Diehl v. Page

3 N.J. Eq. 143
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1834
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 3 N.J. Eq. 143 (Diehl v. Page) 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
Diehl v. Page, 3 N.J. Eq. 143 (N.J. Ct. App. 1834).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

Thomas Diehl and one William Guier, in the year 1818, obtained a judgment in the supreme court of Pennsylvania, against John Page, for one thousand eight hundred and ninety-five dollars and sixty-two cents. The judgment remaining unsatisfied, and Page having afterwards acquired title to the undivided moiety of a plantation in the county of Salem, they sued out an attachment from the court of common pleas of that county, against Page, as a non-resident debtor, returnable to the term of March, 1826, and thereby attached the said property and the rents of it, in the hands of Thomas Wright and Peter Wright, the tenants and two of the defendants. Such proceedings were then had in the attachment, as that in the term of September, 1826, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiffs for three thousand and forty-nine dollars and twelve and a half cents, besides costs. The auditors sold- the property on the-twentieth of December,- and it was purchased by Thomas Diehl and William Guier, for one thousand nine hundred and ninety-nine dollars; upon which the auditors made them a deed.

After stating the foregoing facts, the bill proceeds to state, in substance, that Page, knowing that his interest in the premises was about to be attached by the complainants, fraudulently and without consideration, executed a deed of conveyance to one Isaac H. Booth, for all his interest; which deed bears date on the fourth day of June, that being about the time that Page obtained possession of the property under a judgment at- law.

It further charges, that Booth is a very poor man, and in the lowest walks of life: that he is not and never was possessed of any property, and earns his living by daily labor as a- journeyman comb-maker, and sometimes as a common and day laborer about the city of Philadelphia, and was -induced to lend his name by the promise of reward. That there was no money paid, nor was Booth able to pay any. That after the pretended conveyance, Page, with the knowledge of Booth, made a contract with Wright the tenant, and held himself out as the real Owner of the premises, offered to sell and mortgage them to raise money, and exercised ownership over them in as full and absolute a- manner as [145]*145he ever had done. That afterwards, the said Page made another pretended sale of the property to Samuel C. Atkinson, of Philadelphia, aud one Champion Clark, of Gloucester county, who now pretend to claim the same by virtue of a deed from Booth and wife, dated June first, 1829, for the alleged consideration of four thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars; that no money was paid, but Clark and Atkinson gave a mortgage to Booth for four thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars; all of which transactions were fraudulent, and brought about by the procurement of Page.

William Guier having departed this life, his interest has be come vested in his sou, William Guier, and his daughter, Mary Ann, now the wife of William Kennedy, who, with Thomas Diehl, are the complainants in this suit.

The bill prays, that all the conveyances above mentioned from Pago and his assignees, may be declared fraudulent and void and be set aside, and that the tenant may come to an account for the rents, &c.

John Page, in his answer, admits the issuing of the attachment, and that the property in question was seized on and sold, but insists, that the proceedings in the attachment were irregular; that there was no legal advertisement either of the issuing of the writ, or of the sale of the property, and that the judgment and conveyance founded on it are wholly inoperative and void. He denies that the conveyance to Booth was fraudulent, and insists that it was bona fide, and that he gave a warranty deed, which he would not. have done if the said deed had been fraudulent. He answers nothing as to the pecuniary circumstances of Booth, hut says he was of respectable character and standing, a comb-maker in Philadelphia; that he was desirous of.changing his business for one of a more active nature, and knowing of this property which he, Page, had recovered in New-Jersey, he, after viewing it, proposed to purchase it, and agreed to give four thousand dollars for it, which was supposed could easily be made by a person going thereon and felling timber and wood; and. having confidence in Booth’s honesty, he sold it to hint, believing he would [146]*146be able to pay by instalments or otherwise. Page further denies that he ever offered it for sale after the sale to Booth, or exercised any acts of ownership over it.

Clark and; Atkinson,- in their answer, set up the same defence as Page, in relation to the attachment and the proceedings under it, insisting that they are void. They deny any knowledge of fraud as between Booth and Page, and allege, that believing the value of the property to be considerable, they purchased it of Booth by deed dated June first, 1829, for the bona fide consideration of four thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars; and to secure the payment of the same, they gave him a mortgage on the property, (for what amount is not mentioned.) That the said Booth sold the property because the rents and profits were lying dead and unproductive, and because he was unable to use the property.

Booth and wife have put in no answer, and that of Peter and Thomas Wright, the tenants, is merely formal.

Considerable testimony has been taken by the complainants, to sustain the charge of fraud as made in the bill; but it is necessary, in the first place, to take up and dispose of the first ground of defence assumed by the defendants ; that questions the right of the complainants to come into court and set up any claim whatever to the property. It insists that the judgment on which their title is founded, and the conveyance under which they held it, are- both irregular and void, and that no valid claim can be exerted under- them or- either of them. If this be so, it will be unnecessary to consider the question of fraud; for if the complainants have no title, they cannot be permitted to-impeach that of the defendants.

Taking the defendants’ evidence as admissible, there would seem to be much irregularity in the proceedings under the attachment There were two suits instituted, one of which was continued to judgment, and the other ceased soon after the return of the writ. One of them was in the name of Diehl alone, the other in the names of Ouier and Diehl. The notice of issuing the attachbieht appears to have been in- the first, and not in the [147]*147second suit, and it is doubtful whether the publication was continued for the period of time prescribed by the statute. These matters do not, however, appear upon the record, which I apprehend is the proper instrument to govern the court. But even the record as made out is defective, in my judgment, and before a tribunal lawfully charged with the correction of errors, I think it might have been set aside.

This, however, is not the question. We are not to inquire whether the judgment is erroneous and irregular, but whether it •is void, and, coming up collaterally before this court, is to be taken as a nullity. On this question there ought to be no doubt. The jurisdiction of the court which rendered the judgment was -complete. It was a general jurisdiction over the whole subject matter; and while acting within that jurisdiction, their judgments are not to be impeached, though erroneous on the face of them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 N.J. Eq. 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diehl-v-page-njch-1834.