Hinners v. Banville

168 A. 618, 114 N.J. Eq. 348, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 913
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 27, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 168 A. 618 (Hinners v. Banville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hinners v. Banville, 168 A. 618, 114 N.J. Eq. 348, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 913 (N.J. 1933).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Heher, J.

This is an appeal from an- order dismissing an order entered on August 17th, 1932, requiring complainant, Carolina Hinners, her husband, William H. Hinners, and respondent corporation, P. L. J., Incorporated, to show cause why the decree pro confesso and the final decree entered herein should not be opened and vacated, and appellants permitted to answer the bill, and to redeem mortgaged premises sold under a writ of fieri facias issued pursuant to the directions of the final decree.

The bill prayed the foreclosure of a mortgage in the sum of $2,000, made by appellants, Stephen A. Banville and Rose, his wife, Annie McCullough and Michael, her husband, Helen Banville, John Banville and Mary, his wife, and others, heirs-at-law of John Banville, deceased, covering lands situate in the borough of Cliffside Park. Appellants were not served with process of subpoena. The sheriff of the county of Bergen returned the writ of subpoena non est as to appellants, and two other defendants, Katherine Banville and Elizabeth Banville. There was attached to the writ an affidavit by the under-sheriff, setting forth that he inquired for these defendants, for the purpose of making service of the subpoena, and had been unable to find them in the county of Bergen, and *350 that he was credibly informed, and varily believed, that they could not be found in the State of New Jersey, and that the “present address” of each was “unknown.” An order of publication was thereupon entered. It recited that appellants resided out of the State of New Jersey, and that process could not be served upon them, and contained the usual provision for publication of the notice of the order, and service of a copy upon each absent defendant by mail, if his post office address could be ascertained. Publication of the order was had in a newspaper published in Tenafiy, which had little or no circulation in the municipality in which the mortgaged lands are located. The affidavit of inquiry filed by complainant’s solicitors shows that inquiry for the absent defendants was made by letter addressed to Kathryn Banville, at Malden, Massachusetts, and to Elizabeth Banville, at Peekskill, New York, and that both letters were returned by the postal authorities marked “unclaimed — unknown.” The affiant concluded that he knew of “no other source of information concerning said defendants, having tried every available source prior to the filing of the bill of complaint in the matter.”

The final decree was entered on February 15th, 1932, and the lands were sold by the sheriff to complainant for $100 at a sale held on May 25th, 1932. The sale was confirmed on June 14th, 1932. The sheriff conveyed the lands to complainant, and the latter made conveyance to respondent corporation, P. L. J., Incorporated, on July 20th, 1932, for a consideration of $6,700.

The learned vice-chancellor found that appellants were residents of this state, and that if a reasonably diligent inquiry had been made, they would have been found and served with process; that due to the negligence of complainant’s solicitors in this respect, appellants were denied the opportunity to redeem, and to protect themselves by bidding at the sale, and that while the deed to complainant conveyed the legal title, the sale would be set aside and complainant directed to re-convey to appellants, upon payment of the amount due on the decree, if the title were still in complainant, but that respondent corporation, P. L. J., Incorporated, was a bona -fide *351 purchaser for value, without notice of the equities of appellants, and as such held the title free of such equities. He found also that appellants were guilty of laches.

We are in accord with the vice-chancellor in his finding that if complainant had made diligent inquiry, appellants would have been found and served with process. Complainant failed in the performance of the duty imposed upon her to make an effective inquiry. But assuming that she entertained a conscientious and apparently well-founded belief that appellants could not be found in the state, there was a singular and wholly unexplained failure to comply with the mandate of rule 37 .of the court of chancery, that complainant, or his solicitor, or his agent actually entrusted with the management and conduct of the suit, in all cases where the residence and post office address of an absent defendant not actually served with the notice to appear shall not be known, shall make diligent and careful inquiry therefor.

At the time of the filing of the bill, and for many years prior thereto, Stephen Banville, his wife, Rose, and his sister, Helen, resided on the mortgaged premises. It was the Banville family homestead, purchased in 1889. John Banville and his wife, Mary, occupied premises adjoining. The residence of Annie McCullough and her husband, Michael, was to the rear of the mortgaged lands, and within one hundred feet thereof. John Banville was then, and had been for twenty-five years, engaged in the furniture transportation business in Cliffside Park. He had lived in that municipality for fifty-four years. His name was listed in the telephone directory, and his address was therein stated to be the mortgaged premises. The complainant and her husband had resided in that municipality, and knew the Banvilles. John Banville moved their household furniture to Brooklyn when they took up their residence there in 1917. He had known complainant’s husband for forty-five years. The latter admitted that he knew that John Banville, and his sister, Helen, resided in Cliffside Park at the time of the filing of the bill. Helen Banville at that time was, and had been for seventeen years, employed in the Cliffside Park post office. The mortgaged *352 lands are located on Palisade avenue, in the business center of the borough, near the post office and borough hall.

A bona fide effort by the complainant to bring in appellants as absent defendants would have unquestionably borne fruit. Why these obvious sources of information at home were ignored is not made clear. The conclusion is irresistible that complainant was either grossly negligent in the performance of the duty imposed upon her in the circumstances, or deliberately contrived to procure a decree and sale in foreclosure without notice to appellants. In any event she did not do all that was required of her to give appellants notice of the suit. Consequently, they did not have such notice until after the foreclosure sale.

The complainant is on either horn of the dilemma — one of her own making. There was either gross negligence or a fraudulent attempt to deprive appellants of their property, by denying them the opportunity to redeem, or to protect themselves at the sale. And the case for complainant is not strengthened by her attempt to profit by her own default in the performance of the duty resting upon her. While the amount due on the decree was $2,143, plus costs, complainant’s husband, two weeks after confirmation of the sale, informed Rose Banville, wife of Stephen, that complainant was the owner of the property, and demanded $5,500 for a reconveyance. In conveying the lands to the respondent corporation, for a consideration of $6,700, complainant believed that she was conveying to the Banvilles.

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Bluebook (online)
168 A. 618, 114 N.J. Eq. 348, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hinners-v-banville-nj-1933.