East Ridgelawn Cemetery Co. v. Frank

75 A. 1006, 77 N.J. Eq. 36, 7 Buchanan 36, 1910 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 68
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 8, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 75 A. 1006 (East Ridgelawn Cemetery Co. v. Frank) 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
East Ridgelawn Cemetery Co. v. Frank, 75 A. 1006, 77 N.J. Eq. 36, 7 Buchanan 36, 1910 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 68 (N.J. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Stevens, V. C.

This bill is filed for the specific enforcement of an agreement to convey land and to pay off certain mortgages.

The complainant was incorporated September 30th, 1905, under the act to authorize the incorporation of rural cemetery associations. Gen. Stat. p. 349. After its incorporation it made an agreement (whether in writing or otherwise is not stated) with the" defendant, Frank and one Pond, who subsequently conveyed all his interest to Frank, that they should convey, or cause to be conveyed, to complainant, free and clear of all encumbrance, a tract of land in Aequackanonk township, containing one hundred and twenty-five acres. This tract, with the exception of two parcels of land containing, respectively, one and two acres, they did in fact cause to be conveyed, as agreed. They also agreed to convey such other land, not exceeding ten acres, as might be necessary for the purpose of straightening out the cemetery lands.

The bill alleges that it was also agreed that they would convey to the West Ridgelawn Cemetery Company, the complainant being known as the East Ridgelawn Cemetery Company, one hundred and thirty-five acres, “making,” so the bill states, “two hundred and seventy acres in all,” and would (I quote from the bill)

“accept and receive in payment and as a consideration price for said conveyance a certain interest in the proceeds of tbe sale'-of the said lands, after deducting certain charges and expenses and which interest in said proceeds of sale was agreed to be fixed at fifty shares per acre for the land conveyed to each cemetery, which amounted to 13,500 shares as the aggregate amount.”

The bill then proceeds to state as follows:

[38]*38“And the said interest was to be evidenced by one or more certificates signed by your orator, and the said West Ridgelawn Cemetery (a body corporate) representing in the aggregate thirteen thousand five hundred shares and the same were to be issued and deliverd to the said Adam Prank * * * and that in pursuance of said agreement to purchase said lands your orator and the said West Ridgelawn Cemetery did issue and deliver to the said Adam Prank the said certificates evidencing such interest in the proceeds of sales to be made by your orator and the said West Ridgelawn Cemetery of the lands so conveyed and to be conveyed to them under said agreement.”

The bill further alleges that to better effectuate the performance of the agreement and to indemnify complainant against the paj’ment of the mortgages and to secure the conveyance of the remaining lands agreed to be conveyed, Erank assigned to the Passaic Trust and Safe Deposit Company certain of said certificates representing two thousand five hundred equal undivided shares in the said proceeds of sale of the lands of complainant and the said West Ridgelawn cemetery, in trust for those objects; that he has failed to pay off three mortgages on which there are now due $5,000, $3,750 and $5,500, respectively, and that he has failed to convey the remaining land agreed to be conveyed.

There are other allegations, but the above are the material ones. The complainant insists that it has a lien in equity on all shares issued “outside of the two thousand shares deposited with the trust company,” and asks for an injunction restraining Erank from disposing of any of the shares and for a decree directing Erank to pay the mortgages and to convey the lands agreed to be conveyed and for which he has already received the full amount of shares to which he was entitled, not only for the land actually conveyed, but also for that which he agreed to convey and did not convey. The prayer is, further, that on Frank’s failure to pay and convey, a receiver may be appointed to take Frank’s shares and he be required “to make abatement of said consideration of fifty shares of each acre of land which he fails to convey.”

The bill is notable for its omissions. It does not state within what time Erank was to pay off the mortgages or otherwise perform his agreement. It does not state whether the agreement was in writing, and, of course, does not append any copy of it. It [39]*39does not set forth the terms of the written trust on which the trust company holds the two thousand shares; it does' not show why that trust cannot be enforced by the trust company, and it does not allege that the trust company has ever been called upon to enforce it.

It is, moreover, vague and uncertain on a subject of vital importance. It alleges that payment for the land was made by issuing certificates signed by the two companies representing “a certain interest in the proceeds of the sale of the said land” (without telling us what interest) “after deducting certain charges and expenses,” without telling us what charges and expenses. It merely says that said interest was fixed at fifty shares per acre and amounted to thirteen thousand five hundred shares as the aggregate amount, hfo copy of this novel certificate is appended, and we can only gather its terms from the above description.

This much is clear. The certificate is the joint certificate of both companies, and purports to give to the vendor thirteen thousand five hundred shares in the proceeds of the sale of the land as the consideration for twice one hundred and thirty-five acres, or fifty shares per acre, the maximum amount which a cemetery company may hold being one hundred and thirty-five acres. Is such a scheme authorized or permitted by the Cemetery act ? “A cemetery for the burial of the dead,” says Mr. Justice Gray, in Close v. Glenwood Cemetery, 107 U. S. 474, “if not a strictly charitable use, is, in some aspects, a public and pious use.” Our courts have táken a similar view (Newark v. Stockton 44 N. J. Eq. (17 Stew.) 180; Toppin v. Moriarty, 59 N. J. Eq. (14 Dick.) 115), and so has the legislature. The Cemetery act gives the management of the cemetery to trustees elected by the lot owners. It exempts cemetery lands from taxation and assessment. Rosedale Cemetery Association v. Linden, 73 N. J. Law (44 Vr.) 421. It provides that lots, from the time of interment, shall, in general, be inalienable.» It confers a limited power of eminent domain. It allows the association to hold property, real and personal, upon trust to apply the income to the improvement and embellishment of the grounds. It authorizes the investment [40]*40of money accruing from the sale of lots for the purpose of maintenance and improvement (section 67), and it expressly directs as follows (section 19) :

“One-half at least of the proceeds of all sales of lots and plots shall be first appropriated to the payment of the purchase-money of the lands acquired by the association until the whole purchase-money shall be paid; and the residue thereof to preserving, improving and embellishing the said cemetery grounds and the avenues and roads leading thereto and to defray the incidental expenses of the cemetery establishment; and after the payment of the purchase-money and the debts contracted therefor and for surveying and laying out the ground, the proceeds of all future sales shall be applied to the improvement, embellishment and preservation of such cemetery a.nd for incidental expenses and to no other purpose or object so long as such embellishment is incomplete.”

The only intimation that cemetery companies may issue stock is to be found in the supplement of March 14th, 1879 (Gen. Stat. ¶. 351 § 16),

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Bluebook (online)
75 A. 1006, 77 N.J. Eq. 36, 7 Buchanan 36, 1910 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-ridgelawn-cemetery-co-v-frank-njch-1910.