Finley v. Keene

42 A.2d 208, 136 N.J. Eq. 347, 1945 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 76, 35 Backes 347
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 10, 1945
DocketDocket 149/267
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 42 A.2d 208 (Finley v. Keene) 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
Finley v. Keene, 42 A.2d 208, 136 N.J. Eq. 347, 1945 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 76, 35 Backes 347 (N.J. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

Primarily, this is a suit to establish a trust on land, the title to which is in the name of the defendant, Elizabeth A. Keene-Schnizler, and for an accounting. Incidentally, the complainant Alice Keene-Finley, charging fraud and misrepresentation, seeks to have set aside a deed of conveyance of her interest in the land to the defendant, Elizabeth A. Keene. The complainants, Alice Keene-Finley and Louise M. Keene, and the defendant, Elizabeth A. Keene-Schnizler, are sisters.

About the year 1908 Edward J. Keene rented a property on Market Street, in Camden City, and there established his home and a bakery and ice cream business. The Keene family consisted of Mr. and Mrs. Keene and their three daughters. All worked about the home and in the business and all earnings and business profits were placed in a common fund; Mrs. Keene acted as family treasurer and disbursing agent and a bank account was carried in her name. In about 1918 two of the daughters, Louise and Alice, obtained clerical positions and, at about the same time, the third daughter, Elizabeth, took a position in a department store. All gave their earnings to their mother; she deposited them in her bank account; all continued to work, when possible, in the home and bakery.

Mrs. Keene died October 14th, 1920. Louise was appointed her administratrix and paid for her burial out of the bank account she had maintained; the balance in that account, some twelve or fourteen hundred dollars, was permitted to remain there, and a new account was opened by Louise who took over her mother's responsibilities of family treasurer and *Page 349 housekeeper. Louise also worked regularly in the store and bakery.

In 1926 Elizabeth obtained a position with an insurance company in Philadelphia, and a few months later Alice took employment with the same company. Practically all of their earnings they gave to Louise and the money was used about the home or deposited in her bank account. Later, building and loan shares were taken out in the name of Elizabeth, and in the name of Louise; the monthly payments were made by Louise from out the common fund.

By the fall of 1926 the bakery and ice cream business had so deteriorated that Mr. Keene and his daughters decided it should be abandoned. They determined to purchase a sub-urban home, and agreed to use the money remaining in the bank account that had formerly been in the name of Mrs. Keene for that purpose. All four inspected and approved of the purchase of 303 East Atlantic Avenue, Haddon Heights. The purchase price was $7,125; $50 was to be paid upon the signing of the agreement of purchase, $250 within fifteen days thereafter, and $1,625 at the time of settlement; the balance, $5,200, represented an existing mortgage on the property, payment of which the purchasers were to assume.

The agreement to purchase was executed October 18th, 1926. Mr. Keene suggested that his name not be put in the agreement, or the deed, because of possible complications when he should die; Louise also expressed a reluctance to have her name appear in the title papers, perhaps prompted by the reason given by her father for she had contracted tuberculosis and had been in a sanitarium in 1918. As a consequence only Elizabeth and Alice were named as purchasers. There is some dispute as to just who produced the money for the down payment of $50, but all three sisters agree that the other two payments were made from the common fund managed by Louise. Final settlement was made and the deed of conveyance was dated December 18th, 1926; the grantees were Elizabeth A. Keene and Alice H. Keene.

There can be no possible question but that a resulting trust in favor of Mr. Keene and Louise took effect upon the execution of the deed. In fact, this is alleged by Alice and is now, *Page 350 in effect, conceded by Elizabeth. In a formal answer filed in this cause Elizabeth asserted that the cash payments made, aggregating $1,925, were from the fund belonging to her father and his three daughters; at final hearing she declared that when she and Alice took title to the property she recognized that Mr. Keene and Louise each had and retained a one-quarter interest therein; and, on cross-examination at final hearing, she admitted that both Louise and Alice still had an interest in the property.Depeyster v. Gould (Court of Chancery), 3 N.J. Eq. 474,480; Lykles v. Lykles (Court of Chancery), 109 N.J. Eq. 490; 158 Atl. Rep. 105; Roy v. Enot (Court of Chancery),120 N.J. Eq. 67; 183 Atl. Rep. 906.

After the Haddon Heights home was purchased, Mr. Keene and his three daughters went there to live. Elizabeth and Alice continued to be employed with the Philadelphia insurance company; Louise continued to act as homemaker and family treasurer; Mr. Keene obtained employment; all contributed to the upkeep of the home. In 1933 Mr. Keene opened a tea room and, with the assistance of Louise, operated it successfully. Also, two boarders were accepted in the home. Their board, the earnings from the tea room and the salaries of Elizabeth and Alice were all turned over to Louise.

September 14th, 1929, Alice married. She gave up her position in Philadelphia and her husband, James P. Finley, came to live in the Keene home. He contributed $20 as for board, each week to Louise. Two years later, after Alice had taken over much of the housework because Louise was working in the tea room, this payment was reduced to $15 per week, and then, a year later, to $12.50 per week. Following the marriage of Alice, Louise suggested that if Elizabeth, who was still employed in Philadelphia, would take over the responsibility of paying mortgage interest and amortization and the taxes Elizabeth need no longer contribute any of her earnings to the family account. Elizabeth was never asked to pay board; she agreed to do as Louise suggested.

In February, 1937, Alice and her husband moved into their own home. About that time Mr. Keene closed the tea room and Louise obtained employment in Atlantic City. Only *Page 351 Elizabeth and Mr. Keene remained in the home and it was decided to convert it into a two-family apartment. The total cost of the alterations was not disclosed, but $800 then remaining in the family account carried in the name of Louise was used. It also appeared that Elizabeth applied for and was paid the withdrawal value of the building and loan stock carried in her name and these moneys were expended, in whole or in part, to paint and improve the apartment house. The alterations were completed in 1937. Louise, having suffered a recurrence of her old malady, was taken to the tuberculosis sanitarium at Lakeland July 1st, 1939. She has been a patient there ever since. Thereafter, and until the death of Mr. Keene February 24th, 1942, he and Elizabeth occupied the second floor apartment and Louise made it her home when she could be with them. Elizabeth rented the first floor apartment; moneys collected by her were used to maintain the property, Mr. Keene contributing moneys he received from the sale of his restaurant fixtures and Louise earnings from her employment in Atlantic City and Camden. Mr. Keene died intestate; his three daughters are his next of kin and heirs-at-law.

Upon the death of Mr. Keene, Elizabeth let the apartment she and her father had been occupying and went to live with her sister Alice.

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Bluebook (online)
42 A.2d 208, 136 N.J. Eq. 347, 1945 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 76, 35 Backes 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finley-v-keene-njch-1945.