Doughty v. Miller

50 N.J. Eq. 529
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 50 N.J. Eq. 529 (Doughty v. Miller) 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
Doughty v. Miller, 50 N.J. Eq. 529 (N.J. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Van Eleet, V. C.

This case stands in this anomalous condition : The complainant, in giving his evidence on the hearing, swore that the principal ground on which, by his bill, he rests his right to relief, has [530]*530no foundation in fact. His bill was filed to procure a decree declaring that a deed, absolute on its face, was executed by him as a mortgage, and that inasmuch as he owed the grantee nothing then, and has not subsequently become indebted to her, the deed should be declared to be a nullity and a reconveyance ordered.

The facts which the complainant makes the foundation of his right to relief, as set out in his bill, are the following: He is nearly seventy-six years of age and illiterate, being unable either to read or write; he has been twice married; by his first wife he had eleven children, all of whom are still living; she died in 1869, and he married his second in January, 1872; his second was his junior, she being, at the time of their marriage, about thirty years of age and he about fifty-seven. No issue was born of this marriage. The complainant, at the time of his second marriage, owned a house and lot at Fair Haven, in the county of Monmouth, which he occupied as his home. On their marriage, his second wife went there to live and continued to live there until she died. In March, 1890, the complainant and his wife verbally agreed to engage in the business of keeping a summer boarding-house on the premises where they lived. As part of this arrangement, it was agreed that the capacity of the house should be enlarged by additions and improvements, and used for the purposes of the business, and that the parties should each «contribute their time and labor to the business, and share and bear its profits and losses equally. After this agreement was finally concluded, the bill says that the wife

“ proposed that your orator should convey the house and premises to her by deed, so as to secure to her, against any accident, the payment of the share, which would fall to her in said business, and that she would reconvey the same to your orator upon the settlement of that business.”

The complainant acceded to this proposition, and subsequently, on the 6th day of March, 1890, conveyed his house and lot, through the pastor of the church of which he and his wife, were members, to his wife by deeds absolute on their face. Both deeds were recorded within two or three days after their execution. The land conveyed was afterwards improved by the erection of [531]*531additions to the house and 'other structures at a cost of over $2,000. From the summer of 1880, up to and including the summer of 1890, the business of keeping a summer boardinghouse was carried on on the premises. It was successful, the profits each season being in excess of $500. The wife received all the money and kept all the profits. No settlement was ever made, and the wife never accounted to her husband for the profits, nor paid him any part of them. He never asked for a settlement, nor for any of the profits. The wife died childless and intestate on the 24th day of November, 1890, leaving one brother and three- sisters, who are her heirs-at-law and the defendants to this suit.

Taking the facts embraced in the preceding statement to be true, and assuming that they comprise all the material facts of the ease, there can be no doubt that they make a case which entitles the complainant to a decree. For no principle of equity jurisprudence is more firmly settled, than that effect must be given to a deed according to the intention of the parties, so far as the law will allow, and consequently when a deed, absolute on its face, is executed as a security, it must be declared to be a mortgage. The effect to be given to such an instrument must, however, be determined by the intention of the parties existing at the time of its execution. If they then meant that it should operate as a conveyance, and pass the title absolutely, no subsequent change of intention will make it a mortgage. The defendants deny both of'the principal facts on which the complainant’s right to relief rests. They deny that an agreement was ever made between the complainant and his wife to carry on any business for their joint benefit, and they also deny that the conveyance to the wife was executed as a security. The issue thus made up casts the burden of proof on the complainant. The deeds, standing alone by their own inherent force, show plainly that the complainant’s object in executing one of them, and procuring the other to be executed, was to pass the title to the land from himself to his wife absolutely and unconditionally. That is the construction which they must receive, and that is the legal effect which must be attributed them, especially as they have [532]*532stood undisputed for over ten years, until it is shown, by clear and convincing evidence, that such was not their purpose, but that they were executed merely as a security.

Now as to the proofs. The complainant, in less than three months after his bill was filed, made an affidavit to obtain an injunction to prevent the defendants from further prosecuting an action of ejectment they had brought against him to recover the land in question, in which he swore that he and his wife, in the year 1880, determined to carry on the business of keeping a summer boarding-house on his premises, for their joint and equal benefit and profit, and that they, in the words of the affidavit,

mutually and verbally agreed that they, the said premises, together with the furniture and personalty, should be conveyed to and vested in the said Sarah, so that in ease of any accident to deponent, either from death or otherwise, she, said Sarah, should be secure for the payment of her share of the proceeds of that business, and that upon the settlement or closing of the business the property was to be reconveyed and revested in deponent.”

The facts here verified are identical, in substance, with those alleged in the bill. The complainant’s affidavit was sworn to on the 3d day of April, 1891, and he was examihed as a witness on his own behalf on the 29th day of October, 1891. To render it easy to understand such parts of the complainant’s evidence as will now be quoted it is, perhaps, necessary to say that the complainant made the conveyance to his wife through the Rev. Jacob Fried, and that Mr. Fried went with the complainant to the office of the counsel who drew the deeds and was present when the complainant gave instruction for their draft. The complainant, while under direct examination, was asked this question:

“At the time you made the deed- to Mr. Fried, and Mr. Fried made the deed to your wife, what was said between your wife and yourself as to the object of the conveyance—the reason why the title to the property was to be put in the name of your wife ? Now, go on, and tell the whole story ?”

Which he answered as follows:

“Well, it was the persuasion of Annie Minton and my wife for me to do it, and they insisted upon me to do it; I didn’t know anything about the arrange[533]*533ments for conveying property; I was entirely ignorant of it; I didn’t know that I was giving my property away, nor I didn’t intend to give it away; I knew nothing about the law and no points of law, and nothing about conveying property.”

Shortly afterwards he was asked:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 N.J. Eq. 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doughty-v-miller-njch-1892.