Lindsley v. McGrath

50 A. 236, 62 N.J. Eq. 478, 17 Dickinson 478, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 8
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 19, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 50 A. 236 (Lindsley v. McGrath) 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
Lindsley v. McGrath, 50 A. 236, 62 N.J. Eq. 478, 17 Dickinson 478, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 8 (N.J. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Pitney, Y. C.

The complainants, Thomas E. Lindsley, James D. Lindsley and Mary Temple, are brothers and sister, and file their bill to quiet title to a tract of about fifty acres of land situate in the township of Jefferson, Morris county, which they allege to be in the possession of their tenant.

The defendant files his answer and cross-bill, in which he avers that he was, at one time and until recently, in possession through a tenant, but that recently the complainants had induced the tenant to attorn to them, so that the complainants are in possession.

Both parties claim through one J acob L. Eichter, or, as he was sometimes called and sometimes signed his name, Jacob Eichter, who lived and did business in the village of Eockaway, Morris county, about ten miles from and south of the premises.

The complainants, by their bill, deduce their title as follows: A deed of conveyance from J acob L. Eichter and wife to Sarah L. Lindsley, dated February 8th, 1858; the death of Sarah L. Lindsley seized of the premises and intestate, in December, 1866, leaving her husband, Stephen A. Lindsley, surviving, and the three complainants and four other brothers and sisters her heirs-at-law ; and the death of four of the heirs of Sarah L. Lindsley intestate and without children, by which their title by descent was east upon the three complainants as their heirs-at-law.

The defendant sets out his title as follows: A contract of sale, entered into between Jacob L. Eichter and Stephen A. Lindsley on December 6th, 1852, to convey the premises in question to Stephen, for the consideration of $900, of which $200 in cash was then paid, $200 further was to be paid on May 27th, 1853, and the balance to be paid by a mortgage of $500; that the second sum of $200 was paid on or about May 27th, 1853, and that, on the day last named, Eichter and wife conveyed the premises. to Lindsley by a good and sufficient deed of conveyance, and that Lindsley and wife executed and delivered to Eichter a mortgage, dated that day, to secure the balance of the consideration money.—$500—in sums of $100 a year for five years, as witnessed by five promissory notes for that amount made by Lindsley to Eichter; that that deed was never recorded, and is lost; that [480]*480afterwards Lindsley paid the whole or some part of the money secured by said mortgage; that the making of said deed of conveyance from Fichter,to Stephen A. Lindsley was well known to his wife Sarah L. Lindsley, and that she took a deed of conveyance, on February 8th, 1858, from Fichter, without consideration paid, and with full knowledge of the prior conveyance to her husband, and without her husband’s consent; that after the death of Sarah L. Lindsley her husband married one Mary Vermeule; that he and his second wife remained in possession of the premises until 1897, when he died, having left a last will and testament, in which he gave the whole of his property to his widow, Mary Lindsley; that the estate of Stephen A. Lindsley became indebted to the defendant, McGrath, who was an undertaker, for the expenses of the funeral of the said Stephen A. Lindsley, and that the widow made a deed* of conveyance to him (McGrath) to secure him for such indebtedness.

The complainants’ answer to the defendant’s cross-bill sets up and claims that the lost and unrecorded deed of conveyance, alleged by the defendant to have been made on May 27th, 1853, by Fichter .to Stephen A. Lindsley, was, in fact, made to the said Sarah L. Lindsley.

Upon these pleadings the cause was brought to a hearing upon evidence; and the following facts appeared:

That Lindsley was a carpenter and builder, who lived with his wife on the premises in question at and before December 6th, 1852, and that she bore him the children mentioned in the pleadings, and that four of them died intestate, as stated in the bill; and that the defendant acquired his title under the will of Stephen Lindsley and the deed of Stephen Lindsley’s second wife, an aged lady, who still survives, and has one son by her husband, Stephen Lindsley.

It appeared that Sarah L. Lindsley, the first wife of Stephen A. Lindsley, was a sister of the wife of Jacob L. Fichter, from whom both parties claimed, and that the two were the daughters of David Estill, an old gentleman of some means, who lived near the premises in question.

Lindsley’s family lived, as we have seen, on the premises in [481]*481question, and Jacob L. Fiehter, the grantor, was a merchant and lived with his wife in Rockaway, ten miles south from the premises. Lindsley did not live happily with his first wife, and his trade carried him away from home a good deal of the time, and sometimes for a month or a year. The premises were then, and still are, of little.value.

The defendant produced a receipt, admitted to be in the handwriting of Eiehter, dated December 6th, 1853, in the following words:

“Received December 6th, 1852, from Stephen A. Lindsley, two hundred dollars, being one payment on my farm, price stated in deed.
“$200. Jacob Fichter.”

Further, he produced another receipt, also admitted to be in the handwriting of Jacob L. Fiehter, as follows:

“Received May 27th, 1853, from Stephen A. Lindsley, two hundred dollars, being 2d payment on my farm, price stated in deed.
“Jacob Fichteb.”

He then produced a canceled mortgage, covering the land in question, made by Stephen A. Lindsley and Sarah L. Lindsley, his wife, to Jacob Fiehter, dated May 27th, 1853, in the handwriting of and acknowledged before Horace Chamberlain, a commissioner of deeds, who has been dead several years. It is witnessed, however, by Stephen Strait, also deceased, a well-known citizen of Jefferson township. Mr. Chamberlain is known to the court (and the knowledge of the court was taken by the parties at the hearing instead of proof) to have been a surveyor and conveyancer of considerable repute for care and accuracy, who lived in the neighborhood of these lands.

The consideration named in the mortgage was $500, and it was conditioned to pay

“$500, according to five promissory notes for the sum of $100 each payable to Jacob Ficbter or bearer, in one, two, three, four and five years from date, with interest from date, and bfearing date on the 27th of May, 1853.”

[482]*482The description of the property, which is in two tracts, is not by metes and bounds, but by reference to adjoining owners, and to the record of a deed to Edward Condict, who was Eichter’s grantor, but not to the conveyance to Eiehter; and the mortgage itself does not refer to any cotemporaneous or other conveyance made by Eiehter to Lindsley; and the only legal proof offered by defendant of the making of a deed at that time is what is contained in the two receipts for $200—each in the handwriting not of Mr. Chamberlain, but of Mr. Eiehter himself, and which says that the payments are made “on my farm, price stated in deed,” and the execution and delivery of the mortgage.

The defendant also produces the five promissory notes referred to in the mortgage in question, which appear to have been all written on one sheet of paper, in the handwriting of Mr. Chamberlain, and signed by Stephen A. Lindsley.

The production of those notes would be prima facie

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Related

Dill v. Dill
179 A. 370 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 A. 236, 62 N.J. Eq. 478, 17 Dickinson 478, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindsley-v-mcgrath-njch-1901.