Liebers v. Plainfield, C., Building Co.

155 A. 270, 108 N.J. Eq. 391, 7 Backes 391, 1931 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 115
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJune 12, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 155 A. 270 (Liebers v. Plainfield, C., Building Co.) 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
Liebers v. Plainfield, C., Building Co., 155 A. 270, 108 N.J. Eq. 391, 7 Backes 391, 1931 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 115 (N.J. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

The bill is to foreclose seven mortgages for $7,000 each. conveying seven adjoining houses and lots, given by Plainfield Spanish Homes Building Company, Incorporated, to Manhattan-Jersey Mortgage Corporation, April 19th, 1929, and assigned to the complainant. The answering defendants are David M. Barad and his three associates. The building company purchased a tract of land from them and gave in return a purchase-money mortgage upon which there is now due $30,000. The tract was divided into fourteen lots, and dwelling houses were erected upon thirteen of them. The purchase-money mortgage provided for its subordination to a mortgage of not more than $7,000 on each house and lot *Page 392 and provided further for a second mortgage to Barad et al., on each house for a proportionate share of the $30,000 mortgage, and to take its place. Six of the houses were mortgaged for $7,000 each and the purchase-money mortgage was subordinated, and upon the making of the seven mortgages now under foreclosure, it was subordinated to them. Later when the building company was unable to carry on, it conveyed the thirteen houses and lots to Barad et al., subject to the mortgages and they are in possession, either under their mortgage or the deed; they claim the deed was not accepted though delivered, and they have it. The Manhattan-Jersey Mortgage Corporation had agreed to finance the seven mortgages, whereupon Barad et al., subordinated their mortgage. The mortgage company was not presently in funds and the building company, pressed for money to finish the houses, turned to the complainant who advanced $15,000 temporarily to or through the mortgage company on the security of the mortgages and the mortgage company assigned to him the mortgages, he agreeing to reassign them within two months upon the repayment; the mortgage company holding out promise to finance the mortgages by that time. It defaulted. More money was needed and the complainant advanced an additional $25,000 in the same manner and the mortgage company gave him an absolute assignment of the mortgages. Later the complainant advanced another $6,000 direct to the building company and with that the company's creditors were satisfied. The first two sums were transmitted through the mortgage company by the complainant's checks which were handed to and endorsed and delivered by the mortgage company to the building company which cashed them.

The defendants make the point that the mortgage company had nothing to assign, that the mortgages were without life and consequently that the assignments were nugatory. The point is unsubstantial. It is a matter of no consequence whether the complainant made the advances to the mortgage company and it paid the money over to the building company or advanced it directly to the building company on the *Page 393 security of the mortgages. In either case the mortgages took on legal vitality the moment the consideration was paid. The form in which the security was given is unimportant. Assuming that the mortgages were impotent in the hands of the mortgage company, it was the privilege of the mortgagor to vitalize them. Even a paid and satisfied mortgage may be revived and repledged by the mortgagor. Underhill v. Atwater, 22 N.J. Eq. 16, 599; Martin v. Bowen, 51 N.J. Eq. 452.

After the second advancement of $25,000 was made, $12,500 was returned to the complainant. The defendants claim that $18,600 was returned and they rest this on the fact that after complainant's check for $25,000 was deposited to the credit of the building company, the members of that company withdrew $18,600, in three checks of $6,200 each, one to each, and that the cash was returned to the complainant. There is some mystery and a lot of recrimination and in all likelihood there was corrupt purpose in the transaction, but the complainant was not a party to it. He says he got but $12,500 and that has not been successfully controverted. Two of the members have had a falling-out with the third, a brother-in-law of the complainant, evidently over the spoils, and their antagonism and bitterness and disregard for the oath has resulted in an irreconcilable conflict of testimony and made it impossible, after again carefully reviewing it, to decide with any degree of confidence where the `truth lies. The burden is on the defendants to prove payment and that burden they have not sustained.

The complainant was paid a bonus on the first two advancements and was promised one on the third. The defense of usury is inadmissible. The building company could not plead it; the defendants cannot. Felin v. Arrow Motor Machine Co., 96 N.J. Eq. 44; Commercial Funding Corporation v. Melroy ConstructionCo., 106 N.J. Eq. 11.

It is claimed that the assignments from the mortgage company to the complainant are void because they were executed by a vice-president who was without authority. The vice-president *Page 394 was the general manager in charge of the business of the concern and was especially authorized by the board of directors to execute assignments of mortgage. The business of the company was buying and selling mortgages and it was within the scope of his authority. But the complainant's right does not alone depend upon the assignments. Their pledge by the building company to him carried the security.

The next contention is that the subordination agreement was personal to the mortgage company, because it does not in terms run to its assigns. The subordination itself is found in the covenant in the defendants' mortgage which was automatic upon the thirteen mortgages coming into being. The deed of subordination is merely the formal legal expression of the covenant, reversing the order of priority and fixing a new status for the mortgage liens for the public record. The covenant of subordination is annexed to the junior mortgage liens and runs to the holder of the mortgages.

The defendants' counter-claim to void the subordination agreement, sets up that it was obtained by fraud, first, in that the covenant in the defendants' mortgage stipulated for a subordination to mortgages to be made to a "title company or bank of the State of New Jersey," and that the mortgage company was fraudulently represented to be a title company; and second, in that the agreement was delivered conditionally and was to have effect as a delivered document only upon the payment of $1,625, which was not paid. There is no proof whatever of any representation as to the qualifications of the mortgage company. In fact, there was no inquiry, nor was there any interest displayed, except that the mortgage company would furnish the money on the security of the mortgages and the subordination; and the defendants acquiesced. It was a thing immaterial and the limitation in the covenant was waived. Barad et al. are also estopped, for they knew that the complainant had furnished some and was to furnish more of the money to finish the houses to the advantage of their second mortgage. At to the conditional delivery of the subordination agreement: The defendants' mortgage provided *Page 395 that the proportional second mortgages they were to take on each of the thirteen houses, in place of their $30,000 mortgage, were to run for three years and to be payable in quarter annual installments of $125 each. Later it was agreed that the installment payments, each aggregating $1,625, should start June 15th, 1929, whether the second mortgages were then executed or not.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 A. 270, 108 N.J. Eq. 391, 7 Backes 391, 1931 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liebers-v-plainfield-c-building-co-njch-1931.