Johns v. Norris

22 N.J. Eq. 102
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 N.J. Eq. 102 (Johns v. Norris) 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
Johns v. Norris, 22 N.J. Eq. 102 (N.J. Ct. App. 1871).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The complainants are Theresa Johns and Anna Maria Morehouse, the first the daughter and only heir, the other the widow of Thomas W. Morehouse, who died September 27th, 1865, intestate. Administration of his personal estate was granted to his widow, September 29th, 1855. More-house, before and until his death, carried on the business of a tinman at his premises in Greene street, in J ersey City; his widow, after the grant of administration, continued the business in her own name, using the assets of the estate, collecting a large amount of the credits, and paying few of the debts of the intestate. Upon application of her surety the grant of administration to her was revoked by the Hudson County Orphans Court, February 17th, 1857, and on the 25th of that month, letters de bonis non were granted to the defendant, Noah Norris, who, at her request, accepted them. The intestate died seized of three parcels of real estate in Jersey City, known as the York street, the Greene street, and the Grove street property, each largely mortgaged. Noah Norris had sold to him the York street property, and held a mortgage for $2000, part of the consideration, and on the 20th of February, 1857, he assigned to his brother, the defendant, John D. Norris, for full value. The Greene street property was subject to a mortgage held by Mary Bolen, the mother of the intestate, and the Grove •street property to a mortgage for $2250. All three mort[104]*104gages were for part'.of the purchase money, and no interest had been paid on either since the intestate’s death. These mortgages were all foreclosed by the holders, and the premises sold at foreclosure sales by the sheriff. At these sales, John D. Norris bought the York street property, January 7th, 1858, for $1000. Noah -Norris bought the Greene street property for $1325, November 19th, 1857, and the Grove street property, January 7th, 1858, for $2550. The only surplus on these sales above the mortgage debts was $65.98, on the Grove street sale; this was received and administered by Noah Norris, as administrator. Noah collected the remaining personal assets, and with them paid to the creditors of the intestate a dividend of twelve per cent. The residue of their claims, to the amount of several thousand dollars, are unpaid. The complainant, Theresa Johns, was, at her father’s death, an infant ten years old, and of course an infant at these sales by the sheriff. She has since intermarried with Hiram C. Johns, who is joined with her in the suit as complainant.

The bill charges that these foreclosure sales were had by the advice and contrivance of Noah Norris, who was the confidential friend and business adviser of the widow. That he advised her not to pay the interest on these mortgages so that they would be foreclosed. That at the foreclosure sales he would buy in for her, and keep off other bidders by letting it be known that he was bidding for her; that he would advance the money and hold the property as a mortgagee, and that she could pay him the interest and redeem the property. It charges that the assignment of the mortgage held by Noah Norris to John D. Norris, was not bona fide, but a sham. That at all three sales, Noah Norris gave out to her and to persons present, that he was bidding for her and so deterred bidders, and by these means pur- . chased the property at prices much below its value; that he bid off the York street property and transferred the bid to John D. Norris. That after the sale he repeatedly promised ■her to let her redeem the- property whenever she should be [105]*105able, and acknowledged that he held it for her. And that in 1862 and 1863, he rendered her accounts of his advances and interest on them, in the last one calculated at compound interest, showing the amounts at which he was to convey the property to her. That in 1865 ho conveyed the Grove street property to John D. Norris, and the Greene street property to liis son, the defendant, Brainard T. Norris; that these transfers were not bona fide, but fraudulent and without consideration.

It charges that Noah Norris, being administrator, could not purchase the lands of his intestate at a foreclosure sale for his own benefit, but that such purchase must be in trust for the estate; and that the two other defendants knew of these equities at the transfers by him to them. The bill prays that the purchase of Noah may be declared to have been in trust for tho complainants, and that the defendants may be compelled to re-convey to them upon their repaying to Noah all moneys paid by him in the purchase.

Tho answers of the defendants under oath deny, positively, all the charges of the bill by which the defendants, or either of them, are sought to be affected with a trust, or with fraud, except the fact that Noah Norris was administrator of Morehouse. They deny, fully, that Noah Norris contrived or instigated these foreclosures, or promised in any way to purchase and hold for the widow, or that he gave out to persons who might have bid, that he was buying for the widow, or that he, promised afterward to hold the same for her to redeem at her pleasure. The two other defendants deny that, at the conveyance to them, they had any knowledge or notice of these alleged facts, or that the conveyances to them were without consideration, and not in good faith. These denials are full and responsive.

Much evidence has been taken on both sides; on many points it is very contradictory. Much of this may be charged to inaccuracy of recollection of events that occurred ten years before, and to a warm imagination which makes narrations, often repeated by a good friend, seem as if they [106]*106were of facts seen by the witness. But after all these allowances, there must be in these contradictions bad faith. And notwithstanding the responsive answer of Eoah Eorris, and his positive testimony to the contrary, the weight of the evidence of more than two witnesses, compels me to believe that, at the sales of the. Greene street and York street properties at least, he promised that he would buy them for the benefit of the widow, and that it was given out by him, or with his knowledge and connivance, to persons there, or who would have been at those sales, that he intended to buy for the widow.

I have further from the testimony arrived at these conclusions :

That Eorris permitted the widow to occupy the Greene street property, after the sale, without rent; the only rent he exacted, was as administrator for her occupation before the sale. That in 1862 and 1863, he made out accounts, at her request, of the amounts that would be due to him on a conveyance, according to the right claimed by her, charging interest, and in the last account, compound interest. That these accounts included the York street property, which he assumed he could induce his brother to convey.

That at this time he was willing, and offered to convey, and procure his brother to convey, on these terms; and that he actually made out and submitted to Mrs. Morehouse, for her consideration, an unexecuted deed for the Grove street property, to a married woman in Eew York, a relative of Mrs. Morehouse, named for that purpose by her. That this, and the whole proposition to convey, was then rejected by Mrs. Morehouse, if not positively, at least by not accepting either.

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Related

Blaine v. Krysowaty
38 A.2d 859 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1944)
Gluck v. Rynda Development Co.
99 N.J. Eq. 788 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
22 N.J. Eq. 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johns-v-norris-njch-1871.