Furer v. Real Estate Corp.

154 A. 543, 108 N.J. Eq. 221, 7 Backes 221, 1931 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 143
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 29, 1931
StatusPublished

This text of 154 A. 543 (Furer v. Real Estate Corp.) 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
Furer v. Real Estate Corp., 154 A. 543, 108 N.J. Eq. 221, 7 Backes 221, 1931 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 143 (N.J. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Complainant, Michael Furer, is a judgment creditor of defendant The Real Estate Corporation, and seeks a decree declaring void, as against complainant, a certain conveyance of real estate — known as the Somerdale Tract — made by The Real Estate Corporation to defendant Linkop Realty Company.

Defendant The Real Estate Corporation was never the owner of the Somerdale Tract, the land against which the lien of complainant's judgment is sought to be enforced; it merely held the legal title to the land in trust for others, and in good faith and in pursuance of its trust conveyed the *Page 222 legal title to the parties entitled to it, long before the present judgment was procured against The Real Estate Corporation. The theory now urged in support of the amended bill is that credit was given by complainant's assignors — Getzov and J.L. Furer — to The Real Estate Corporation because of its apparent ownership of the land, and hence, as it is claimed, the real owners of the land are now estopped from denying the ownership of The Real Estate Corporation.

It is true that the legal title to the land was in The Real Estate Corporation at the time credit was extended to that corporation by complainant. It is also true — and is admitted by stipulation — that The Real Estate Corporation at no time enjoyed any beneficial interest in the land, but held the legal title merely for the convenience of three individuals who owned the entire beneficial estate. Nor did the transaction, in which it is alleged that complainant extended credit to The Real Estate Corporation, have anything to do with the Somerdale Tract. That transaction wholly related to other land — not here in controversy — which complainant's assignors were selling to The Real Estate Corporation; in making that sale complainant's assignors accepted in part payment a purchase-money mortgage from The Real Estate Corporation on the land so sold; the claim is that complainant's assignors would not have accepted the bond of The Real Estate Corporation, which bond was secured by the purchase-money mortgage, but for their belief that The Real Estate Corporation was the absolute owner of the other land which it in fact held in trust. The judgment which complainant now seeks to enforce against that land is a judgment against The Real Estate Corporation for a deficiency arising from the foreclosure of the purchase-money mortgage.

A more detailed history of the transaction seems essential. February 8th, 1926, complainant's assignors held an agreement signed by "G.R. Weiner, Agent," whereby the latter agreed to purchase from the former certain real estate not here involved. Settlement under that contract was made on that day. The conveyance was made to The Real Estate Corporation, pursuant to the directions of Miss Weiner, and *Page 223 a purchase-money bond and mortgage for a part of the consideration was made by that corporation to the vendors. At that time The Real Estate Corporation held in trust the legal title to certain real estate known as the Somerdale Tract — the premises herein in controversy — by deed dated January 29th, 1926, and recorded February 2d 1926. The origin and nature of that trust are set forth in an opinion of this court in Frank v. Linkop Realty Corporation and The Real Estate Corporation,106 N.J. Eq. 567. The essential facts in the Frank Case have been stipulated as facts in this case. As there appears, Miss Weiner and two associates had contracted to buy the Somerdale Tract and had arranged to have the title conveyed, at settlement, to a corporation to be formed for that purpose; the stock of the corporation to be held by the three purchasers in proportion to their respective interests. But on settlement day (January 29th, 1926) the corporation had not been formed and for that reason the legal title was made to The Real Estate Corporation for it to hold the title until the proposed corporation could be formed, when The Real Estate Corporation was to convey to the newly-formed corporation. The new corporation, defendant Linkop Realty Corporation, was subsequently formed, as planned, and the legal title was conveyed to it by direction of the three beneficial owners. It was during that period in which the naked legal title was in The Real Estate Corporation, and only a few days after the trust conveyance to The Real Estate Corporation had been made, that the conveyance of the other real estate was made by complainant's assignors to The Real Estate Corporation by direction of Miss Weiner under the contract of sale held by complainant's assignors, and the part purchase-money mortgage and bond taken by them. Some two years later judgments were recovered against The Real Estate Corporation by one Frank and also by complainant herein. In 1930 Frank filed a bill to set aside the conveyance of the Somerdale Tract from The Real Estate Corporation to Linkop Realty Corporation on the ground that the conveyance was without consideration and void as to creditors of The Real Estate Corporation; *Page 224 shortly thereafter complainant, Michael Furer, filed the original bill herein upon precisely the same grounds as the Frank bill. The Frank suit was first heard and the decision already referred to was filed October 4th, 1930. By reference to that decision it will be found that the trust was held to have been bona fide and the conveyance to the Linkop Realty Corporation a bona fide conveyance in fulfillment of the trust and unassailable by a creditor of The Real Estate Corporation; the bill was accordingly dismissed. But near the conclusion of that opinion, after a statement to the effect that where one holds a naked legal title, as trustee for another, he has no interest which his judgment creditors can have satisfied out of the trust property, it is there stated that the one and only exception to that rule is based upon an estoppel arising from credit given to the trustee on the faith of his ownership. Shortly thereafter the present suit came on for final hearing and on the eve of the hearing complainant's bill was amended; the amended bill was predicated upon the claim — then for the first time asserted — that it was in reliance upon the belief that The Real Estate Corporation was the beneficial owner of the Somerdale Tract that complainant's assignors were induced to waive their right to a bond and mortgage from Miss Weiner and accept the bond and mortgage from The Real Estate Corporation. This tedious recitation of facts is deemed necessary to fully disclose that it was not until after the suggestion above referred to as made by this court in its opinion in the Frank Case, in October, 1930, that the notion that complainant's assignors had been misled was made a ground for relief in the present case; a crucial fact first suggested, and then by an amended bill, on the event of trial nearly five years after the event.

There are to be found authorities which sanction the view that where one has placed his real estate in the name of another for the purpose of enabling the latter to obtain credit in his business transactions, the real owner of the land may be estopped from repudiating the record title, as against creditors of the trustee who have extended him credit in *Page 225 faith of his ownership of the land.

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Related

Frank v. Linkop Realty Corp.
151 A. 550 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1930)
Trenton Banking Company v. . Duncan
86 N.Y. 221 (New York Court of Appeals, 1881)
Bicocchi v. Casey-Swasey Co.
42 S.W. 963 (Texas Supreme Court, 1897)
Pitney v. Bolton
45 N.J. Eq. 639 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
154 A. 543, 108 N.J. Eq. 221, 7 Backes 221, 1931 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/furer-v-real-estate-corp-njch-1931.