Cramer v. Weith

90 A.2d 524, 20 N.J. Super. 577
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJuly 9, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 90 A.2d 524 (Cramer v. Weith) 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
Cramer v. Weith, 90 A.2d 524, 20 N.J. Super. 577 (N.J. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

20 N.J. Super. 577 (1952)
90 A.2d 524

MELVIN B. CRAMER, PLAINTIFF,
v.
RUSSELL WEITH, FRANK L. TWITTY AND ROBERT L. TWITTY, DEFENDANTS.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division.

Decided July 9, 1952.

*578 Mr. Louis M. Mallin, attorney for plaintiff.

Mr. Irving I. Jacobs, attorney for defendants Twitty.

HANEMAN, J.S.C.

On August 17, 1949 the defendants, Frank L. Twitty and Robert L. Twitty, instituted a suit in the Atlantic City District Court against the plaintiff, Melvin B. Cramer, on two of a series of nine negotiable promissory notes.

Thereafter, plaintiff instituted this action, alleging, inter alia, that he did not have an adequate remedy at law, that unless said action be stayed and the defendants enjoined from transferring or assigning the outstanding notes, as well as a certain chattel mortgage hereinafter adverted to, there would arise a multiplicity of suits, and that the promissory notes and the chattel mortgage might find their way into the hands of innocent purchasers. He further alleges that both the promissory notes and the chattel mortgage are tainted with usury and therefore demands the relief accorded by R.S. 31:1-3. Pursuant thereto, the district court action was enjoined.

Defendants, by way of counterclaim, seek: (1) to obtain a judgment on the six last due notes of the above referred to series, in the total sum of $5,000, with interest and costs, and (2) to foreclose the chattel mortgage to which reference is above made.

*579 I find the facts in connection herewith to be as follows:

On or about May 5, 1945 the plaintiff, finding himself in some financial difficulty, borrowed certain sums of money from the defendant Russell Weith, for which the plaintiff was obliged to pay a premium or bonus. This loan was to be repaid by September of 1945. On September 5, 1945 the said plaintiff not having paid to Weith the full amount of the above referred to loan, borrowed additional money, for which he again paid a bonus or premium, and executed and delivered to the said Weith a chattel mortgage in the sum of $10,000, which sum included the balance due on the original loan, the premium or bonus, and the newly advanced money. The affidavit of the mortgagee in said mortgage reads in part as follows:

"The sum of Ten Thousand ($10,000) Dollars as evidenced by two checks; one certified in the amount of $7,500, drawn on the Brooklyn Trust Co., dated August 30, 1945, and signed by Pauline Isaacs, Attorney, and endorsed by Pauline Isaacs to Clara Fishman and endorsed by Clara Fishman to Melvin B. Cramer; and the other check in the amount of $2,500, drawn on the Brooklyn Trust Co., dated September 4, 1945, and signed by Pauline Isaacs, Attorney, to the order of Clara Fishman and endorsed by Clara Fishman to Melvin B. Cramer — which $10,000 was loaned by Russell Weith, the mortgagee, to Melvin B. Cramer, the mortgagor, on the 4th day of September, 1945, to be repaid by the said Melvin B. Cramer as set forth in the foregoing mortgage; out of which said sum is to be paid and cancelled a present chattel mortgage in the sum of $3500, now held by Russell Weith on the goods and chattels on the premises mentioned in the aforesaid mortgage."

The plaintiff not having paid in full the amount due on said mortgage, delivered to Weith, upon his demand, a series of nine promissory notes, all dated October 24, 1947, in the following amounts and payable on the following dates:

      $750 payable on July 15, 1948
       750 payable on August 15, 1948
      1000 payable on September 15, 1948
       750 payable on July 15, 1949
       750 payable on August 15, 1949
      1000 payable on September 15, 1949
       750 payable on July 15, 1950
       750 payable on August 15, 1950
      1000 payable on September 15, 1950

*580 Each of said notes, except for the amount payable and the due date thereof, was identical. One of said notes reads as follows:

"750.00 October 24, 1947

On July 15, 1948 I promise to pay to the order of Russell Weith Seven Hundred Fifty ($750.00) Dollars payable at 1119 Boardwalk, Atlantic City, N.J. Value Received Interest at 6% per annum.

(over) Melvin B. Cramer."

The reverse side of said notes, as they now appear, read as follows:

"This note is given as evidence of part of the Ten Thousand ($10,000.00) Dollar loan made on the day of 1946 and now reduced to Seven Thousand Five Hundred ($7,500.00) Dollars. Upon default of the payment of this note, the entire unpaid balance, as evidenced by the other notes executed this day, shall become due and payable immediately.

Pay to the order of Frank and Robert Twitty.

Russell Weith."

It is to be noted in passing that the first three of said notes, due July 15, August 15 and September 15, 1948 respectively, read in part on the reverse side as follows:

"loan made on the ____ day of ____ 1946."

The last six notes read as follows:

"loan made on the 5th day of September, 1945."

The words "5th" and "September" are inserted in ink, and the figure "5" in the year "1945" is written in ink over a typewritten "6."

The said Weith, in turn, finding himself in financial difficulty in June 1949, went to the defendants Twitty for the purpose of obtaining a loan from them. It was testified by the said Weith and Frank L. Twitty that the said Twitty made the loan on June 10, 1949 and then received from the said Weith as collateral security the above referred to series *581 of nine notes and an assignment of the above referred to chattel mortgage.

It is again to be noted in passing that the acknowledgment on the assignment of the chattel mortgage was dated June 25, 1949 and that the said assignment was recorded June 27, 1949.

The total amount allegedly loaned by the said Twittys between June 8, 1949 and June 23, 1949 was $4,913.50. In addition, the said Twittys issued a series of purchase orders to firms authorizing them to ship merchandise to the said Weith, but upon the credit of said Twittys. These orders covered a period from June 8, 1949 to June 17, 1949 and totaled $3,228.36.

On June 27, 1949, said Weith being a resident of the State of New York, apparently finding himself in insurmountable financial difficulties, made an assignment for the benefit of creditors in that state.

I find as a fact that the defendants Twitty knew of the financial embarrassment of the said Weith at the time the alleged assignment of the chattel mortgage and the endorsement of the promissory notes were made by him. Although Frank L. Twitty disclaimed any knowledge of the original transaction between Cramer and Weith involving the chattel mortgage and the promissory notes, I am satisfied, especially from the testimony of Mrs. Frances La Touf, the now divorced wife of the plaintiff, that prior to the transfer of the said chattel mortgage and the promissory notes, she and her then husband, the plaintiff, had a conversation with the defendant Weith in the presence of the defendant Robert L. Twitty concerning the alleged bonus being charged by the said Weith. The entire testimony of the said Weith is unreliable and untrustworthy.

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90 A.2d 524, 20 N.J. Super. 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cramer-v-weith-njsuperctappdiv-1952.