegations of the bill in this particular are not proved. The important charge, that Mumford fraudulently assumed to be the agent of a line of steamers between New York and San Francisco, with power and authority to vend tickets for passengers, is not made satisfactory by the evidence. He was openly acting as such agent in the city of Philadelphia. It is not pretended he assumed such authority for the mere purpose of imposing upon the complainant. The only evidence of his want of authority is the fact, that upon the complainant’s calling at the office of the company in the city of New York, for whom Mumford assumed to act, some one at the office denied that Mumford was an agent. There might have been reasons existing at the time when inquiry was made for denying his agency. It was on the eve of the sailing of the steamer, at a period when, it is a matter of notoriety, the demand for passages could not be supplied. But it is unnecessary to speculate upon this matter. Satisfactory proof was within reach of the complainant. If Mumford was not an agent of the company, some one connected with the [153]*153company should have been called as a witness to establish the fact. The proof, as to the particulars of the transactions which took place during the negotiation of the parties respecting the bond and mortgage, does not correspond with the allegations of the bill in every particular. According to the testimony of Eli Ilopkins, the whole transaction was this : the complainant applied to Mumford for a ticket, and offered to give him a mortgage on his house and lot in Camden for three hundred dollars. He wanted Mumford to give him a ticket for one hundred and eighty dollars, and the balance in money for the mortgage. Mumford refused, and said he would not take a mortgage for less than six hundred dollars. It was then agreed between them that the bond and mortgage should be given for six hundred dollars; that Mumford should give complainant a ticket for a passage from New York to California, at the price of one hundred and eighty dollars, pay him in cash one hundred and twenty dollars, and give him a receipt for $300, which receipt would1 be good at any time as a payment for that amormt on the bond and mortgage. The witness does not state that Mumford used any artifice, or even persuasion, to induce the complainant to make the arrangement. He deliberately entered into this arrangement. Mumford gave him one hundred dollars in cash, a memorandum for the ticket, and a receipt, as agreed upon, for the three hundred dollars, and the complainant delivered to Mumford the bond and mortgage. Thus far there was no fraud in this transaction, unless Mumford assumed his character as ticket agent for the fraudulent purpose of procuring the complainant to execute the papers; and upon this point, as I have already remarked, the evidence is not satisfactory. The next question is, as to the rights of Kyan under his assignment.

What, then, were the respective rights of the original parties at this crisis in the transaction ? The bond and mortgage had been delivered. The complainant had ro[154]*154ceived a valid consideration for them of two hundred and eighty dollars, one hundred of which was in cash, and for the remaining one hundred and eighty dollars, he took a memorandum, or order, for the delivery of a passage ticket from New York to California, in a steamer to sail from the city of New York on the then 9th day of June. On the 8th day of June, Mumford assigned the hond and mortgage to the defendant, Eyan.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 N.J. Eq. 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cornish-v-bryan-njch-1854.