Foley v. Kirk

33 N.J. Eq. 170
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 33 N.J. Eq. 170 (Foley v. Kirk) 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
Foley v. Kirk, 33 N.J. Eq. 170 (N.J. Ct. App. 1880).

Opinion

The Vice-Chancellor.

The principal object of the bill in this case is to compel the defendant to surrender, for cancellation, five declarations of sale, which the complainants allege were,, long ago, fully paid, and are, consequently without legal force, but which they say the defendant intends, wrongfully, to put in evidence against them on the trial of an action of ejectment, which they have brought against him, and that their production in evidence will very seriously imperil their just rights.

The facts material to the controversy, which are either admitted or so fully proved as to be beyond dispute, may be stated as follows:

Ann Stanton died intestate, in 1843, seized in fee of two lots of land situate in the city of Hoboken. She died without leaving issue, but leaving a husband, and two brothers and a sister. A child was born to her and her husband, which died in infancy, so that, on her death, her lands descended to her two brothers and her sister, subject to an estate by the curtesy in her husband. Her husband, John Stanton, conveyed the lands of which she died seized to his brother, William Stanton, by deed dated July 15th, 1846. William Stanton, after he acquired John’s life [172]*172estate, neglected to pay a tax of $14.93, assessed against one of lots for the year 1858, and on the 16th of May, 1859, the the proper municipal authority sold this lot to one Ebenezer Montague, for the amount of the tax and costs, for the term of nine hundred years, and issued a declaration of sale. The same lot was again sold, to the same purchaser, for a term of ninety-nine years, on the 30th day of April, 1860, for the tax of the year 1859, and also for a sewer assessment of $64.23. Declarations of sale, in execution of these sales, were also issued. On the same day the other lot was sold, to the same purchaser, for a term of ninety-nine years, for the tax of 1859, and likewise for a sewer assessment of $66.43. Declarations of sale were also issued upon, these sales. The total amount of the taxes and assessments for which these sales were made, was $180.42.

Some time in the year 1861, William Stanton applied to one Henry Thomas, who resided at Utica, in the state of New York, to make him a loan for the purpose of enabling him to pay off or purchase Montague’s claims under the tax sales. Thomas consented to do so, and afterwards paid Montague $300 in satisfaction of his claim. The amount so paid to Montague was negotiated wholly by Thomas and Montague. Stanton took no part in it, nor was he consulted about it. Prior to this time, Thomas had paid Stanton’s debts, advancing a considerable sum for that purpose. Immediately after the sum to be paid to Montague was agreed on, Stanton requested Thomas to accept a mortgage for the whole of his indebtedness to him, including not only his payment. to Montague, but also his payments to others. This Thomas declined to do, but insisted on having an absolute conveyance, so,” to quote Thomas’s own words, “ that I could see that the taxes, the interest, and so on, were paid in the future, but I told him I would give him any kind of a paper that could be drawn, to secure him the property back.” Stanton assented to this arrangement, and in execution of it, on the 21st day of January, 1862, conveyed the lots in question to Thomas, by deed absolute on its face; and Thomas, on the same day, executed an agreement, under seal, agreeing to reconvey the lots to Stanton or to his wife, or to any other person he might name, on being [173]*173paid his debt. The agreement provided that Stanton should retain possession of the lots and take their rents and issues, and pay all taxes, assessments and water rents, and that the interest on his debt to Thomas should be paid semi-annually, and that $200 of the principal should be paid at the end of three years, $200 more at the end of four years, and the balance at the end of five years. Two days afterwards (January 23d, 1862), Montague assigned the four declarations of sale, issued to him April 30th, 1860, to Thomas, and also executed a deed to Thomas for oue of the lots. This deed states on its face that it was executed for the purpose of releasing and conveying to Thomas any right Montague may have acquired by his purchase of the let at two tax sales theretofore made by the city authorities, one February 8th, 1858, and the other May 16th, 1859.

On the 24th of November, 1862, William Stanton, by a writing under his hand and seal, assigned to the defendant all his rights under his contract with Thomas for a reconveyance of the lots, and, by the same writing, directed Thomas to convey the lots to the defendant. The defendant swears that this assignment was made in execution of a contract he had made with Stanton for the purchase of the lots, with other lands, at the price of $7,200, $5,000 of which was the price he had agreed to give for these two lots. He further testifies that he fully understood, when he made the purchase, that the deed made by Stanton to Thomas was not intended to have effect as a deed, but was meant to have effect as a mortgage, and that he paid Thomas, in satisfaction of the debt secured by the deed, out of the purchase-money he had agreed to pay to Stanton, the sum of $2,580. Thomas, in fulfillment of his contract with Stanton, and pursuant to the directions contained in the assignment, conveyed the two lots to the defendant by deed dated January 10th, 1863. The defendant also testified that the five declarations of sale issued to Montague, and also the deed made by Montague to Thomas, were delivered to him with the deed from Thomas to him, and as parts of his muniments of title.

Henry Thomas is the only person now living who took part in the transaction of January, 1862, when Montague’s tax titles [174]*174were paid or purchased, and Stanton executed the deed to Thomas. Montague, Stantou, and the lawyer under whose direction the business was done, are all dead. Mr. Thomas has been examined as a witness. He swears that he paid the taxes to Montague for the benefit of Stanton’s family that the amount he paid was included in the security he took from Stanton, and that he understood the tax sales were to be canceled at once.

John Stanton, the life tenant, died October 13th, 1877. The complainants are either heirs at law of Ann Stanton or stand in the title of her heirs. Shortly after John Stanton’s death, the complainants brought an action of ejectment against the defendant, to recover possession of the two lots of which Ann Stanton died seized. The defendant has appeared and interposed a plea, and in this case he has made no attempt to deny or conceal the fact that on the trial of the action of ejectment, he intends to use the declarations of sale as evidence, and to insist that they, in connection with his other title papers, give him a perfect legal title to the possession of the two lots in controversy, for a long term of years.

To compel the surrender and cancellation of written instruments which have spent their force, and are mere nullities, but which, left in an uncanceled state, may becloud a title, or be used for dishonest purposes, is an ancient and well-established head of equity jurisprudence. If the instrument was originally valid, but has, by subsequent events, such as satisfaction, or payment, or other extinguishment, become fundus offioio, and the party holding it refuses to surrender or cancel it, the court will compel .

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Bluebook (online)
33 N.J. Eq. 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foley-v-kirk-njch-1880.