Harvester B. L. Assn. v. Kaufherr

190 A. 491, 121 N.J. Eq. 327, 20 Backes 327, 1937 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 113
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 17, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 190 A. 491 (Harvester B. L. Assn. v. Kaufherr) 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
Harvester B. L. Assn. v. Kaufherr, 190 A. 491, 121 N.J. Eq. 327, 20 Backes 327, 1937 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 113 (N.J. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

In 1928 Julius F. Kaufherr, who will hereinafter be referred to as the decedent, made his bond to complainant for the principal sum of $35,000, secured by his mortgage in that amount, encumbering vacant land in the city of Newark. In 1932 the decedent made a second bond to complainant for the unpaid balance of the loan, which unpaid balance then amounted to $26,900. Thereafter, on June 17th, 1935, a bill of complaint to foreclose the mortgage securing the payment of said balance was filed in this court. The decedent was made a party defendant in that suit and was duly served. On June 19th, 1935, a lis pendens was filed and thereafter the cause proceeded to a final decree of foreclosure, entered on September 3d 1935, adjudging that there was due to complainant the sum of $27,433 besides interest and costs.

The sheriff sold the mortgaged premises on November 19th, 1935, to complainant for $100, and no objections to confirmation being made, the sale was confirmed on November 30th, 1935. Subsequently, on February 15th, 1936, complainant commenced in the Essex county circuit court an action against the decedent to recover the resultant deficiency.

On February 28th, 1936, the decedent caused to be incorporated a company known as the Kaufherr Meadowland Realty Company (one of the defendants herein) and on March 24th, 1936, the day the company's charter was filed in the county clerk's office, Kaufherr and his wife conveyed to that company the real estate standing in his name. He died on *Page 329 April 3d 1936, and thereafter Daniel C. Kaufherr (the petitioner herein) qualified as executor under his will. Kaufherr's death was suggested on the record and said executor was substituted as the defendant in the then pending circuit court action.

The executor then presented a petition to this court asserting that the fair value of the mortgaged premises was in excess of the amount adjudged by the foreclosure decree and praying that the order confirming sale be vacated and the property ordered resold and that complainant be enjoined from prosecuting the law action or, as an alternative, the fair value of the property be credited against the decree. On this petition an order to show cause was allowed on June 24th, 1936. Affidavits were submitted by both sides and on August 18th, 1936, upon the consent of the parties, an order was entered dismissing the said petition. The petitioner's consent to such dismissal is now explained by his counsel's affidavit that because of the complainant's resistance to the petition and upon a consideration of complainant's affidavits then filed and because it was apparent to him that inasmuch as a lis pendens had been filed in the foreclosure action and the time for appeal from the decree confirming sale had expired, the law relating to the case "would not avail to the benefit of the estate."

When the said petition, which I call the first petition for relief, was dismissed and the restraint against the law action was no longer effective, complainant proceeded to take judgment in the law action against the executor, which judgment was entered on August 28th, 1936, for $29,493.05, and this without defense or objection from the executor. Execution was issued on September 3d 1936, and returned unsatisfied.

Complainant then brought the present suit for relief and discovery. In the bill and in the affidavits attached thereto it is alleged that during the period that the decedent was indebted to complainant, as aforesaid, he secured four life insurance policies on his own life for various amounts aggregating the sum of $250,000 and that by agreement made in 1934 he subjected those policies to the operation of a trust agreement by which four trusts were created, the present beneficiaries of which are: Laura Kaufherr (the debtor's widow), *Page 330 Daniel C. Kaufherr (the debtor's son, the petitioner herein), Vera Kaufherr (the debtor's daughter-in-law and the wife of the petitioner herein) and Jane Kaufherr (the debtor's daughter), all of whom are made defendants to the bill.

The bill and proofs further show that the debtor's brother, Albert H. Kaufherr, died on September 30th, 1935, whereupon the debtor collected $28,000 from insurance carried on the brother's life and it is charged that a portion of this sum was used by him to pay and satisfy moneys theretofore borrowed by the debtor on the policies on his own life and the balance was transferred and paid over to the defendants in the cause for the purpose of concealing such funds and placing them beyond the reach of the creditors of the decedent, Julius F. Kaufherr.

The bill also charges that the conveyance by the decedent to the Kaufherr Meadowland Realty Company of the debtor's real estate was not only voluntary and without consideration, and therefore fraudulent against creditors, but also was designed to hinder the decedent's creditors from collecting their unpaid claims. It is further charged that the premiums paid by the decedent for the aforesaid quarter of a million dollars of insurance on his own life were paid while he was indebted to complainant and other creditors and while he was insolvent and that such payments therefore were made in fraud of the decedent's creditors, of whom complainant has since March 10th, 1928, been one. It is further charged in the bill that the premiums so paid by the decedent within six years next preceding the commencement of the within suit exceed in the aggregate the amount due on complainant's said judgment.

It is further charged that in January, 1936, the decedent caused the beneficiary in three policies issued by the Mutual Life Insurance Company to be changed, substituting the defendant Laura Kaufherr as beneficiary in place of the trustees named under the aforementioned trust agreement, and that upon the death of the assured she received as the proceeds of said policies the sum of $200,000, and that the son, Daniel C. Kaufherr, as trustee under the said trust agreement received the proceeds of another policy issued by the Aetna *Page 331 Life Insurance Company in the sum of $50,000, and that the aforementioned sum of $200,000 has been deposited with the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York to be held under the terms of the life insurance trust agreement created by the decedent, as above stated.

The bill prays (1) that discovery be made by the defendant-executor and by the widow of the moneys received by them under the life insurance policies and that the executor disclose the premiums paid by the decedent within the six years preceding the commencement of this action and also the disposition made by the decedent of moneys collected by him under policies of insurance on the life of the decedent's brother, Albert H. Kaufherr, (2) that the defendants be decreed to pay complainant's debt, (3) that said conveyance to said Kaufherr Meadowland Realty Company be set aside as fraudulent, (4) that said lands be sold discharged of such conveyance and the proceeds applied to the payment of complainant's judgment, and (5) that it be decreed that the proceeds of the four policies carried by decedent on his own life are subject to the lien of complainant's judgment and that the defendants Daniel C. Kaufherr and Laura Kaufherr, be directed to pay out of said proceeds complainant's judgment. The bill also prays for restraint, pending this suit, against the defendants disposing of any of the property or assets mentioned in the bill.

Upon the filing of the said bill and a consideration of its allegations and the affiadvits supporting the bill this court allowed the usual order for discovery directing the executor to appear before one of its masters.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 A. 491, 121 N.J. Eq. 327, 20 Backes 327, 1937 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harvester-b-l-assn-v-kaufherr-njch-1937.