Marsh v. Mitchell

26 N.J. Eq. 497
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 26 N.J. Eq. 497 (Marsh v. Mitchell) 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
Marsh v. Mitchell, 26 N.J. Eq. 497 (N.J. Ct. App. 1875).

Opinion

The Vice-Chancellor.

The object of the bill in this case, is to enforce the payment of a mortgage debt, by the sale of certain mortgaged premises. The mortgage was made by the defendant, Isabella H. Mitchell, and her husband, Charles H. Mitchell, to Seth B. Mills, October 25th, 1871, to secure the payment of $9113, with interest, one year after its date, and was assigned by Mills to the complainant, June 13th, 1873. All interest accrued up to October 25th, 1873, had been paid, before the commencement of the suit, in semi-annual payments. .Charles H. Mitchell died January 30th, 1873. The bill was filed March 11th, 1874. The land mortgaged was the separate property of the defendant, and the consideration of the mortgage was a debt of her husband. Its validity against him has not been questioned.

On-the argument, the complainant’s right to a decree was resisted on the grounds:, first, that the paper sought to. be enforced as a mortgage, was not, as against the defendant, a valid deed, because she did not acknowledge the statutory [499]*499facts, necessary to pass her estate, on a private examination, ay-vt ítv.)■» her hnsband, but in his presence and under his second, that she was induced it. execute it by the fraudulent representations of one Seman Tvlous, as to its object and the use to be made of it.

The statutory requirement that the acknowledgment of a married woman shall be on a private examination, apart from her husband, is clear and imperative. No estate of a feme covert shall pass without it. Revision 88. It applies to all conveyances by a married woman, whether of her own separate estate or the lands of her hnsband. Ross v. Armstrong, 5 C. E. Green 109. The certificate of acknowledgment, in this case, is in due form, certifying that the defendant was privately examined, separate and apart from her husband, by the officer, and that on such examination, she acknowledged all the facts required by the statute. This, however, simply makes a prima facie case; the truth of the certificate may be disproved. Wells v. Wright, 7 Halst. 137.

Whatever force there might have been in that defence, under other circumstances, it is clear, in the present condition of the pleadings, the defendant cannot be permitted to make it. It is not set up in the answer. It is not even hinted at. By the answer, the defence is limited to fraudulent representations in procuring the mortgage; no question is made that the formal acts necessary to give it validity as the deed of a married woman, were performed ; indeed, the complainant is not put to the proof of the mortgage. She admits its execution, but avers it is invalid because procured by fraud. In this condition of affairs, it is obvious the defence now set up is not within the issue made by the pleadings. The defendant cannot, therefore, have the benefit of it. Parsons v. Heston, 3 Stockt. 155 ; Howell v. Sebring, 1 McCarter 90 ; Champion v. Kille, Ib. 232 ; Gresley’s Eq. Ev. 234, marg’l. “ A decree entirely outside of the issue raised in the record, is coram non judioe, and will be so adjudged, even when assailed in a collateral proceeding.” Munday v. Vail, 5 Vroom 418.

[500]*500The power of permitting amendments is frequently exercised by courts of equity, even on final hearing, when necessary to the furtherance of justice. Should the defendant be-permitted to file an amended or supplemental answer to set up this defence ? The answer is under oath. No claim is made that there was actual coercion, or that the mortgage-was not her voluntary act. If it is true her husband put her name to the notes without her knowledge or authority,, she had strong motive for desiring to have them in her owm possession and out of the hands of a determined creditor.. Even before the production of evidence, the court listens to> applications to amend sworn answers, with great caution, and will not, as a general rule, permit material facts, prejudicial to the complainant, to be added, if they were known to the; defendant at the time the original answer was sworn to. Vandervere v. Reading, 1 Stockt. 446; note to Livesey v. Wilson, 1 Vesey & Beames 149; Bowen v. Cross, 4 Johns. Ch. 375; Champion v. Kille, supra; 1 Daniells Ch. Pr. 778, 780. Chancellor Green, in denying, an application to amend,, in Huffman v. Hummer, 2 C. E. Green 272, employs language strongly pertinent to the case in hand. He says: It is clear that no new fact has come to the knowledge of the-defendant since the answer was sworn to. Every, fact now within the knowledge of the defendant, was known to him at the time of putting in the answer, and it would tend to the-encouragement of gross negligence, to permit a defendant to. remould an answer, to the truth of which he had sworn, with full knowledge of all the facts.” It is perfectly plain an, amendment cannot be permitted in this case without violating an established rule of practice.

It 'must also be remarked, the defendant is precluded from-disputing the due execution of the mortgage, by admissions made in her behalf and forming part of the record in this case. Her solicitor admitted, before the master, during the production of the proofs, that the mortgage was signed and executed by the defendant and her husband. The admission was recorded by the master, with the assent of the solicitor,, [501]*501:and the mortgage offered and received in evidence without •objection. Express admissions in judiaio, stand as conclusive presumptions of law, (1 Greenleafs Ev., § 27,) and cannot be disputed unless it is first shown they were made by mistake. Ibid, § 206. No such claim is made, and, under the >;vmn toes, it maybe fairly pnvumcd would be difficult to Main it, if made.

i’ pnii Me record as it now stand■„ '( lisM; ledue execution the ■ gage has been admittc md : - tot, therefore, be ■MeM.f'.h

The papers, by their inherent force and the defendant’s admission, establish a complete case against her, and put on her the burden of showing they are vitiated by fraud.

The mortgage was given to take up two notes, purporting to be made by the defendant and her husband to Semau Klous, the first dated April 19th, 1870, for §5000, payable eighteen months after date, and the second, dated October 12th, 1870, for §4500, payable one year after date, each bearing interest from its date. The defendant says she did not sign them, either in person or by an agent, but that her husband admitted he had put her name to them. If the signatures are imitations, they are skillful. Klous transferred the notes to Seth D. Mills before maturity, who, some days before they fell due, informed the defendant he held them, and payment at maturity would be required. The defendant never disputed the genuineness of her signatures, nor her liability, until the commencement of this suit; on the surrender of the notes to her, after the execution of the mortgage, she admitted they bore her name.

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.J. Eq. 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marsh-v-mitchell-njch-1875.