Johnson v. Tuttle

9 N.J. Eq. 365
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1853
StatusPublished

This text of 9 N.J. Eq. 365 (Johnson v. Tuttle) 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
Johnson v. Tuttle, 9 N.J. Eq. 365 (N.J. Ct. App. 1853).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The complainant holds two mort-

gages made and executed by James Tuttle and wile.

On the 26th of May, 1834, James Tuttle was indebted to the complainant in the sum of twelve hundred and fifty dollars. For this amount Tuttle gave the complainant his promissory note of that date, endorsed by Yoadiah P. Thomas, Joseph Bleything and Charles Ford. To secure its payment he and his wife executed a mortgage upon lands in Morris county, to one of the endorsers, Yoadiah Thomas, and Thomas assigned it to the complainant.

On the 10th of December, 1839, Tuttle, in order further to secure the amount due on the said note, with his wife, ex[366]*366ecuted another mortgage to the complainant upon other land in the county of Morris.

On the 20th of December, 1821, Jacob Gray recovered a judgment, in the Inferior Court of Common Pleas of the county of Morris, against James Tuttle, for the sum of two thousand three hundred and two dollars and seventy-two cents, besides costs. Since then Gray has deceased. The complainant has exhibited this bill against Gray’s executors and others, .defendants in the suit, to foreclose their rights,, and to sell the mortgaged premises to pay his debt. The contest is in reference to this judgment. The complainant insists the judgment has been satisfied.

The complainant alleges that the age of the judgment, in connection with the fact that it was allowed to stand open for twenty-four years, when the creditor had under execution, and within his reach, property ample to pay the judgment, is evidence that it was in some way satisfied between the parties. And some other circumstances are urged to show that the court ought to come to this conclusion.

The indulgence which was shown by Gray to Tuttle is explained. There was a family connection between them: their wives being sisters. The terms on which they lived, and their business relations with each other, are sufficient to-account for the fact of much leniency and indulgence on the part of Mr. Gray. But the executors show, by the dealings and settlements between Tuttle and Gray, and between Tuttle and themselves, as well as by the declarations of Tuttle, and numerous letters written by him, that Tuttle, up to the time of his death, which occurred. after the bill was filed, considered and dealt with the judgment as open and unsatisfied. The complainant insists that the declarations of Tuttle, and his letters, are not admissible as evidence against the complainant. The rule that a party cannot offer his own declarations as evidence is not applicable. Tuttle and Gray are brought into this suit, as well adverse to each other as to the complainant. The rights which Gray is called upon to establish are adverse to Tuttle’s. When Gray is called upon to establish his judgment against Tuttle, Tuttle’s [367]*367declarations are competent for the purpose. Such declarations are not in favor of the party making them, but against his interest. There is no allegation in the bill of collusion, nor is there any evidence to excite the suspicion that the judgment was kept on foot to defeat the complainant, or for any other unlawful purpose.

It is shown that numerous payments were made on the judgment in large and small sums, from time to time, in money and otherwise. Questions were raised on the argument, as to the admissibility of some of the evidence, on both sides, in reference to these payments, as well as to the effect and sufficiency of it. The complainant insists that the payments actually proved, show the judgment paid. But all these questions will more properly and fairly come up before the master upon a reference.

There is one matter, however, connected with taking the accounts, which, I consider, it is proper I should decide now.

In the year 1821, an execution was taken out on this judgment, and, by virtue of it, the sheriff levied upon certain personal property belonging to the defendant. From the pleadings in the cause, as well as the evidence, I am satisfied that, both by the rules of law and equity, the personal property so levied upon was, pro tanto, a payment upon the judgment.

If the property so levied upon had been of sufficient value to satisfy the judgment, and so charged in the bill, and not denied, I should have declared the judgment satisfied, as respects the complainant’s mortgages. In Wood v. Toney, 6 Wend. 562, a perpetual stay of execution was ordered, on the application of a bona fide purchaser of lands bound by judgment, where it appeared that an execution had been issued, and personal property of the defendant in the execution levied upon to an amount sufficient to satisfy the judgment. On a previous application, on behalf of the defendant in execution, the court had, under the circumstances of the case, refused to set the execution aside. The plaintiff in the judgment, or his assignee, had ordered a stay on the [368]*368execution, and the property had been left in the hands of the defendant. "Without saying that this court will lay it down, as a rule, that where a judgment creditor has levied upon personal property sufficient to pay his judgment, he may not relinquish his lien upon it, for the benefit of his debtor, without putting in jeopardy his lien on the real estate, I feel clear in declaring the rule in equity to be that when called upon by a bona fide purchaser or mortgagee, the creditor must account for the personal property he has levied upon. He must show that it did not go to pay his judgment. The presumption of law is that it did. When the sheriff levies upon property, it is his for the special purpose of paying the execution in his hands. The defendant must be credited pro tanto, and the plaintiff must look to the sheriff. If the property has been disposed of, by the fraud of the debtor, or been appropriated to his own use, with the consent of the plaintiff, as between the plaintiff and defendant, their respective rights, as to any lien upon real estate, are not affected. As between the plaintiff and a bona fide purchaser, or encumbrancer, a different case is presented, and their equities must depend upon the particular circumstances of the case.

In the case of Luther v. Onondaga C. P., 19 Wend. 79, on an application for a mandamus to the pleas, A., defendant in execution, fraudulently removed from the county, property which Luther, as deputy sheriff, had levied upon, and the sheriff was ordered to pay the amount of the execution. He paid it, and took an assignment of the judgment. The court allowed Luther to be subrogated in the place, of the plaintiff, as against the defendant, but not as against the purchasers of his real estate, on subsequent judgments and executions.

In Hayden v. The Agent of the State Prison at Auburn, &c., 1 Sand. Ch. Rep. 195, the assistant Vice-Chancellor applied the rule very rigidly, and determined that the levy of an execution,.upon sufficient personal property to pay it, is a satisfaction of the judgment as to junior encumbrances upon real estate, although, in consequence of the sheriff’s indulgence to the debtor, and the plaintiff’s neglect to enforce it [369]*369the levy actually produces nothing to apply on the execution.

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Related

Wood v. Torrey
6 Wend. 562 (New York Supreme Court, 1831)
People ex rel. Luther v. Onondaga C. P.
19 Wend. 79 (New York Supreme Court, 1837)
Hayden v. Agent of the State Prison
1 Sand. Ch. 195 (New York Court of Chancery, 1843)
Supreme Lodge, Knights of Pythias v. Rutzler
98 A. 836 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.J. Eq. 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-tuttle-njch-1853.