Flemming v. Lawless

38 A. 864, 56 N.J. Eq. 138, 11 Dickinson 138, 1897 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 23
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedNovember 18, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 38 A. 864 (Flemming v. Lawless) 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
Flemming v. Lawless, 38 A. 864, 56 N.J. Eq. 138, 11 Dickinson 138, 1897 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 23 (N.J. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

This is a motion, on behalf of the defendants, to open a final decree in this cause made on the 25th day of January, 1897, fixing the amount due — $5,507—upon the mortgage set out in the bill, and $1,558.85 for taxes on the mortgaged premises paid by complainant, and decreeing a sale to pay the same. From that decree an appeal was taken to the court of errors and appeals, and the cause was argued at the last June Term thereof. Before the decision thereof by that court, upon application of the defendants, the court sent the record, back to this court, in order to enable this court to deal with the application upon its merits.

The application, made by petition, is based upon the discovery by the defendant of a piece of documentary evidence, to wit, a receipt for a payment on account of the taxes, included in the decree, alleged to have been made to the complainant’s agent by the defendant, and which receipt was not in the possession or control of the defendants when the cause was tried in this court.

The opening of a decree, fairly obtained after a hearing, in which both parties have been fully heard, is a matter resting in the discretion of the court, to be exercised with care and caution and in such manner as to promote justice.

Two things must, of course, be proven by the defendants in order to entitle them to the ear of the court — first, that the alleged receipt is genuine, and second, that it was not within their possession or control at the time of the hearing in this [140]*140court, and that such want of possession and control was without fault on their part.

Counsel for the complainant makes a preliminary objection to the granting of the petition, based in part upon the terms of the one hundred and fifty-seventh section of the common-law Practice act, and in part upon the misconduct of the defendants, and contends that the defendants are absolutely debarred by the terms of the last clause of said act from now offering said receipt in evidence, even if its genuineness were proven and it were also proven to the satisfaction of the court that it was not in their possession or control at the time of the hearing before this court;, and as an additional and supporting ground, he contends that, without the aid of that act, the defendants are not entitled to the ear of the court because they have disobeyed an order of the court with respect to the very receipt in question, and are in contempt therefor.

The consideration of this question renders it necessary to recur to some of the facts and circumstances which preceded the hearing in this cause.

The bill alleges that the owner of the mortgaged premises failed to pay the taxes, water rents and other municipal charges levied by the city of Jersey City upon the premises, and permitted them to fall in arrear to a large amount; that the arrears were finally adjusted by a commission under what is called the Martin act, and that the complainant, as mortgagee, was obliged to pay several large sums for the taxes so adjusted, in order to save the premises from being sold, for which she claims a first lien upon the premises. The amount so paid was alleged in the bill to be $3,272.70 in three separate payments, in the months of April and May, 1890, and the further sum of $1,512.56 on the 13th of October, 1891, making in all $4,785.26.

The defendant Lawless set up in his answer that the complainant had received the sum of $1,200 from one Vorrath in payment of a part of the mortgaged premises conveyed by the defendant and released by the complainant, and that that sum should be applied either to the mortgage or arrears of taxes, [141]*141without indicating which. That .payment of $1,200 was admitted by the complainant at the hearing.

The defendant Lawless set up further payments especially on account of the taxes, as follows:

“The defendant Peter Lawless admits the payment of three thousand two hundred and seventy-two dollars and seventy cents for taxes, water rents and other municipal charges by Jersey City, as set forth in said bill, as having been made by the complainant [ignoring the alleged payment of $1,512.56, October 13th, 1891], but avers and insists that he paid and reimbursed said complainant for such payment made by her, and paid in excess of said sum to her or her attorney, James Flemming, now deceased, for said taxes, water rents and municipal charges the sum of three thousand two hundred and twelve dollars and thirty cents, for which he has vouchers ready to he produced and proved The said defendant Peter Lawless admits that there is due on the mortgage of the said complainant the sum of nine hundred and forty-nine dollars and fifty cents, without interest, which interest is to be added and which sum he is ready to pay to the complainant in satisfaction of her said mortgage.”

It thus appears that Lawless, in his answer, alleged payments on account of taxes, &c., of $3,272.70, plus $3,212.30, making $6,485.

On the 23d of November, 1895, and before the cause had been referred for trial, the complainant presented her petition to the chancellor, setting out a brief résumé of the proceedings, and then follows this allegation :

“That in the answer of Peter Lawless, Julia Bathe and Catherine O’Neill, the said defendants allege that they paid to James Flemming certain sums of money for taxes and on the mortgage in question, and that there is now- due on said mortgage and taxes the sum of nine hundred and forty-nine dollars and fifty cents, with interest, and that they have certain receipts, vouchers and other evidences in writing of the payment of the said sums; that she is ignorant of any such receipts for the amounts above set forth.”

The petition further alleges that the petitioner had requested the defendants to permit her to inspect and examine any receipts or other evidences in writing of such payments, but that the defendants had refused. It prayed that an order might be made directing the defendants “to produce the said receipts, vouchers or other evidences in writing of the payments of the [142]*142said sums of money and leave the same for inspection and examination in such a manner as the court might think fit.

Upon that petition an order was made on the 2d of December, 1895, reciting the petition and directing

“ that said defendants do, within five days from the date of service upon them of a copy of this order, which need not be certified, produce receipts, vouchers or other evidences in writing for all the payments claimed to have been made in their answer, on the mortgage in question, and also the receipts, vouchers and other evidence in writing of the payment by them or any of than to James Flemming of three thousand two hundred and seventy-two' dollars and seventy cents, and the sum of three thousand two hundred and twelve dollars and thirty cents, as set forth in said answer, and leave them with Isaac Eomaine, Esquire, one of the masters of this court, for the space of ten days, subject to the examination of said petitioner.”

This order was served upon the defendants’ solicitors on the 7th of December, 1895. At that time the defendant Lawless alleges and now admits that he had in his possession, or in that of his counsel, a Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
38 A. 864, 56 N.J. Eq. 138, 11 Dickinson 138, 1897 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flemming-v-lawless-njch-1897.