Dougherty v. Connolly

48 A. 777, 61 N.J. Eq. 421, 16 Dickinson 421, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 106
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 23, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 48 A. 777 (Dougherty v. Connolly) 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
Dougherty v. Connolly, 48 A. 777, 61 N.J. Eq. 421, 16 Dickinson 421, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 106 (N.J. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Emery, Y. C.

Dr. Alexander N. Dougherty, the testator, who died in 1882, by his will devised his real estate to his widow, Henrietta A. Dougherty, for life, and appointed her executrix, with the following power of sale:

“Third. If it should be advantageous hereafter during the lifetime of my said wife in the opinion of my executrix hereinafter named to sell all or any portion of my real estate, it is my will and I do hereby direct and order that the same be so sold at the discretion of my executrix aforesaid, either at public or private sale, and I do 'authorize and empower my said executrix to make such sufficient conveyance as may be required to the purchaser or purchasers of the same, the money arising from such sale or sales to be securely invested and the income thereof to belong to my said wife for her own use during her life.”

Subject to this life estate and power of sale, the lands were devised to his four sons, three of whom are the complainants and one of whom is a defendant. ' Complainants have, or claim, a contingent interest in the share devised to their brother, the defendant, but, for the purposes of the present inquiry, this cir[423]*423cumstance need not be further noticed. On July 10th, 1895, Mrs. Dougherty, by a deed of that date, executed by herself as executrix, under the power of sale, and also individually, and for an expressed consideration of $1, conveyed the real estate, a house and lot in Newark, to the defendant Connolly. Connolly and his wife executed a mortgage on the lands, on the same date, to the defendant the Fidelity Trust Company, for $6,000, payable in three years from date, with interest. Subsequently, and by deed dated August 10th, 1895, Connolly and wife conveyed the premises to the defendant Dempsey, by deed, with full covenants of warranty, for the consideration of $1, and Dempsey, by deed dated August 24th, 1895, for a like consideration, conveyed the premises to Mrs. Dougherty, by a deed of bargain and sale, without covenants. The deeds from Connolly to Dempsey and from Dempsey to Mrs. Dougherty were recorded on the same day—August 26th, 1895. Dempsey, on the 24th of August, the date of his déed to Mrs. Dougherty, executed a mortgage to Connolly on the premises for $2,500, which was recorded on August 26th, 1895, six minutes subsequent to the record of Connolly’s deed to him, and at the same time as his deed to Mrs. Dougherty. This mortgage is still outstanding of record. The bill charges that the power of sale was fraudulently exercised by the executrix for the purpose of raising, by means of a mortgage on the premises, $6,000, which Connolly was to receive and use in a partnership business, in which he and Mrs. Connolly wére to be jointly interested, and that, for the purpose of carrying out this scheme of borrowing money and evading the provisions of the will, the premises were to be convejed by the executrix to Connolly, and after the execution of the mortgage Connolly was to reconvey the lands at once to Mrs. Dougherty; that instead of reconveying at once, as agreed, Connolly held the title for several weeks, and before the reconveyance, and without Mrs. Dougherty’s knowledge, conveyed the lands to Dempsey, without consideration, receiving from him the- mortgage of $2,500, in fraud of complainants and of Mrs. Dougherty, which was fraudulently retained by Connolly on the reconveyance by Dempsey to Mrs. Dougherty as an apparent lien on the property. It is alleged that no consideration [424]*424■for any of the conve3ances was paid’by any of the parties, and that the entire scheme of rasing the money was a fraud on the executrix, by an abuse of her confidence in him, and was a fraud on the complainants’ rights. As to the Fidelity Trust Company mortgage, the bill charges that the mortgage was taken with notice of the extent of the power of complainants’ rights as devisees and with notice that the power of sale was not properly exercised for the purpose of the advantageous sale, in the exercise of a proper discretion of the executrix, and was made for other and improper reasons, and it is claimed that the nominal consideration of the deed from the executrix to Connolly was notice that the sale was not a bona fide sale under the power made for the purpose of procuring funds for investment, and that the trust company received its mortgage with full notice of Connolly’s defective title. It is prayed that the trust Compaq mortgage and all the conveyances and mortgages be declared void as against the complainants. The trust company, admitting the execution of the deed from the executrix to Connolty, and its advance to him, by way of mortgage, of the $6,000, alleges that this was advanced in good faith, and without any knowledge of any matters to put it upon inquiry or to charge it with the duty of inquiring as to the actual consideration of the sale, or to inquire, into the appropriation of the proceeds of sale, and denies receiving the mortgage with notice that the conveyance to Connolly was made for improper reasons, or without consideration, or that Connolly’s title was defective; claims to be a bona -fide pur chaser, and that the mortgage is a valid encumbrance upon the entire fee of the premises, including complainants’ interest. The mortgage having become due by reason of the failure to pay installments of interest, the trust company, by way of cross-bill filed against Mrs. Dougherty, prays that if it should be decreed that the mortgage is void as against complainants, Mrs. Dougherty’s life estate, which was also conveyed by the mortgage, may be sold. Mrs. Dougherty, as executrix and individually, answers complainants’ bill, substantially admitting the charge of the bill, as to the purpose of the conveyance to Connolly and that no consideration was received by her for the deed, and she also files a cross-bill against the trust [425]*425company, Connolly and Dempsey to set aside the deed from Connolly to Dempsey and the mortgage from Dempsey to Connolly, as given in fraudulent violation of Connolly’s agreement with her to transfer the property to her immediately after the mortgage, and also to set aside the trust company mortgage, because it was taken with notice that the deed from her to Connolly was without consideration, and that the mortgage was made for Connolly’s benefit only. The defendants Connolly and wife and Dempsey do not appear to answer either the bill or cross-bill. The evidence of Mrs. Dougherty, corroborated by the papers and documents in the case, shows, beyond dispute, that, as between Connolly and Mrs. Dougherty, the transaction was not intended as a bona fide sale of the property, but as a method of raising money, by way of mortgage on the premises, which was to be advanced to Connolly, who was to repay it, and that Mrs. Dougherty (who was to continue in possession of the property and receive its rents) was to receive some benefit from this advance to Connolly on the mortgage, either by way of interest, to be also paid to her, or a share of the profits in a partnership with Connolly. So far as relates to these defendants, therefore, the deeds to Connolly and Dempsey and the mortgage from Dempsey to Connolly must be set aside as fraudulent and void, and so far as they assume to convey anything beyond the life estate of Mrs. Dougherty, must be declared not to affect the rights of the complainants or of the defendant Alexander Garthwaite Dougherty, and the mortgage from Dempsey to Connolly must also be declared void as against Mrs. Dougherty and the defendant trust company as claiming title through her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 A. 777, 61 N.J. Eq. 421, 16 Dickinson 421, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dougherty-v-connolly-njch-1901.