Englese v. Hyde
This text of 155 A. 373 (Englese v. Hyde) 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.
Opinion
The bill is filed to restrain an execution sale on a judgment which the defendant recovered in the district court of the *Page 404 city of Passaic and docketed in the county clerk's office. The judgment debtors as named in the county clerk's record are Virginia Gazella Paralla and John Paralla (first name fictitious, being unknown). The full name of the former is Edith Virginia Gazella Paralla and the correct name of the latter is Rocco Paralla. Two weeks after the docketing of the judgment, complainants, not knowing of the judgment, purchased from the judgment debtors for a valuable consideration lands in Passaic county. Before they took title, their attorney examined the records in the county clerk's office but did not discover the judgment. His failure to find it may be accounted for by the discrepancy in the Christian names; he was searching against Edith and Rocco, not Virginia and John. A few months after complainants took title, execution issued on the docketed judgment; the sheriff levied on complainants' lands and has advertised the sale of the property. This is the sale which the bill is filed to restrain.
The question which complainants seek to litigate is whether defendants' judgment is a lien on their land superior to their title. There are two reported decisions which seem to uphold the jurisdiction of this court to decide such a question and to enjoin the sale if complainants' title appears to be free from the judgment lien. Lewis v. Hall,
The other two cases last cited above were suits to quiet title in which the complainant, in order to preserve the status until final hearing, asked that the execution sale on the judgments held by defendant be stayed. In each case, such relief was denied. In the West Jersey and Seashore Railroad Company suit, Vice-Chancellor Garrison wrote: "The sole question is whether certain judgments are or are not valid liens against premises, title to which is claimed by complainant. If they are not liens, the sheriff's sale will do no harm to the complainant. If they are liens, the sale should not be enjoined. Whether they are or are not is a legal and not an equitable question." In the AlpernCase, Vice-Chancellor Stevenson, while indicating his disapproval of the rule, held that "the party in peaceable possession and claiming title is not allowed to have the status of the judgment fixed so that he may pay the same if it is found to be valid. He must either pay the judgment, whether an encumbrance on his property or not, or take the chances of his being able subsequently to maintain his title against what has ceased to be in form a mere encumbrance and has become in form a complete hostile title."
These cases disclosed a serious defect in our judicial system. The owner of land could not ascertain or enforce his rights in the court of chancery because the controversy was legal and not equitable; he could not proceed in a court of law because no form of action at law permitted an adjudication of the claims of the parties until after the lien of the judgment, if it was a lien, had been transformed into an absolute title. It was to remedy such situations and to provide a method whereby rights and liabilities might be conclusively ascertained in order that the parties could intelligently order their affairs, that the legislature enacted the Uniform Declaratory Judgments act. P.L.1924 p. 312. This statute authorizes courts "to declare rights, status and other legal relations whether or not further relief is or could be claimed." The court of chancery cannot, however, by *Page 406
force of this statute declare that the defendants' judgment is or is not a lien on complainants' land, since this is a legal question. Paterson v. Currier,
Complainants may have two weeks to institute suit for a declaratory judgment at law and to file a bond and a supplement to their bill alleging the pendency of the law action. Defendants, of course, may answer the supplement. If nothing new is developed by the answer, further proceedings on the suit in this court will be stayed and the restraint against the sheriff's sale continued until the law court disposes of the matter. If complainants do not see fit to adopt this course, the bill of complaint will be dismissed. *Page 407
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
155 A. 373, 108 N.J. Eq. 403, 1931 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/englese-v-hyde-njch-1931.