McArdle Real Estate Co. v. McGowan

163 A. 24, 109 N.J.L. 595, 1932 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 342
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 18, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 163 A. 24 (McArdle Real Estate Co. v. McGowan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McArdle Real Estate Co. v. McGowan, 163 A. 24, 109 N.J.L. 595, 1932 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 342 (N.J. 1932).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Parker, J.

The writ brings up an order made by the First District Court of Jersey City, making absolute a rule to show cause, and providing in particular that three judgments in three suits in that court wherein the real estate company above named was plaintiff and said Margaret McGowan was defendant, “be set aside and vacated.” Each of the three judgments was a default judgment, defendant not appearing and judgment being entered on the statutory affidavit of the cause of action. Pamph. L. 1913, p. 280. The judgments were docketed and executions thereon were levied against real estate, which was put up for sale by the sheriff and sold, by virtue of the McArdle executions, to Yiolette Lynch, a junior judgment creditor, but no. deed has been delivered by the sheriff.

At some stage in these proceedings not clearly indicated by the state of the case, it transpired that defendant was of unsound mind, and about two months after the sheriff’s sale lunacy proceedings were begun in the Court of Chancery and duly prosecuted, resulting in an adjudication that Miss McGowan was a lunatic and had been such for over three years past. Her sister was appointed guardian of her person and property, and by her attorney obtained the rule to show cause which led to the opening of the judgments.

The prosecutor first objects that the District Court erred in opening the judgments.

It is not argued that the thirty days statute (Comp. Stat., p. 1959, § 17) controls the present situation. The case of Lutter v. Neubauer, 100 N. J. L. 17; affirmed, 101 Id. 222, cited by both counsel, is dispositive of that point and several others arising in this ease. But the argument seems to be that the present case does not meet all of the four requirements laid down in the case cited. That it does meet the first two, viz., that defendant was insane when served with *597 process, and that the court was unaware of that disability, is not denied. The challenge relates to the third and fourth. Conceding that de Cendant did not appear and was not represented, it is denied that she “had in fact a good and meritorious defense.” Rut the meaning of that phrase is to be gathered from the remarks of this court on page 19 of the Lutter case. It does not mean a defense which can be guaranteed to prevail at a trial, but one which if stated on an ordinary application to open a default judgment for surprise and merits would lead the court to grant the application. The lunatic signed a lease as tenant about August 1st, 1930, and she vacated the premises after three months, about October 31st. The claim in the first suit is for rent o£ October, November and December. As to the latter two months, we have at least the disaffirmance by a lunatic of a contract she was legally incapable of making, except for necessaries. See Hurey v. Leavitt, 93 Id. 299. Assuming that in view of her occupancy of the premises during October, she was liable for that month, as to which we express no opinion, at least the defense for the other two months has such merit as calls for a trial; and that is what was meant in the Lutter case.

As to the fourth prerequisite to opening the judgment, it is urged that the rights of an innocent third party have intervened, and that such third party has not been brought into the present proceeding, and will be legally aggrieved by the opening of the judgments if sustained. It is said that Mrs. Lynch, “a stranger to the proceedings below, had therefore incurred liabilities, and had become invested with a fixed and definite legal right, which is recognized and enforced by the law.” The brief maker does not state what the liabilities are, nor what fixed and definite legal right is vested in Mrs. Lynch by her bid at the sheriff’s sale. If she had become a bona fide purchaser, then, as the court had jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject-matter, she would be protected by her deed from the sheriff even if the judgments and executions were set aside in a direct proceeding. Comp. Stat., p. 4677, pl. 10; 23 C. J. 771; Nichols v. Dissler, 31 N. J. L. 461; Shultz v. Sanders, 38 N. J. Eq. 154; affirmed, Ibid. *598 293. In this last case there were infants, against whom no proof had been made. But if Mrs. Lynch has not completed the purchase by paying the money and taking the deed, she is not a bona fide purchaser (23 C. J. 759), and it is difficult to see what “fixed and definite legal rights” she acquired, by merely contracting to purchase under judgments apparently valid at the time of the sale, but attacked before it was consummated. A purchaser in that situation would seem entitled to have back what he advanced in cash on account of his bid, but no. more. As to the costs of advertising, &e., she is not liable for those. For the lunatic it is urged that Mrs. Lynch may not be the innocent third party that she is claimed to be; but that question cannot be settled at this time, particularly as she is not before us. We conclude that the District Court did not err in opening the judgments.

But the rule entered in the District Court provides that the three MeArdle judgments “be set aside and vacated.” The phrase in itself does not clearly indicate whether the court ruled merely that the judgments should be opened and the defendant admitted to defend on the merits, or whether it was intended to quash the whole proceeding in each case; but an examination of the record makes it plain that the latter course was meant, as the rule making absolute the rule to show cause specifically states that “service was not made in accordance with the manner prescribed for service of process upon a lunatic.” Other parts of the record, needless to recite here, confirm this view. Hence the determination in the District Court was a final one, and this makes it unnecessary to consider the propriety of a certiorari in advance of final judgment.

We think there was error in adjudging that defendant had not been properly served with process. The lower court seems 'to have been of opinion that service, to be valid, must be personal, and “in the presence of a competent person as required by statute.” We know of no such statute, and none has been cited to us. Counsel relies on the ease of In re Martin, 86 N. J. Eq. 265 (at p. 271), where the late Chancellor Walker quotes a note found on pages 19, 20 of Dickinson’s Chancery *599 Precedents. Assuming the correctness oí that note, it relates to actions in equity and does not apply to suits at law. As to these latter, our leading decision is Van Horn v. Hann, 39 N. J. L. 207, wherein (at p. 213) the court says, citing English authorities: “The common law rule [italics ours] is that a lunatic defends in the same manner as ordinary persons.

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Bluebook (online)
163 A. 24, 109 N.J.L. 595, 1932 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcardle-real-estate-co-v-mcgowan-nj-1932.