Markley v. Camden Safe Deposit & Trust Co.

69 A. 1100, 74 N.J. Eq. 279, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 83
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 6, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 69 A. 1100 (Markley v. Camden Safe Deposit & Trust 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
Markley v. Camden Safe Deposit & Trust Co., 69 A. 1100, 74 N.J. Eq. 279, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 83 (N.J. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Leaming, V. C.

Complainant seeks relief against a certain trust deed made by his mother, Mary Josephine Markley, in her lifetime, to defendant trust company. The ground asserted for relief is that the property which was conveyed by Mrs. Markley to the trust company by the trust deed in question was not the absolute property of Mrs. Markley, but that her rights in the property were, in equity, limited to its enjoyment during her lifetime, and that at her death her issue (except Hamilton Markley, who is conceded to have released for the benefit of the other heirs any claim he may have had) became entitled to the property in equal shares of one-fifth each. The property in question represents the proceeds of sale of the real estate of which Albert W. Markley (husband of Mary Josephine Markley and father of complainant) died seized. The constructive trust which complainant now asserts is claimed to have arisen by reason of the manner in which Mrs. Markley acquired title to the property. Her husband died 'intestate in September, 1875, owning a large amount of personal property and seized of two tracts of real estate, one known as the mansion-house or 420 Cooper street, [281]*281Camden, where he resided, and the other as the Shamong tract, in Burlington county, and leaving him surviving his widow, Mary Josephine Markley, and six children, one of them complainant, as his heirs-at-law. At the time of the father’s death all of the children were minors except Hamilton, and after the father’s death all continued to reside with their mother in the mansion-house referred to. In the following December Hamilton filed a bill for partition of the real estate, and pursuant to decree of court, sale was made by a special master in June, 1876. At the partition sale the mansion-house property was sold by the master to Mrs. Markley for $3,000. It is admitted that the property was then worth $25,000. The Shamong property was sold to a disinterested purchaser for $700, its full value. In the partition proceedings the clerk of the court was made guardian ad litem for the several minor heirs, and after confirmation of the sales Mrs. Markley was appointed by the orphans court as guardian of the minors and as such was authorized to receipt for the proceeds of the sales, she having, prior thereto, released her dower rights in the real estate.

I am entirely satisfied from the evidence disclosing the circumstances surrounding the transaction that this purchase of the mansion-house property by Mrs. Markley was not such a purchase as can be said to have divested the equitable estate of the minor children. Complainant was then sixteen years of age. He and the other minor children were under their mother’s care and protection. Her will was their will at that time. While in the partition proceedings the clerk of the court had been duly appointed guardian at litem of the minors, there can be little doubt that the entire proceedings taken were essentially under the management and control of Mrs. Markley and her son Hamilton. No court could have confirmed that sale of the homestead property with the knowledge of its real value. Mrs. Markley, while acting or while about to act as general guardian of the minors, became the recipient of the title theretofore vested in the minors and at a valuation unconscionably inadequate. As general guardian of the minors she was able to receipt for the amount of her bid. It does not appear that the amount of her bid ever found its way into her ac[282]*282counts as guardian or that the amount for which the Sha^ mong property was sold ever became a part of her guardianship accounts. Mrs. Markley’s purpose at the time may have been and probably was that the transaction should eventually result in benefit to the children. Statements made by her were, to the effect that she took title to the homestead for the benefit of the children, but such a purpose will not destroy the constructive fraud which the policy of the law requires a court to assume to be present in such a transaction. I am convinced that it is the clear duty of a court of equity to declare a constructive trust in favor of the minors in the transaction referred to> and to treat Mrs. Markley as a trustee holding the title to the homestead property for the benefit of her children and holding the proceeds of sale of the Shamong tract for their benefit, unless it satisfactorily appear that as guardian or otherwise she subsequently accounted to them for the full value of the homestead property and for the proceeds of sale of the Shamong tract or that they have since in some other manner lost their right to assert their claim.

Complainant 'reached Iris majority in the year 1881, and as the statute of limitations runs against the right to assert a constructive trust, complainant’s remedy is now lost unless his delay is sufficiently excused. The reason assigned for the long delay on the part of the complainant in asserting his rights is that a family arrangement existed whereby it was understood that the real estate and its proceeds should be enjoyed by Mrs. Markley as long as she lives and that the corpus would not be diverted by her from the course of legal descent. If the failure of defendant to earlier assert his rights has been by reason of a family arrangement of the nature referred to, reasonably attributable to Mrs. Markley, it is clear that he should not be barred, for such an arrangement contemplates the postponement of the enjoyment of the rights of the heirs for the benefit of their mother until her death. I find it somewhat difficult to determine with certainty to what extent complainant may have deferred the assertion of his rights through any such understanding, reasonably attributable to his mother. That a family arrangement existed touching the real estate is entirely certain. In the deed [283]*283of trust against which, complainant now seeks relief Mrs. Markley, by way of recitation, oyer her own signature, asserts that the partition proceedings “were inaugurated and completed in conformity to and in compliance with a family arrangement for that purpose.” Complainant testifies to conversations with his mother in which she stated to him that at her death the real estate was to go to the children equally. Mrs. Schellenger’s testimony, though somewhat vague, is to the same general effect. It may be that the evidence justifies the conclusion that complainant’s failure to earlier assert his rights arose from his mother’s assurances that at her death the real estate, or its proceeds, would be restored to the heirs, but I incline to the view that the real cause of complainant’s inaction was his ignorance of the facts. Complainant undoubtedly had an abiding confidence in his mother, and her statements to him touching the real estate were necessarily not without influence, but his testimony leads me to believe that he has never fully understood the facts as they were, and I somewhat doubt whether the well-known intelligence of his counsel has been sufficient to impart to complainant a full appreciation of the real situation, even at this time. The constructive trust in fa^or of complainant arises from the fact that Mrs. Markley acquired complainant’s real estate in an unlawful manner. My judgment is that complainant remained in ignorance of that essential fact during the entire lifetime of his mother and I doubt whether he yet fully understands it. Under, these conditions the statute will not run against him. Mrs. Markley, as above quoted, refers to the partition transaction as a family arrangement. It is clear that complainant had no intelligent part in any family arrangement at that time.

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Bluebook (online)
69 A. 1100, 74 N.J. Eq. 279, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/markley-v-camden-safe-deposit-trust-co-njch-1908.