Longley v. Sperry

66 A. 1062, 72 N.J. Eq. 537, 2 Buchanan 537, 1907 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 79
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 66 A. 1062 (Longley v. Sperry) 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
Longley v. Sperry, 66 A. 1062, 72 N.J. Eq. 537, 2 Buchanan 537, 1907 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 79 (N.J. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Pitney, Advisory Master.

The contest in this cause is over a sum of money in the hands of the court, which is the proceeds of the sale, by consent of the parties and the order of the court, of certain chattels constituting a livery stable plant known as the Golf Stables, situate at Cranford, New Jersey. '

The question involved is, Which of two innocent parties— Longley and Sperry—shall suffer by the manifest fraud of a third party ?

Both parties claim under chattel mortgages, and the question is one of priority, depending upon the effect of certain facts and circumstances in the cause. The facts are as follows:

In the last days of July, 1905, one James Z.. Smith was the owner in possession of the chattels in question, and all parties claim through him.

On the 29th day of July, 1905, he conveyed the stable and contents and the lease of the realty to the complainant, Longley, and to one William E. Brock (who is the fraud-doer in the case), jointly, for the sum of $3,000. Of this sum, $2,000 was paid in cash, $1,500 being paid by Longley and $500 by Brock, and for the balance of $1,000 they delivered to Smith their several promissory notes for $500 each, one made by Longley, endorsed by Brock, payable six months after date, and one made by Brock, endorsed by Longley, payable twelve months after date.

[540]*540Mr. Austin, a lawyer practicing at Cranford, seems to have attended to this matter professionally, and he swears that he promptly lodged the mortgage for record, and it so appears, and that it was duly returned to him from the office of the register, and that he mailed it immediately to Mr. Smith at Cranford. Mr. Smith swears that immediately after the sale, and while Brock was in possession managing the business for himself and Longley, his, Smith’s mail, continued to be delivered at the stable. The fair inference from all the evidence, and this is Mr. Smith’s theory, is that this mortgage was delivered from the post-office to the livery stable and there taken and kept by Brock. It is certain that it never came to the hands of Mr. Smith, and was next seen in the hands of Brock under circumstances presently to be stated.

Mr. Longley left the management of the business at the livery stable mainly, if not entirety, to Brock, but the bill and letterheads of the concern were printed and the bills made out in the name of William E. Brock & Company.

Mr. Longley paid his note at maturity, which made him the ■owner of two-thirds interest in the plant.

Mr. Smith procured the note of Brock, with Smith’s endorsement in addition to that of Longley, to be discounted at the Cranford bank.

Some time shortly before the 1st of June, 1906 (two months before maturity of Brock’s note), Brock applied to the defendant Sperry (who was engaged in business in New York City, but seems to have lived and been acquainted in Cranford) for a loan of $2,250 to be secured by a chattel mortgage on the stable. Sperry seems from his carefully prepared ex parte affidavit (received in evidence by consent without cross-examination) to have been satisfied to loan that amount, and for the purpose of carrying the affair through employed his regular New York attorney, Mr. John Hall Jones, with an office at No. 320 .Broadway. Sperry learned from Brock that Smith held a chattel mortgage on the premises to secure $500 and instructed Jones to procure an assignment of that mortgage. Jones thereupon communicated by telephone with Smith and arranged with him for a meeting on June 4th at Jones’ office. On that day Sperry, [541]*541Smith and Brock met in Jones’ office, and it then appeared and was stated that the original mortgage could not be produced, and that the $500 note of Brock was held by the Cranford bank. Sperry thereupon drew his cheek for $525.33—the amount of the note with interest—-to the order of the bank, and another check for $1,724.67 (the balance of the $2,250 to be loaned) to the order of Brock and delivered the same to a Mr. Nolan, apparently an attorney, but who was called in the case assistant to Mr. Jones, and whom I will call his clerk, with instructions that the same were to be delivered upon receiving from Mr. Smith an assignment of his mortgage and upon the execution by Brock of a chattel mortgage to Sperry. Mr. Jones caused to be prepared and executed by Smith an assignment of Smith’s mortgage in which it is erroneously described as a mortgage dated August 1st, 1905, and made by Brock alone without stating the name of the mortgagee, and that assignment was executed on the same 4th day of June before Jones as a notary, and recorded that same afternoon.

On the same afternoon—according to Sperry’s theory of the facts—Nolan, Brock and Smith proceeded to the bank at Cranford, and there Nolan handed the $525.33 check to the proper officer of the bank, who produced Brock’s note, endorsed by Longley and Smith, accepted the check, stamped the note paid, and handed it to Brock, the maker, and thereupon Smith delivered his assignment to Nolan, who caused the same to be- recorded promptly.

The error in the description in Smith’s assignment being detected—just when does not directly appear—a new assignment was prepared in Jones’ office, executed, dated and recorded on the 5th day of June, wherein the mortgage was properly described, both as to date and the names of the mortgagors, Longley and Brock.

On the same 4th day of June Brock executed a chattel mortgage, prepared by Jones, to secure the whole sum of $2,250, to which is annexed an affidavit made by Brock, the mortgagor, and not by Sperry, the mortgagee, stating that the true consideration was a loan of $2,250, and that mortgage was acknowledged on the same day before Mr. Jones as a notary public, and was [542]*542recorded on the samé day, and the check of Sperry for $1,724.67 was duly delivered to Mr. Brock and'paid on that day by the bank.

Mr. Jones, on being informed that 'the original note of Brock had been handed to Brock and kept by him, required and received from Brock a substituted note for $500 to the order of Sperry, and due on August 1st, 1906, with interest from August 1st, 1905. Jones also prepared and required Brock to sign a statement under date of June 6th, 1906, that he, Brock, had destroyed, the $500 note and also the chattel mortgage given to secure it.

The foregoing, facts are abstracted from the several affidavits of Sperry, Jones, Smith and Nolan, carefully prepared for use in contesting a motion by complainant for interim restraint against Sperry pending suit, and admitted in evidence by consent without cross-examination.

In this condition of affairs, on the 9th day of June, Brock proposed to Longley, who resided in Elizabeth, to purchase out his, Longley’s, interest in the stable, and in that connection produced and'showed to him the'chattel mortgage, given by the two to Smith, duly canceled by tearing off the- seals, and the promissory note made by Brock and endorsed by Longley duly stamped paid by the bank. The chattel mortgage did not bear any evidence of having been satisfied of record. ’ .

A week later, on the 16th day of June, Longley and Brock concluded the contract of purchase and sale.- Longley gave Brock k

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Bluebook (online)
66 A. 1062, 72 N.J. Eq. 537, 2 Buchanan 537, 1907 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/longley-v-sperry-njch-1907.