McKee v. Griggs

51 N.J. Eq. 178
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 51 N.J. Eq. 178 (McKee v. Griggs) 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
McKee v. Griggs, 51 N.J. Eq. 178 (N.J. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Greek, V. C.

Mary Ann McKee, wife of James McKee, on the 2d of October, 1877, was seized in fee of three parcels .of land in the city of Paterson. Plot No. 1 being the northeast corner of Willis street and Sedgwick avenue, one hundred feet square, was subject to a mortgage held by John H. Harbeck, Jr., for $5,700, which was then due. Plot No. 2, a lot on Main street, twenty-five feet from Slater street, being twenty-five feet by one hundred, was subject to a mortgage held by Henry Cowan for $2,300. Plot No. 3, a lot twenty-five feet by one hundred, on the northeast corner of Main and Slater streets, was subject to a mortgage held by the Mutual Life Insurance Company for $2,500, which was the first lien, and also to a mortgage to John Hinchliffe for $700. There were houses on all these different tracts.

Mr. Harbeck, at the time mentioned, was pressing for payment of his mortgage; there was a dispute between him and James McKee with reference to a claim which the latter insisted should be allowed by Harbeck in settlement.

Robert Adams, effected an arrangement with Mr. Harbeck by which he agreed to take in settlement a bond from Mr. Adams for $3,000, payable in one year, Harbeck to retain his mortgage as security for the payment of Mr. Adams’ bond.

This arrangement was agreed to by the McKees, who furthermore agreed to secure Mr. Adams by a bond and mortgage upon ■the three tracts, conditioned for the payment of $3,000, with interest, if Adams was required to pay that amount to Mr. Harbeck. In pursuance of this arrangement a contract in writing was executed between Harbeck and Adams, and Adams gave his bond to Harbeck.

March 22d, 1878, the McKees gave to Adams the bond and mortgage as they had agreed to do.

The McKees did not pay the $3,000 to Harbeck, and Adams was forced to pay the sum, which he did on April 7th, 1879, taking from Harbeck an assignment of the $5,700 mortgage.

June 9th, 1879, Adams filed his bill in this court to foreclose the mortgage given to him, and a decree of foreclosure and sale was entered February 3d, 1880. By this decree the property [180]*180was ordered to be sold in parcels, and the fieri facias directed that the sale should be made first of Plot No. 1, and out of it Adams should be paid the amount due on his mortgage, viz., $3,479.56, and costs, $138.64; that Plot No. 2 should next be sold, and out of the proceeds Mr. Cowan’s mortgage debt should be paid, namely, $2,649.50, any balance remaining to be paid to Adams in the event of his debt not being discharged by the proceeds of Plot No. 1; in the next place, that Plot Nó. 3 should be sold subject to the mortgage of the Mutual Life Insurance Company, and the proceeds appropriated to the payment of any balance due Mr. Adams. This plot was also subject to the Hinchliffe mortgage upon it, he not being a party to the suit. After several adjournments the property was sold on the 31st of July, 1880, and struck off to James H. Rogers, solicitor for Adams,the complainant, as follows: Plot No. 1, for $400"; Plot No. 2, for $2,500; Plot No. 3, subject to the insurance company’s mortgage, for. $3,000. Mr. Rogers signed the conditions of sale as solicitor for Adams, as bought for $5,900.

The deed was not made immediately after the sale, but Adams went into possession of the property and put it in the hands of his real estate agent, James A. Morrisse. A sale of Plot No. 1, was afterwards effected by Mr. Eckings, a real estate agent, to John H. Kemp, for $2,500, and Adams took a deed from the sheriff dated July 31st, 1880, the sheriff’s affidavit being made on the 13th of November, 1880, the consideration expressed being $400, the amount of the bid; and Adams and wife, by deed dated November 15th, 1880, conveyed it to John H. Kemp for the consideration of $2,500. Kemp retained $701.07 for taxes due, and paid the balance — $1,798.93—to Adams, who applied it, with the amount of rents which he had received from the property, upon his claim.

In the face of the decree of foreclosure and sheriff’s sale to Adams, Mary Ann McKee/ personally, made an application to the Mutual Life Insurance Company, November 19th, 1888, for a loan of $7,000 upon Plots Nos. 2 and 3, which adjoin one another, and this loan was passed by the committee of the insurance company to Mrs. McKee. This was subject, of course, [181]*1814o the title being satisfactorily vested in her when giving the mortgage.

Afterwards, John Shaw, who was a member of the firm of •Shaw & Hinchliffe, wealthy brewers of Paterson, and a warm personal friend of Mrs. McKee, was substituted as the party to whom the loan was to be made. This was effected, not by his filing a new application, but by an alteration of the endorsement ■on Mrs. McKee’s former application. He went twice at least, personally, to New York-with reference to the loan; Mr. White, the insurance company’s real estate agent, says that Mr. Shaw’s ¡substitution was an arrangement the lawyers, who passed the papers, had to deal with, that the loan was passed by the committee to Mrs. McKee. The sheriff, by deed dated July 31st, 1880 (the sheriff’s affidavit annexed, however, was not verified •until January 17th, 1881), for the expressed consideration of $5,500, conveyed the two tracts Nos. 2 and 3 to John Shaw, who is therein described as the purchaser at the' sheriff’s sale ■of the property for that amount. Mr. Shawfthen gave his bond and mortgage to the Mutual Life Insurance Company, upon the same property, to secure the loan of $7,000. These papers are both dated July 31st, 1880, and are both acknowledged under date of January 17th, 1881. It seems that the balance •due Robert Adams — $1,646.46—was paid by check of Shaw & Hinchliffe, dated January 14th, 1881, and the taxes on the two lots, amounting to $910, by check of the same firm, dated January 18th, 1881.

The Mutual Life Insurance Company gave Mr. Shaw a check ■dated January 18th, 1881, for $7,000, which he endorsed over to John McClure, one of the counsel of the insurance company, who retained his fees and the amount due on the prior mortgage of the insurance company, and paid the balance — $4,354.03— by check dated the same day, to Mr. Shaw. This he deposited to the credit of his private account in the First National Bank of Paterson, January 19th, 1881, and the same day gave a check to Henry Cowan for $2,752.86 in settlement of his mortgage and ■one to John Hinchliffe, Sr., for $700, the amount of his mortgage. January 22d, 1881, he gave his cheek to Jacob H. Blau[182]*182velt, county clerk, for his fees, “searching title Mrs. McKee.” On January 20th, 1881, the deed from the sheriff to Shaw and the mortgage from Shaw to the Mutual Life Insurance Company were put upon record. Mr. Shaw placed the property in' the-hands of Mr. Eckings, as his real estate agent, but Mrs. McKee continued to reside in one of the houses up to the time of her death without the payment of rent.

Mr. Shaw went to Europe somewhere about August 22d, 1881,. and died there in November following. He wás a widower with several children. He left a last will and testament, which was-duly admitted to probate in Passaic county, containing the following provision:

“I give, devise and bequeath, unto J. W. Griggs and Henry L. Butler of Paterson, New Jersey, and to their heirs arid assigns forever, all my real and personal estate of whatsoever description and wheresoever situated to be by them or the survivor of them, held upon the following trusts,”

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.J. Eq. 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckee-v-griggs-njch-1893.