Gendre v. Byrnes

44 N.J. Eq. 372
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 44 N.J. Eq. 372 (Gendre v. Byrnes) 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
Gendre v. Byrnes, 44 N.J. Eq. 372 (N.J. Ct. App. 1888).

Opinion

Van Fleet, V. C.

The main object of this suit is to procure a decree invalidating a deed made by Maria Mulock, now deceased, in June, 1880,. to her daughter, Fanny J. Byrnes. Mrs. Byrnes asks for a dis[373]*373missal of the complainants’ bill, on the ground that, even if the ■facts stated in it are taken to be true, no case is made which ■entitles the complainants to the decree they ask. Both the complainants and the defendant are beneficiaries under the will of Mrs. Mulock. The defendant and two of the complainants were her daughters, and the other complainant was her grandson. If the decree which the complainants ask should be made, the title to the lands in question will not vest in the complainants, but in trustees appointed by the will of Mrs. Mulock, to be held by them, however, for the benefit of the complainants and Mrs. Byrnes. The complainants allege, that, prior to the institution of their suit, they applied to the trustees to bring a suit for the same purpose for which they now sue, but that the trustees refused to do so. The complainants then brought this suit, not only against Mrs. Byrnes, but also against the trustees. It is not disputed that the complainants have a right to maintain this action, under the circumstances stated, provided it shall be determined that the facts, which constitute the gravamen of their action, are sufficient to support the decree they ask.

The case made by the bill against the validity of the deed uiider which the defendant holds the lands in question, may be stated as follows : Mrs. Mulock died on the 12th of May, 1882, at the age of eighty-six; she left a will, by which she directed that almost the whole of her estate should be divided into three shares; she gave one share to the defendant absolutely, and the use of the other two-thirds, in equal shares, to the complainants, Mrs. Le Gendre and Mrs. Lu Gar, during life, with remainder to their respective issue. Mrs. Mulock was a lady of large means; she owned real estate in the city of New York, and also in Richmond county, New York, and in the cities of Chicago, Illinois, and Newark, New Jersey; for five years prior to her death she had been in feeble health, and her mind, for all that time, in consequence of her sickness and old age, was so far impaired as to render her incapable of managing her property and her business. The defendant livéd with her mother, and for five years prior to her mother’s death, was her mother’s agent and «confidential adviser, and had the care and management of all her [374]*374mother’s property. While standing in this relation to her mother, and on the 11th of June, 1880, she induced her mother to convey to her, without consideration of any kind, improved property, situate in the city of Newark, worth at least $40,000, of which she was then collecting the rents for her mother, and withheld the deed from record until after her mother’s death. The bill, in addition to the facts above set forth, charges the defendant with having induced her mother to make the deed in question by fraud and the exercise of undue influence, but does not state the particular acts or facts on which this charge is founded. And this omission is made the main ground of the defendant’s motion. If this charge constituted the only foundation of the complainants’ right to relief, the bill would be subject to objection, on the ground that it lacked that degree of fullness and particularity in statement which the rules of pleading require. The case will, however, be considered as though the bill contained no such charge in express terms.

Eor present purposes, the defendant must be understood as assenting to the truth of each fact above asserted.. The question then is, Ho the facts thus admitted so far impugn the integrity of the defendant’s deed as to make it the duty of the court to set the deed aside? The answer which must, according to a. highly salutary principle of law, be given to this question, I think, is entirely plain. The bill describes, the relation existing between the mother and the daughter, at the time the deed was made, as that of principal and agent, but the facts therein stated would rather seem to indicate that it more closely resembled that of guardian and ward. The mother was in feeble health and weak in mind-; she had reached the last stage of her life- on earth; her natural strength was so far abated and impaired as that a little labor, either physical or mental, had become a great toil to her;. She had reached the point in human existence-where nothing is so-desirable as rest, freedom from care, and peace. To an old lady;, in this condition, a surrender of the management of her property and the conduct of her business into other hands, so that she may be free from its care and worry, is almost indispensable to her-comfortable existence, and the person to whom she commits her-[375]*375interests, whether a child or stranger, very soon, as a general rule, acquires over her not only a very powerful influence, but, in most cases, an absolute ascendency. Her manager, generally, very soon becomes the guardian of both her property and her person. The bill puts the defendant very much in this position towards her mother. For over three years prior to the making of the deed, the bill says, the mother’s state was one of complete dependency, and the daughter was in a position where she could exercise almost supreme control. It also says, that, while the parties occupied these positions towards each other, the daughter got from her mother a deed for property, worth at least $40,000, for which she gave her mother nothing.

. Whether we say the defendant, at the time she obtained title, was simply the agent of her mother, or stood in a relation to her mother where she was subject to higher duties and greater responsibilities than those of an agent, is, in my judgment, of no importance whatever. As agent simply she was bound, in all her dealings with her mother, to practice towards her mother the .utmost good faith. The law on this subject is settled beyond all question, and rests on the highest considerations of justice and safety. An agent is bound to serve his principal to the best of his skill, knowledge, ability and judgment. The law, to prevent him from being tempted to betray his principal, will not allow him to place his interests in conflict with those of his principal, and if, in any case, this rule be violated, the agent, in order to keep what he has obtained, must show that, in the particular transaction, he served his principal, against himself, with the same fidelity that he would have been required to use against a third person. Lord Eldon called it a great rule, which requires, that'he who bargains in a matter where he may obtain an advantage for himself, with a person placing confidence in him, shall show, as a condition of keeping what he has obtained, that he made a reasonable use of the confidence reposed in him. Gibson v. Jeyes, 6 Ves. 266, 278. If an agent obtains from his principal the title to lands of which he has charge for his principal, and the validity of his title is subsequently assailed, he must, even in a case where he has given a consideration, in Order to maintain his [376]*376title, show affirmatively that there was no undue influence exercised, no advantage taken, and no imposition practiced. In the language of Mr. Justice Van Syckel, speaking for the court of errors and appeals, in Condit v. Blackwell, 7 C.E. Gr. 481, 486: “The transaction must be characterized by the utmost good faith.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 N.J. Eq. 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gendre-v-byrnes-njch-1888.