John Agnew Co. v. Board of Education

89 A. 1046, 83 N.J. Eq. 49, 1914 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 107
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 13, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 89 A. 1046 (John Agnew Co. v. Board of Education) 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
John Agnew Co. v. Board of Education, 89 A. 1046, 83 N.J. Eq. 49, 1914 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 107 (N.J. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Stevenson, Y. C.

1. The decree will adjudge that any liens originally acquired by the Ingalls Stone Company and James Healey, by the filing of their respective notices, were released so that they have no participation in the'distribution of the fund. Under the statute, as amended in 1909, these parties are covered by a bond securing their entire claims. The provision for the substitution of a bond for the claimant’s lien, which was injected into the statute in 1909, like many other provisions of the act, is badly drawn. After a careful study of this amendment, I have reached the conclusion that the words “decreed to be due from said contractor under any such claim” do not refer to the suit in remj which may or may not be brought at a later time, after the bond has been given, covering all claims at that time on file, but to any action in any court of competent jurisdiction in which any of these claimants may sue on their bond, or otherwise, for the recovery of their debts mentioned in the notices of “claim” which they filed. The word “decreed” must not be taken in a technical sense. This statute, borrowed from New York, confuses technical terms of law and of equity. The “claimant” in an equity suit is called the “plaintiff.” To allow in this suit m rem, instituted in order to effect the distribution of this fund among parties who have liens upon it, any decree establishing the validity and amount of claims which are-not liens on the fund at all would,’ in my judgment, establish a very incongruous and inconvenient practice. If such a decree could be made it would seem that the surety on the bond should be made a party to the suit. Ho personal decree of any kind is allowable in the suit provided by this peculiar statute. The case of these two claimants from whose liens the funds due and to grow due on the contract have been released, it seems to me, remains precisely the same as if 'after their; bond had been given, which included all liens on the fund which had been created up to that time, no' further liens had ever been filed. Can there be any good ground for holding that these claimants after they had lost their liens on the fund and, as a substitute for such liens, had been protected to the full amount of their respective debts by the bond, could have brought any suit in the court of chancery of [53]*53New Jersey under this statute, or otherwise, to collect their money or to have the amount due them fixed by a decree? It may be observed that the bond does not merely secure to these claimants the amount which would have been adjudged or decreed due to them from the proceeds of the original contract of the municipality'' if their liens had not been discharged; the bond secures to them the payment of such sums as should be decreed “due from the said contractor under” their respective claims. The claims might aggregate a much larger sum than any sum which was due or could ever become due to the contractor from the municipality. lu such case can there be any question that the remedy of the claimants covered by the bond would be by an action at law to be brought by them or on their behalf, in which the full amount of their claims would be recovered without regard to the amount which they would have recovered on their liens if no bond had been given?

No intimation is made that the joinder of these two claimants, from whose liens the fund in question has been released, was not entirely proper. They may be proper, although not necessary parties. They seem to occupy a position similar to that of encumbrancers who are brought into an ordinary foreclosure suit because their encumbrances stand uncanceled of record, although in fact they have been paid. The mandate of the statute contained in section 7 that “the plaintiff must make all parties who have filed claims * * * parties defendant” applies to the situation of affairs when the statute was enacted in 1892, without any provision for a release upon giving bond.

2. The first lien in point of time claimed upon the fund in this action is that of the Eirst National Bank of the Town of Union, New Jersey, for $15,000 and interest thereon. This lien is claimed under an assignment from the Glen Engineering Construction Company to the said bank, dated September 15th, 1910, delivered on September 16th, 1910. The indebtedness alleged to be secured by this assignment is represented by two notes, one for $10,000 and the other for $5,000. The Glen company exhausted the lending power of the bank available to it under the National Banking act, when it procured the discount by the bank of its note for $10,-000. In this situation of affairs the bank discounted the note of [54]*54the officers of the Glen company, all parties understanding that the proceeds of the note would be turned over to that company. The bank now asks this court to countenance what it alleges was an evasion of the National Banking act, and to hold that this independent transaction, to which the Glen company was not a party at all, nevertheless must be deemed to have created a debt from the Glen company to the bank so as to bring the same within the operation of this assignment. All this in the face of the fact that the bank refused to loan the Glen company any amount beyond the $10,000 which had been loaned, because it was not lawful for them to make such a loan, and the bank thereupon scrupulously excluded the Glen company from the new loan and made it, as appears by the books of the bank, strictly a loan to the individual who signed the note. Under no circumstances could this assignment on its face be stretched so as to cover any indebtedness beyond the $10,000 which was legally due from the Glen company to the bank.

There has been no argument in regard to the description in the assignment of the money which was thereby intended to be transferred by way of mortgage to the bank, and I shall not deal with this matter.

My conclusion of law and of fact in regard to the validity of this assignment is that it was made to secure a pre-existing indebtedness when the assignor was insolvent or in contemplation of insolvency, and that therefore it is void under the sixty-fourth section of the Corporation act of New Jersey. I also conclude that this assignment is void under the present United States Bankruptcy act.

It is not the purpose of this memorandum to discuss the evidence at length. Not even all the propositions of fact which I find established by the evidence will be set forth. In regard to the oral promise for an assignment of the contract alleged to have been made by the Glen company to the bank when the loan of $10,000 was made, my conclusion is that the evidence is unsatisfactory and entirely inadequate to establish at the present time that any such definite oral contract ever was made. Assuming, however, that such an oral promise was made in consideration of which the bank made the loan, the law is well [55]*55settled and well founded, in reason that no such oral promise can affect the status of the subsequent assignment made in pursuance thereof, as a preferential transfer under our Corporation act or under the Bankrupt act. We have to deal in this case with the character of this assignment made by the Glen company to the bank on September 16th, 1910, to secure a loan made nearly five months prior thereto without the slightest regard to any oral promise from the Glen company to the bank made at the time the loan was effected, and on the strength of which the loan may have been made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 A. 1046, 83 N.J. Eq. 49, 1914 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-agnew-co-v-board-of-education-njch-1914.