Hatch v. Van Dervoort

54 N.J. Eq. 511
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 54 N.J. Eq. 511 (Hatch v. Van Dervoort) 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
Hatch v. Van Dervoort, 54 N.J. Eq. 511 (N.J. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Pitstey, V. C.

The petitioner makes the following case: He is the owner of .a large shop or store for the retail of dry goods, in the city of Paterson, which, in April, 1895, was held under an unexpired lease by a firm of dry goods merchants named Van Dervoort & Slingland (two of the defendants herein) at a yearly rent which amounted to $308.33 per month, and was payable monthly. At that time the store was filled with a large stock of dry goods, which had cost nearly $30,000.

. On the 4th of April Van Dervoort & Slingland, being financially embarrassed and heavily indebted to a bank upon notes endorsed by several of their friends, executed to those friends,. eight in number, several chattel mortgages to secure them in the [513]*513premises. The aggregate of the debts was about $24,000. On the same day, the chattel mortgagees, acting in concert — their mortgages standing on an equal footing as to priority — took formal possession of the chattels as they were then situate in the store of petitioner but did not remove them. The business of selling the goods at retail continued, by. their direction, under the immediate supervision of Van Dervoort & Slingland. ,

On or shortly after the 4th of April, the complainants .in this suit, New York merchants, to whom Van Der-voort & Slingland! were indebted for goods sold, brought an action at law against, them, with the result that judgment was rendered therein on the 16th of April. The chattel mortgagees, learning of the suit at law, on the 13th of April, advertised all the goods to be sol'd at auction, on the premises, on the 18th of April. In anticipation of judgment being entered against them, Van Dervoort & Slingland made a general assignment for the benefit of their creditors to one Bewkes on the 15th of April. Before Bewkes had qualified or got possession of the goods the complainants recovered judgment, and on the 16th of April filed their bill of complaint in this court, attacking all the chattel mortgages and! praying a receiver. An order to show cause was granted •'with interim restraint, the litigation upon which extended to the 10th of July, when a receiver was appointed, who was ordered and directed to proceed to sell the goods, which had all the time remained in the petitioner’s store.

The receiver qualified and took possession of the goods and store on the 15th of July, and immediately proceeded to make sale in pursuance of the order, but in the stoi’e, with the result that he realized in the neighborhood of $19,000. Litigation was then had in this court as to the validity of the chattel mortgages, with the result that their validity, was sustained. The petitioner, who was not a party to the suit, intervened by petition, at an early date after the sale, and asked for payment of his rent out of the proceeds from the time the chattel mortgagees took possession until the premises were vacated. His claim was not resisted as to the time the receiver was in possession, and he was ordered to pay the petitioner rent for the premises after [514]*514July 15th and until the store was vacated, and the balance of the fund was ordered to be paid to the chattel mortgagees, less a sufficient sum to cover petitioner’s demand for rent from the date of the chattel mortgages up to the qualification and entry of the receiver. f

One of the chattel mortgagees was a Mr. S., a practicing lawyer in Paterson, who was counsel for Van Dervoort & Sling-land, and also for himself and the other chattel mortgagees. In fact, he devised and carried through the whole plan, and acted throughout as the counsel not only for himself but for the other chattel mortgagees.

The petitioner swears that, as soon as the chattel mortgages were put on record and the fact had become known that they had been given, he at once looked after his rent, and inquired of Mr. S. about the rent that was due at that time, amounting to nearly $1,500, and was informed by Mr. S. that as to that rent he had no remedy. He was offered by Van Dervoort & Sling-land a bill of sale for all the goods, subject to the chattel mortgages, but declined to receive it. He then inquired, as he swears, as to the rent accruing from that time forward until the store should be vacated, and was assured by Mr. S. that the chattel mortgagees, having taken possession, would be answerable (for that rent. This is denied by Mr. S., and I have no doubt that he is honest in his denial, but I find it difficult to suppose that the petitioner, who is of equal credibility with Mr. S., manufactured his evidence upon this point, and it is quite easy to believe that Mr. S. had forgotten that he had made the promise or statement to the petitioner which is testified to by him. It was quite natural that the petitioner should make the inquiry as to future rent, and it was quite as natural, and also reasonable, that Mr. •S. should answer as petitioner swears that he did. It was of the •utmost importance to the mortgagees that the goods, should remain as they were in the store, where they could be sold to the ¡best advantage.

Upon the question of fact as to whether or not a promise was made by Mr. S. to the petitioner, I feel constrained to find that it was made. The fact that petitioner rested quietly, took no [515]*515other measures to secure his rent or the possession of his premises, indicates that he was relying on some arrangement for its payment, and he swears that he relied on Mr. S.’s promise.

There can be no question that if Mr. S. made such promise— his authority to do so not being disputed — and petitioner relied upon it, the mortgagees are bound by it. It is not a question of the application of the statute of frauds to a promise to pay a past debt, but of a promise, on behalf of the promisor, to pay for use and occupation in futuro.

But the mortgagees argue that, admitting the promise to have been made, still they ought not to be held bound by it beyond the time when the court intervened and stopped their proceeding to sell, and that after the 17th of April and until the 15th of July they were restrained, by the order of this court, from dealing &c. with the goods. But such restraint did not prevent them from seeking another place to store the goods, if they could, at a cheaper rent, and if the order, through inadvertence, could be so construed, it would have been modified upon application for that purpose.

There is much force in the suggestion of counsel for petitioner that, admitting that during the period in question, namely, from April 17th to July 15th, while the order to show cause with its interim restraint was in force', the goods were, in a sense, in the custody of this court for the purpose of being preserved for the benefit of 'the parties who should finally be determined to be entitled, then their storage was necessary for such preservation, and its expense should fall on the goods. Under such circumstances, there can be no doubt that if proper application had been made to the court immediately after the order of April 17th the court would have made immediate provision for the care and preservation of the goods pending litigation, and would undoubtedly have charged the cost thereof upon the goods.

Again, in this connection, it was in the power of the mortgagees to have consented at once to the appointment of a receiver, the result .of which would have been the same as if the appli-. cation had - been made directly for -provision' for - their care and custody. How, in such case, it is not too much-Jo-say-that [516]

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Related

Seidler v. Branford Restaurant, Inc.
127 A. 36 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
54 N.J. Eq. 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatch-v-van-dervoort-njch-1896.