H. C. Tack Co. v. Ayers

38 A. 194, 56 N.J. Eq. 56, 11 Dickinson 56, 1897 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 5
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedAugust 12, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 38 A. 194 (H. C. Tack Co. v. Ayers) 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
H. C. Tack Co. v. Ayers, 38 A. 194, 56 N.J. Eq. 56, 11 Dickinson 56, 1897 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 5 (N.J. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

The only contested question in the cause is as to the order of priority between the complainant’s mortgage and a judgment held by the defendant Ayers, who, as he claims, has a lien upon an undivided portion of the mortgaged premises.

The premises in question consist of a lot of about one acre of unimproved and unoccupied land, devised by a father — David Wilson — to three brothers, Henry A., George L. and Charles B. Wilson.

On April 26th, 1882, the three brothers made a partition of the premises into three equal plots, by three several deeds, all bearing date April 26th, 1882, each expressed to be made in consideration of $1, in each of which two of the brothers released to the third the plot intended to be allotted to him, the result of which was that each brother became seized in severalty of an equal divided one-third part or plot of the acre.

The deed to Charles Wilson was recorded on the 14th of March, 1883, and on the 20th of May, 1890, he conveyed his plot to his two brothers — Henry and George — by deed expressed to be in consideration of $800, which was duly recorded on the 23d of May, 1890. The result of these conveyances was to vest the title to the whole original lot in Henry and George — that is, they were tenants in common of Charles’ plot, and each held in severalty one of the other plots.

In that condition of things, Henry and George made the mortgage set out in the bill, dated and recorded in September, 1893, conveying the whole plot to the complainant to secure promissory notes given by them to the complainant. The two deeds, however, from Charles and George to Henry, and Charles [58]*58and Henry to George, of the two plots set apart to each of them in the original partition, were not recorded until the 26th of March, 1894, leaving the apparent title of those two plots still in the three brothers. In the meantime, to wit, on the 19th of February, 1894, one McComb recovered a judgment against Charles for $486.49 in the Bergen county circuit court, which was afterwards assigned to the defendant Ayers. Under'that judgment Ayers claims a lien superior to the complainant’s mortgage upon one equal undivided third part of the two several plots set off to Henry and George. His claim is based upon the fourteenth section of the “Act respecting conveyances” (Gen. Stat. p. 855), which declares

“that every deed or conveyance of land which shall not be recorded within fifteen days after its execution and delivery shall he void and of no effect against a subsequent judgment creditor or bona fide purchaser, or mortgagee for a valuable consideration, not having notice thereof.”

Counsel for complainant seeks to evade the literal effect of this statute in several ways. First, he says that by the will under which the three brothers claim this land the legal title was not vested in them at the time the judgment was recovered, and therefore no lien was acquired. Without setting out the will at length, I think that point cannot be sustained.

His next point is that the legal title having been conveyed' away and the title absolutely vested in the mortgagors before judgment, there was nothing left for the judgment against Charles to fasten upon, and that the general rule is that a judgment creditor is not a bona fide purchaser for value, and cannot be classed with a person who has parted with anything of value on the strength of apparent title, citing, in that behalf, the cases of Harney v. Bank, 7 Dick. Ch. Rep. 697, and Cresse v. Security Land Co., 9 Dick. Ch. Rep. 447, and other cases there cited.

The general principle undoubtedly is that a mere judgment creditor is not entitled to the vantage ground of a bona fide purchaser or mortgagee who has parted with value on the strength of an apparent title; but the difficulty in the way of counsel’s present argument is that the statute in question, as was pointed [59]*59out in the cases just cited, places a judgment creditor on a higher plane in this respect than either a purchaser or mortgagee, and it is impossible to avoid the effect of that language. The unrecorded deeds from Charles to Henry and George must be held absolutely void against the judgment creditor unless he had actual or implied notice of them, and the complainant's mortgage must fall with them.

Some evidence was offered as to the possession of this lot by the mortgagors, from which it was faintly argued that a judgment creditor was bound to take notice that they were the exclusive owners; but the proof in that respect failed, and the case must stand unaided by any implied notice arising from possession. In fact, there was no actual, exclusive occupation.

But counsel for complainant placed his case on higher ground and made a further argument, which may be divided as follows: First, he says that the chain of title of the premises indicated clearly to the judgment creditor that there must have been a partition. The interest upon which he claims a lien is, as we have seen, an equal undivided one-third part of the equal divided two-thirds of the whole, viz., the two plots set off to Henry and George, and, in order to show any title to that two-thirds part, defendant is obliged to resort to the title of the three brothers under the will of their father, and, back of that, to the deed to the father on record. He cannot rely upon mere possession in his judgment debtor, for he had no other or greater possession than his brothers had, and, in point of fact, there was no actual possession. This chain of title charges him with notice that his debtor held as tenant in common with his brothers. He then finds the two brothers giving a conveyance to the judgment debtor, for a nominal consideration, of a distinct portion of the premises which, when plotted, shows that it was exactly or nearly a one-third portion, and later the record shows the debtor reconveying to the brothers, for a full consideration, this one-third part.

The contention of counsel of complainant is that these conveyances, in connection with the title to the whole land in the father, and the devise to the three sons clearly indicate that there had [60]*60been a conventual partition carried through by the execution of mutual releases.

The precise line of argument is this: that the judgment creditor, or the sheriff as his agent, in looking for landed property upon which to levy, would have found none whatever indicated by any actual possession; that his next resort, in “the ordinary course of business, would have been to search the record of deeds in the name of the debtor as grantee, which would have led him necessarily to the conveyance by his two brothers to him, for a nominal consideration, of a distinct plot of land not marked on the ground by any metes and bounds, and a reconveyance of the same by the debtor, for a valuable consideration, to the two brothers. Further searching, he would have learned, as a matter in pais, that the judgment debtor was the son of a certain man, who was deceased. Looking, then, in the name of that man as grantee, he would have found a deed to the father of a block of land which, when plotted and placed by its calls on the ground, he would have found included in its metes and bounds the small plot previously conveyed by the two brothers to the debtor, and by the debtor back to the two brothers, and that the small plot was just one-third in size of the whole.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 A. 194, 56 N.J. Eq. 56, 11 Dickinson 56, 1897 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-c-tack-co-v-ayers-njch-1897.