Garr v. Hill

9 N.J. Eq. 210
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1852
StatusPublished

This text of 9 N.J. Eq. 210 (Garr v. Hill) 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
Garr v. Hill, 9 N.J. Eq. 210 (N.J. Ct. App. 1852).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

In the early part of 1839, Alfred F. James, then of Jersey City, in the county of Hudson, made a verbal agreement with the agent of Heal McLeod, of the city of Hew York, to this effect: That McLeod, on the first of August, 1839, would convey, by deed of warranty, to James, two lots of land in Jersey City, for the consideration of eight hundred dollars, for one lot, and one thousand dollars for the other. On delivery of the deed, James should pay two hundred dollars on each lot, and give a bond and mortgage for the residue of the consideration money, payable in five years from the date thereof, with interest payable on the first day of May, in every year; or, provided, by the said first of August, the said James put improvements, by building, on the two lots, to the value of two hundred dollars on each, McLeod agreed to take a bond and mortgage for the whole purchase money, one thousand eight hundred dollars, payable on like terms. James, under this agreement, went into the possession of the lots, and commenced building dwelling-houses upon them, but of what value does not appear, though one of the answers denies that they were of the value stipulated in the agreement. Ho conveyance was made to James under this agreement. On the twenty-ninth of August, 1839, James and David B. Wake-man entered into an agreement, under seal, and which agreement bears date August twenty-ninth, 1839, in which, after reciting the verbal agreement between James and McLeod, James agrees, in consideration of the sum of five hundred dollars, to convey to said Wakeman all his right, title and interest in the said lots of land, and further agrees to dis[212]*212charge the said McLeod from all liability under his contract, provided McLeod would convey the said premises to Wake-man upon the same terms and conditions specified and agreed upon in their said verbal agreement.

On the thirteenth day of September, 1839, an attachment was issued out of the Common Pleas of the county of Bergen against McLeod, as an absconding debtor. Under this attachment, the sheriff attached this land and all the estate, right and interest of Alfred F. James in the same, and the same was inventoried and appraised at four thousand dollars.

On the twelfth day of October, McLeod conveyed the lots in question to Wakeman, and on the twenty-first of the same month Wakeman and wife executed to McLeod a mortgage to secure Wake man’s bond of one thousand eight hundred dollars. Wakeman entered into possession, and expended several hundred dollars upon the buildings which had been partly erected by James.

In the term of April, 1841, of this court, a foreclosure suit was commenced on the mortgage against Wakeman and wife, as the only defendants. A decree was obtained, and under it the property was sold. McLeod purchased it for the amount of the decree, two thousand one hundred and sixty dollars, and on the twentieth of November, 1841, the sheriff executed and delivered to him a deed.

On the eleventh of December, 1841, McLeod conveyed to one of the defendants, Selah Hill, the consideration expressed in the deed, being two thousand and two hundred dollars. Hill went into possession, finished the buildings, and has put considerable improvement on the lots.

On the twenty-ninth of July, 1843, nearly four years after the attachment was levied, the auditors made sale under the attachment, and conveyed to the complainant the interest of James in the lots and improvements for the sum of forty-one dollars.

The bill prays that the lien which existed on the said lots in favor of the said James may be established, and the complainant be decreed entitled to the same, by virtue of [213]*213his purchase, the complainant submitting to such terms, &c., as the court may direct.

McLeod being deceased, his executors were made parties defendants to the bill, and they and Selah Hill have severally answered. The cause comes up now for final hearing upon the pleadings and proofs.

The complainant has failed to establish the fact that the agreement between James and Wakeman, of the twenty-ninth of August, was antedated. Hill denies fully all knowledge, information or belief that it is so, and clears his conscience of any participation in a fraud, if any was practiced, in that transaction. The agreement is produced. There is nothing suspicious on the face of it. It is proved to be in the handwriting of the subscribing witness B. J. Vancleve, Esq., counselor-at-law, since deceased. If it was antedated, the only object must have been to represent the transaction as prior in point of time to the issuing of the attachment, so as to prevent James’ interest being affected by a lien in consequence of that proceeding. This is charged, by the bill, to have been the object the parties had in view. But it is proved that Mr. John Cassedy, who was the agent of McLeod, and then residing at Hackensack, received by the hands of Wakeman, a letter addressed by James to Mr. Cassedy, informing him of the agreement with Wakeman. The letter is produced', and bears date the twenty-ninth of August, and Mr. Cassedy’s impression is he received it either the day after, or a few days after its date. It appears also in evidence, that on the twenty-ninth of August, James confessed a judgment to Wakeman and his brother, thus showing that on that day they had transactions together in reference to accounts previously existing between them. There is no circumstance proved, from which the inference can fairly be drawn that the agreement was not executed on the day it bears date.

But it is insisted by the bill, and also by counsel in argument, that even if the said agreement was executed prior to the issuing and serving the attachment, it did not amount to a sale and conveyance in presentí, of the right, title and in[214]*214terest of James in the premises, but was merely an executory contract binding James to convey the same, provided McLeod would agree to the substitution of Wakeman in the place of James; and the bill charges that McLeod did not consent to the substitution until after the service of the attachment. It is true, the only evidence as to the time when McLeod first consented to the substitution, was when he executed the deed, which was a short time after the attachment was issued. But McLeod being dead, it was not in the power of the defendants to show when his consent was first given. But I do not consider this material. The agreement of the twenty-ninth of August, was a leg'al transfer of all James’ interest in the land. He sold his interest for the sum of five hundred dollars. There was nothing further for him to do, and no conveyance for him to execute. McLeod’s consent was not necessary to make the transfer of James’ interest complete. It is true, Wakeman might not have been able to compel McLeod to execute to him a deed upon the exact terms stipulated by the agreement; though he might have got the full benefit of it by paying the consideration, if McLeod refused to take his bond and mortgage as a substitute for James’. The agreement between James and Wake-man was complete and executed. Suppose McLeod -had refused to, execute the agreement with Wakeman, Wakeman could not have recovered the five hundred dollars back again from James. And if James had enforced against McLeod the execution of the agreement, James would have been a trustee for Wakeman. If James had, by virtue of his agreement with McLeod, any interest that was subject to attachment, he had an interest he could part with without McLeod’s consent. Ifj therefore, the agreement was bona fide,

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.J. Eq. 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garr-v-hill-njch-1852.