Davis v. Piggott

39 A. 698, 56 N.J. Eq. 634, 11 Dickinson 634, 1898 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 83
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 24, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 39 A. 698 (Davis v. Piggott) 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
Davis v. Piggott, 39 A. 698, 56 N.J. Eq. 634, 11 Dickinson 634, 1898 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 83 (N.J. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Reed, V. C.

These are three suits for the foreclosure of three mortgages. They were tried together.

The contest concerns the priorities of the respective mortgages. One Kaniper owned a tract of land containing one hundred and eighty-one and forty-hundredths acres, which will hereafter be styled the one-hundred-and-eighty-one-acre tract. He executed a mortgage upon this tract in March, 1873, to Christian and Levi Cressman, to secure two bonds, each one for $1,000, one held by Christian and the other by Levi Cressman.

In March, 1875, Kaniper made a second mortgage upon the same tract to James D. De Witt for $600.

In March, 1876, Kaniper sold off from the one-hundred-and-eighty-one-acre tract one hundred and eleven and twenty-four hundredths acres (which will hereafter be styled the one-hundred- and-eleven-acre tract), to one Edward Piggott. Piggott gave back to Kaniper a mortgage dated March 14th, 1876, for $2,000,' to secure part of the purchase-money. This mortgage was, on June 18th, 1877, assigned to W. H. Lawall.

By a release dated November 29th and acknowledged and recorded December 15th, 1877, Christian and Levi Cressman released the seventy acres still owned by Kaniper after the sale of the one-hundred-and-eleven-aere tract to Piggott, from the’ lien of their mortgage.

[636]*636To the release was added an agreement, signed by De Witt, the holder of the second mortgage on the whole one-hundred- and-eighty-one-acre tract, and by Lawall, the assignee of the mortgage made by Piggott to Kaniper on the one-hundred-and-eleven-acre tract. This agreement is in the following words:

“We, the subscribers, James D. DeWitt and William H. Lawall, who hold subsequent encumbrances on the premises herein described, do hereby consent that the said premises be released and discharged as is herein set forth, and do for the consideration of one dollar to each of us in hand paid agree that in case the said Cressman or either of them attempt to collect the said mortgage or either of the bonds thereby secured, that in that case the said De Witt and Lawall agree that the moneys secured thereby and the interest and costs shall be first collected out of the premises (covered by said mortgages) remaining after the part is released as is therein set forth.
“Dated December 6th, 1877.
“J. D. DeWitt,
“W. H. Lawall.”

This agreement was not recorded.

Afterwards, on March 12th, 1886, the administratrix of Lawall, deceased, assigned the Kaniper mortgage to William M. Davis, the complainant in the first suit.

Kaniper sold of the seventy acres remaining after the sale of the one-hundred-and-eleven-acre tract to Piggott, in four parts as follows:

1. To Thomas Butler, November 14th, 1877, eight and fifty-one hundredths acres, for $153.18, the expressed consideration.

2. To Thomas Miller, on December 15th, 1877, thirty-two and fifteen-hundredths acres for $1,125.25, the expressed consideration.

3. To Rosetta Rush, on December 29th, 1877, nine and seventy-hundredths acres for $175, the expressed consideration.

4. To S. V. Davis, on January 1st, 1878, twenty-two and fifteen-hundredths acres for $725, the expressed consideration.

The order in which these three suits were instituted is as follows :

On April 17th, 1897, William M. Davis filed a bill to foreclose his mortgage upon the one-hundred-and-eleven-acre tract. Among others, he made parties to the suit Cressman, who held [637]*637the oldest mortgage upon the one-hundred-and-eighty-one-acre tract, and De Witt, the holder of the second mortgage upon the same tract, and Davis, the holder of the Kaniper mortgage upon the one-hundred-and-eleven-acre tract.

The prayer of the bill is that the Davis mortgage may be decreed to be the first lien upon the one-hundred-and-eleven acre tract.

Subsequently, while this suit was pending, James D. De Witt, on July 8th, 1897, filed his bill to foreclose his $600 mortgage upon the whole tract, charging that by virtue of the release executed by the Chessmans his mortgage became a first lien upon the seventy-acre tract and a second lien, next in order after the Cressman mortgage, upon the one-hundred-and-eleven-acre tract. He prays that the whole tract may be sold.

To this suit all the preceding parties are made defendants.

On the same day, namely, July 8th, 1897, the administrator of Christian Cressman filed his bill to foreclose the Cressman mortgage so far as it secured the bond for $1,000 which has been held by Christian Cressman, now deceased. To this bill, Davis, the complainant in the first suit and a defendant in this suit, has filed a plea in abatement and an answer. The plea is grounded upon the pendency of his own suit, in which the same facts are pleaded and in which the administrator of Christian Cressman is a defendant. The answer claims that the lien of the Cressman mortgage upon the one-hundred-and-eleven-acre tract covered by complainant’s mortgage, is extinguished by the release given by the Cressmans of their lien upon the seventy acres.

The effect of this plea will be reserved.

I will proceed to consider the relative status of the holders of the several mortgages under the facts displayed upon the hearing.

It appears that when Kaniper, the owner of the one-hundred- and-eighty-one-aere tract, sold one hundred and eleven acres from it to Piggott, there were upon the whole tract two mortgages, the oldest, the Cressman $2,000 mortgage, and the next the De Witt $600 mortgage.

[638]*638By the sale to Piggott of the one-hundred-and-eleven-acre tract, the seventy acres retained by Kaniper became first liable for the payment of these mortgages. Then Piggott gave to Kaniper the $2,000 mortgage on the one-hundred-and-eleven-acre tract. After this mortgage was made the condition of affairs was this: The one-hundred-and-eleven-acre tract became liable, first, for that part of the amount secured to Cressman and De Witt left unpaid after the sale of the seventy acres, and secondly, liable for the $2,000 secured by the mortgage made by Piggott to Kaniper. This was the position of affairs when the Kaniper mortgage was assigned to Lawall.

Afterwards the Cressmans released the seventy acres still owned by Kaniper from the lien of their $2,000 mortgage. They executed this release with knowledge of the existence of the.Kaniper mortgage upon the one-hundred-and-eleven-acre tract. Their knowledge of its existence is admitted in the pleadings; for the fact of such knowledge is charged in the bill of Davis and is not denied by Cressman or Paxton, the owners of the Cressman mortgage, both of whom filed answer to the Davis bill. Besides, the release was acknowledged December 15th, 1877. Attached to this release, and upon the same sheet upon which the release is written, is added the agreement already set out, which agreement is dated December 6th, 1877, upon which date it presumably was executed, which was nine days previous to the date of the acknowledgment by the Cressmans of the release. It was executed by Lawall, assignee of the Kaniper mortgage, and by De Witt.

The agreement displays upon its face the existence of subsequent encumbrances held by the signers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 A. 698, 56 N.J. Eq. 634, 11 Dickinson 634, 1898 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-piggott-njch-1898.