Johnson v. Wetmore & Champlin

12 Barb. 433, 1851 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 107
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1851
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Barb. 433 (Johnson v. Wetmore & Champlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Wetmore & Champlin, 12 Barb. 433, 1851 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 107 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1851).

Opinion

Monson, J.

The plaintiff contends that the objection raised by the demurrer, that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action is too general; and he insists that the demurrer should point out the defects, and show why the facts do not constitute a cause of action.

The decisions upon this point have not been altogether uniform, but I am inclined to follow those of Justices Willard, Gridley and Mason, (4 How. Pr. Rep. 226. 3 Id. 280. 5 Id. 113,) in preference to the decision of Justice Sill, (4 How. 98,) without however recognizing any distinction between a demurrer to a complaint, and a demurrer to an answer, which Justice Mason, in 5 How. 113, seems inclined to raise. Those authorities authorize the allegation in the demurrer as in this case, that complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. Another ground of demurrer is that the court has no jurisdiction of the subject of the action; that the writing alledged in the complaint to have been obtained by the defendants, is void by statute, and that the plaintiff has an ample remedy at law. In Noah v. Webb, (1 Edw. Ch. Rep. 608,) V. C. McCoun said, “The power of the court of chancery to compel bonds and other instruments, in the nature of securities, to be given up. and cancelled is not to be disputed. And in the exercise of this power, so far as the point of jurisdiction is concerned, it matters not whether such instrument could or could not be enforced at law; nor whether it is void upon its face or shown to be void by evidence aliunde. Still the power will not be exercised in every case of the kind. It rests in sound discretion.” Again, “ There are many cases in the books to show that although the [435]*435obligation and penalty are gone and the legal remedy is lost, yet so far from ordering the bond to be given up, the condition of it will be regarded in the light of an agreement, and its performance enforced.” (Id. 612.) Wherever they appear to be fair in all respects and founded upon a sufficient consideration.” (Id. 615.) Instances however may occur, in which the court may be called upon to exert its authority in an opposite direction, and order instruments of this kind to be given up and canceled. But the justice, propriety or necessity for the measure must be very apparent. The party claiming it should show clearly and beyond all reasonable doubt, not only that the instrument is void in law and can never be enforced there, but that in equity also it never ought to be enforced or attempted to be made use of for any purpose, against him.” (Id.)

In Hamilton v. Cumming, (1 John. Ch. Rep. 522,) the chancellor says, “ It is every day’s practice to order instruments to be delivered up of which a bad use might be attempted to be made at law, although they could not even there entitle the holder to recover. It is not very apparent why a doubt could have been started in some of the modern cases as to the general jurisdiction of the court, when we consider the uniform tenor and language of the more ancient decisions, and which do not appear to have turned upon the distinction whether the instruments were or were not void at law. In Whittingham v. Thornburgh, (2 Vern. 206.) Goddort v. Garrett, (Id. 269,) and DeCarta v. Scandrel, (2 P. Wms. 170,) policies of insurance procured by fraud were ordered to be delivered up and canceled, though the fraud was equally a defense at law. And in another case, (Law v. Law, Cases Temp. Talbot, 140,) Lord Talbot ordered a bond to be cancelled, and charged the defendant with costs, without deciding whether or not the bond was good at law.” Again, at page 524, the chancellor says that in the case of Law v. Law, the whole consideration was spread out upon the bond, and that as the case is reported in Peerá Williams, the lord chancellor was inclined to consider the bond as void at law as well as in equity, and yet he canceled the bond without sending the parties to law. In 1 John. Ch. Rep. [436]*436524, the bond was good on its face, and void only from facts appearing in the defendant’s answer, viz. that it was given upon a trust which, he, the defendant, ought not to disclose, and depended upon a contingency which had never happened, and which was only within the reach of possibility, and that the defendant had held it for twenty-seven years. The chancellor said such bond could not be permitted to endure for ever. And we, says Kent, “ can not recognize any trust which is not disclosed, and is therefore unknown. It is not convenient or just that such a bond should continue with a pretension to the assets in the hands of the plaintiff. It might embarrass their application, or weaken their security, or poison their enjoyment. It is immoral for a person to retain a bond which is useless to him and an annoyance to others. It must therefore be delievered up and canceled.”

In 1 Hopkins, 143, the court allowed a deed alledged to be fraudulent to be brought into court for inspection, and refused to dissolve an injunction against ejectments prosecuted on such deed. In Petit v. Shepherd, (5 Paige, 501,) the chancellor says, “The jurisdiction of this court to set aside deeds and other legal instruments which are a cloud upon the title to real estate, and to order them to be delivered up and canceled, appears to be now fully established, citing 1 John. Ch. Rep. 517, and various other cases.

In Van Doren v. Mayor, &c. of New- York, (9 Paige, 389,) the question was whether the corporation of the city of New-York had authority to impose assessments for the purpose of laying out certain streets. The court decided that they had, and against the partition contended for by the complainant, and then proceeded, perhaps unnecessarily, to say, “But if the objection-to the right of the common council was well taken it would only show that this court had no jurisdiction in this case. For a valid legal objection appearing upon the face of the proceedings through which the adverse party can alone claim any right to the .complainant’s land is not in law such a cloud upon the complainant’s title as can authorize a court of equity to set aside or stay such proceedings. That can never be considered a legal cloud which can not for a moment obstruct the unaided rays of [437]*437legal science when they are brought to bear upon the supposed obscurity. But where the claim of the adverse party to the land is valid upon the face of the instrument or the proceedings sought to be set aside, as where the defendant has procured and put upon record a deed obtained from the complainant by fraud, or upon a usurious consideration, which requires the establishment of extrinsic facts to show the supposed conveyance to be inoperative and void, a court of equity may interfere and set it aside as a cloud upon the real title to the land.”

In Cox v. Clift, (1 Comst. 122,) the court said, “Whenever it is apparent from the writing or deed itself that no danger to the title or interest of the complainant is to be apprehended, a court of equity will not entertain a bill for the cancellation or delivery of the instrument.” In that case the bill alledged that a certain deed executed on a sale on foreclosure of a mortgage executed to the state purported to convey the whole of 62-| acres when it should only convey a part.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Barb. 433, 1851 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-wetmore-champlin-nysupct-1851.