Larter v. Canfield

45 A. 616, 59 N.J. Eq. 461, 14 Dickinson 461, 1900 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 92
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 23, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 45 A. 616 (Larter v. Canfield) 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
Larter v. Canfield, 45 A. 616, 59 N.J. Eq. 461, 14 Dickinson 461, 1900 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 92 (N.J. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

GREY, V. C.

This bill is filed by the complainant as one of the cestuis que trust under a declaration made by the defendant Frederick W. Canfield to the effect that he held the title to certain lands in Essex county, in trust for the use of the complainant, and of Scarlett & Scarlett, incorporated, and of himself in the proportions in which they had contributed to pay the consideration money for the purchase of the lands, which the declaration admitted was $500 by the complainant, $1,500 by the defendant Canfield, and $5,000 by the defendants Scarlett & Scarlett, incorporated ; and that the trustee would account for his disposition or sales of the trust lands, and after payment of the expenses and mortgages, would turn over the balance to the several parties interested in the proportions in which they had contributed the purchase-money. There is another provision in the declaration of trust, by which the trustee declares to the contributors

“ that after the mortgage debts are fully paid and satisfied, I will upon their written request convey to them respectively at their expense * * * their respective undivided interests in whatever lands may remain unsold or uncontracted for.”

The bill alleges that the complainant paid the $500, his share of the purchase-money, and that Scarlett & Scarlett paid $5,000, their share; that Canfield, for his own share, put in $1,500, which he represented was his own money, but that in fact, as the complainant has recently discovered, Canfield paid but $500 of his own money, and that the other $1,000 of the money he put in was money proceeding from sales or mortgages of the joint [463]*463purchase, which Canfield had collected, and which he fraudulently put into the venture as his own, so that he might secure the larger proportion upon which he could receive future dividends, and that the declaration of trust was accepted by complainant in ignorance of defendant’s conduct.

The bill prays that the declaration of trust may be reformed, so that it may declare that Canfield contributed but $500 of said purcháse-money, making the total cash investment $6,000; that Canfield’s interest in the scheme may be correspondingly reduced; that he may discover the proceeds of sales received by him, and the portions paid out, and that he may be decreed to pay over to the complainant his proper share; that Canfield may be decreed to convey to complainant his undivided interest in the residue of the lands; that a partition be made, or a sale, if partition be impracticable, and a division of the proceeds.

To that part of the bill which prays a reformation of the declaration of trust to make it declare that Canfield contributed but $500, and that his interest in the scheme may be accordingly reduced, and to the part which seeks conveyance of the undivided interest, and a partition or sale of the residue of the lands, the defendant Canfield demurs, and alleges as causes of demurrer— first, that there is no equity in the bill; second, that the bill shows that Canfield did contribute $1,500 of the. purchase-money, and that $7,000 in all was paid into the venture; third, that it appears by the bill that the lots were to be held under the terms of .the trust until Scarlett & Scarlett and the complainant should, after the mortgages were paid, request in writing a conveyance of their undivided interests in the residue of the lands.

To the portion of the bill which seeks a discovery and accounting for the money received by the defendant from the sales of' the trust lands, the defendant pleads the pendency of another suit in this court, wherein Scarlett & Scarlett, limited, is complainant, and the trustee Canfield and the complainant in this suit (Larter) are defendants, which suit, the defendant Canfield states in his plea, is for the same matters and to the same effect and for the like relief as the complainant demands; and sets [464]*464forth by that portion of his present bill to which the plea is interposed.

The first cause of demurrer is that no such case is stated as entitles the complainant to any of the relief prayed for, &c. Objection is taken by the complainant to the framing of this cause, for the reason that it in no way specifies any defect in the bill, and that it amounts to no more than a general challenge of the whole case stated in the bill for want of equity. Specification of cause of demurrer is not required where the lack of equity in the bill is so manifest that it can readily be discerned upon mere perusal (Essex Paper Co. v. Greacen, 18 Stew. Eq. 504), unless the defect is collateral to the main case as when laches is the ground of demurrer. Van Houten v. Van Winkle, 1 Dick. Ch. Rep. 386. This cause of demurrer would therefore seem to be well expressed so far as a manifest want of equity in the bill is challenged by it.

The substance of the complainant’s well-pleaded charge which the demurrer must be held to admit to be true, is that Canfield falsely represented that he had put $1,500 of his own money into the scheme, whereas he had in fact put in but $500 of his own, and the other $1,000 was money already realized by him from the joint venture, and by him used to increase his proportionate share; that this condition of things was unknown to the complainant until shortly before the filing of the bill. The defendant is therefore shown to have represented that he had paid $1,500 of his own money into the scheme ,in which his fellows each had a proportionate interest (that of Scarlett & Scarlett many times exceeding his own), when in fact he had paid in only $500, but having in his hands another $1,000 which belonged to all the parties in the venture, he, without their knowledge, used this to inflate his actual contribution of $500 up to the apparent sum of $1,500, so that he might claim larger proportionate profits in the output of the plan. The rest of the bill addresses itself to the ultimate relief to be attained by partition,.&c.

It is hardly necessary to say that the misuse of trust moneys by a trustee for the increase of his own profit and the reduction [465]*465of the profits of his eestuis que trust, and the obtaining of the acceptance of a false declaration of a trust, are wrongs which are remediable in equity by the reformation of the trust agreement in accordance with the true relations of the parties. The first ground of demurrer should be overruled.

The second ground of demurrer is that the bill on its face shows that Canfield did contribute $1,500, his full share of the purchase-money, and that the total sum paid in was $7,000. It is true that the bill alleges that Canfield paid in $1,500, but it does not stop with that allegation as does the second ground of demurrer. The bill goes further and shows that of the $1,500 which Canfield paid in, $1,000 belonged to the complainant and his fellows in the scheme, and that Canfield fraudulently used this $1,000 of trust money, falsely representing that the whole of his contribution was of his own funds. He deceived them into the acceptance of the declaration of trust upon a false basis of proportionate profits. The second cause of demurrer does not candidly state the effect of the bill in the particular in question and should be overruled.

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Bluebook (online)
45 A. 616, 59 N.J. Eq. 461, 14 Dickinson 461, 1900 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larter-v-canfield-njch-1900.