Hargrave v. LaPalomento (In Re LaPalomento)

29 B.R. 291
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedMay 17, 1983
Docket16-01158
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 29 B.R. 291 (Hargrave v. LaPalomento (In Re LaPalomento)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hargrave v. LaPalomento (In Re LaPalomento), 29 B.R. 291 (N.J. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

On Complaint for Determination of Rights in Real Property.

WILLIAM LIPKIN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The debtors, Daniel J. and Barbara D. LaPalomento, filed a voluntary Petition under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code on February 9, 1982. Thereafter, the trustee filed the present complaint to determine the extent and validity of liens in real estate, which was part of the debtor’s estate.

The complaint recited that the debtors had executed the following mortgages: a first mortgage to Penns Grove National Bank with the approximate remaining sum of $30,000.,

a second mortgage to Peoples Bank of South Jersey with a remaining balance of $41,000., and
a third mortgage to Beneficial Finance Company of New Jersey with a remaining balance of approximately $23,000.

There is no dispute as to the validity of the first mortgage to Penns Grove National Bank or the third mortgage to Beneficial Finance Company. The trustee and Beneficial Finance both contest the validity of the second mortgage to Peoples Bank, claiming that the description of the mortgaged property given on the mortgage document is legally insufficient, because it is indefinite and vague and does not provide adequate record notice of the property subject to the mortgage. If this argument is correct, the lien will inure to the benefit of the estate under Section 551 of the Code.

The mortgage to Peoples Bank contains the following description of the property:

... the mortgagors hereby mortgage to mortgagee premises known as Pennsville-Pedricktown Road Salem County Penns-ville, NJ

The document does not contain a metes and bounds description, a tax lot and block number, a street address or a reference to the deed covering the premises. Although the mortgage description states that the property is located in Pennsville Township, New *293 Jersey, the parties agree that, in fact, the property is located in Pedricktown, Old-mans Township, Salem County, New Jersey.

Pennsville and Oldmans are distinct municipal entities, both of which are located in Salem County. The parties also agree that the location of Pennsville-Pedricktown Road is in Oldmans Township; there is no road by that name in Pennsville Township.

The trustee may avoid this mortgage on the real estate only if applicable state law would have allowed a bona fide purchaser of real property to avoid it, even though there has been no such purchaser of the property from the present debtors. 11 U.S.C. § 544(a)(3). This is one of the trustee’s “strong arm” powers under the Bankruptcy Code. New Jersey law must be consulted to determine if a bona fide purchaser of this property could have purchased the debtors’ property free from the mortgage of Peoples Bank.

Under N.J.S.A. 46:21-1, whenever a mortgage has been duly recorded with the county recording officer in which the real estate is located, all subsequent judgment creditors, purchasers and mortgagees have constructive notice of the recording of the mortgage and its contents for purposes of determining priority. 1 There is nothing in the statutes prescribing any certain type of description as sufficiently definite to provide notice of the property mortgaged, or subject to other transfers.

However, as a matter of common sense, recording a mortgage or deed would not be useful unless the instrument had a specific enough description to indicate what real estate was covered by the instrument. The following relevant analysis is given in 59 C.J.S., Mortgages, § 108:

A mortgage, in order to be effective, must contain some description of the land intended to be covered; it should contain a reasonably certain description of the premises intended to be covered by it, or the description of the premises should reasonably furnish the means of its identification. If the description is so indefinite or uncertain that the property cannot be identified, or if it calls for premises which have no existence or which cannot possibly be found, the mortgage will be invalid unless reformed.
The office of the description, however, is not so much to identify the property conveyed as to furnish the means of its identification; and, although it is vague or indefinite, it will not render the mortgage inoperative, if it contains data from which a certain description can be made out, or, as discussed infra § 111, if by the aid of extraneous evidence it can be amplified and applied with certainty to its intended subject. Where a single tract is situated in two different municipal districts, it is not necessary to describe separately the parts lying in each of the districts.

(at 149-150; footnotes omitted)

This treatise also discusses the erroneous description óf a town, 59 C.J.S., supra, at 151:

Whether the civil district, town, county, state, or nation is requisite to the description of the property covered by a mortgage depends on whether one or all of them are essential to identify and distinguish the particular tract from other lands. It has been held that a mortgage which does not designate the state, county, or town in which the land lies is void. On the other hand, it has been held that omitting to name the state, county, or city, or naming the wrong county, will not invalidate the instrument where oth *294 er adequate elements of identification exist. Thus, if the parties describe themselves in the mortgage as residing in a certain state or county, or if the fact of such residence appears from the certificate of acknowledgment or from other parts of the instrument, it will be presumed that the land lies in the state or county named, although it is not so stated in the description, and the omission will not invalidate the mortgage.

Several New Jersey cases provide guidance as to whether a mortgage is invalid when it designates a location in an incorrect municipality and there is no specific reference to a deed which might provide an accurate description.

There is no requirement under New Jersey law that a description of property in a mortgage be in the form of metes and bounds; any description which identifies the property is adequate for purposes of providing constructive notice. N.J. Bank v. Azco Realty Co., Inc., 148 N.J.Super. 159, 166, 372 A.2d 356 (App.Div.1977), cert. den. 74 N.J. 280, 377 A.2d 684 (1977). Nor is a purchaser limited solely to the description contained within the 4 corners of the mortgage instrument; instead, a purchaser who has constructive notice of the existence of a mortgage, may have a duty of inquiry to ascertain the true description of property and is, thus, chargeable with notice of such facts as might be ascertained by a reasonable inquiry, even though outside of the mortgage document. Garden of Mem., Inc. v. Forest Lawn Mem. Pk.

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Bluebook (online)
29 B.R. 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hargrave-v-lapalomento-in-re-lapalomento-njb-1983.