Melos v. Hagen

133 A. 538, 99 N.J. Eq. 683, 14 Stock. 683, 1926 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 131
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 29, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 133 A. 538 (Melos v. Hagen) 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
Melos v. Hagen, 133 A. 538, 99 N.J. Eq. 683, 14 Stock. 683, 1926 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 131 (N.J. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

This is a bill to cancel a conveyance made by a ward to her guardian at the time of the settlement of his final account shortly after her majority.

The ward in question will be referred to as the complainant, and no mention will be made of her husband in his capacity as a purely formal party. The guardian is the sole defendant. In 1900 the complainant's father died intestate, seized of a parcel of real estate which he had undertaken to devise to his widow. After his death the complainant was born, and the will was nullified by the twentieth section of "An act concerning wills" (4 Comp.Stat. p. 5860), and the complainant became seized of the land in fee, subject only to the widow's dower. The widow intermarried with the defendant, and, erroneously believing herself to be the owner of the above real estate, executed a last will and testament, in which she attempted to devise one-third of the same to the defendant and the remaining two-thirds to the complainant. Thereafter, the complainant's mother died, and the defendant, in 1906, was appointed the general guardian of the latter's person and estate. During the period following this appointment he filed four or five intermediate *Page 685 accounts, and submitted to her when she became of age a final account, which was never filed in the office of the surrogate, but exhibited to her in the office of his attorney, where she accepted the same after a brief examination of it and its accompanying vouchers. The reason for this perilous practice will presently be made apparent.

The complainant became twenty-one years of age on the 6th or 7th day of November, 1921, and the final account was exhibited to her a little more than two months thereafter, on January 23d 1922. On the following day the deed, which is attacked in the bill, was drafted, and on January 25th, 1922, it was executed and acknowledged. It conveyed a little more than one-third of her entire estate, and the land conveyed was at that time worth $30,000. It was a voluntary donation, the complainant receiving nothing whatsoever in consideration thereof. After the deed had been signed by the complainant in the office of the defendant's attorney, she was escorted to the office of another member of the bar who bears a very high reputation both for integrity and professional skill, before whom, as a master in chancery, she acknowledged the instrument. His testimony is that he has no recollection of the transaction, and it is perfectly clear that nothing more was done in his presence or by him than the usual perfunctory explanation to the grantor of the contents of the deed and the taking of her acknowledgment.

There is no denial that the complainant as a child was nervous and delicate. In fact, she gave unmistakable evidence on the witness-stand of being highly nervous, if not actually neurotic. She was constantly under the care of physicians and unable to continue her scholastic education beyond the grammar grades, although possessed of an income of some $6,000 or $7,000 a year. It is true that she attended two schools conducted for business training upon the advice of her guardian, but before completing the course her delicate health necessitated a break in this education, so substantial that, when she resumed, it was at another school.

Upon the death of her mother the defendant placed her in the home of one of his sisters named Mrs. Griffin, where she *Page 686 lived until the time of her marriage, and, in fact, for some time thereafter. While thus domiciled, there is no doubt that she was treated with kindness, care and attention, and that, so far as her health and moral training were concerned, she was well cared for. But it is also equally true that during all of that period she paid her way, dollar for dollar. So great a mass of proofs was submitted that it is impracticable, within any reasonable limit, to completely present it in this opinion. But it was clearly demonstrated that the complainant utterly relied upon the defendant and his sister up to and including the time of the conveyance under attack.

During the complainant's minority exceptions were filed by a next friend to the last intermediate account ever filed in the office of the surrogate, and many, if not all of them, were sustained, whereby it was made evident that the defendant had prayed allowances for a very substantial sum of money, upwards of over a thousand dollars, which the orphans court disallowed and surcharged him with. In this connection it is not without interest to say that a counsel fee of $150 was allowed in that court to the next friend, and in his final account, which was not to bear the scrutiny of an impartial officer or to be filed as a public record, this man charged his ward with the payment of that counsel fee, which he had been directed to pay himself because of his official misconduct. Another striking instance of the effort of the defendant and those associated with him to profit by his relation of trust was the purchase of a more or less expensive automobile, which was intended for their profit and convenience, rather than that of the ward. A letter was produced, written by some physician, recommending automobile driving for the complainant's physical benefit, and there was also produced a petition addressed to the orphans court for permission to purchase the same. This, however, was never filed, and no such order was ever granted. Nevertheless, the car was purchased and used as a family vehicle, and the judgment of the physician proved entirely wrong, because the complainant was found to be of too nervous a disposition and temperament to operate an automobile. Counsel for the defendant, *Page 687 in answering the charges that full advantage had been taken of his opportunities by the guardian to profit at the expense of his ward, made the astounding argument that the legal allowances were not compensatory. If such a rule should be adopted by this court, it might as well submit and give up the struggle that it has made for centuries to compel fiduciaries to be faithful. So far as I remember, no attempt was made to explain the discrepancy in the testimony about the gift of $2,500 to Mrs. Griffin.

At the time the complainant executed the deed in question it will be recalled that she had, on the day before, examined her former guardian's final account and assented to the items therein displayed. Among them appeared regular payments of rent for the premises conveyed by the deed just mentioned, up to and including the month of November, 1921, during which she became twenty-one years of age. For December of that year and January of the year following the defendant had not charged himself with any rent, although he still continued to occupy the premises as a tenant and his ward continued to be the owner of the fee. This is especially damaging, in view of the fact that the defendant testified he had had no idea that the complainant intended to make him a gift of these premises, not only at the time the deed was executed, but not until a long period thereafter, when the deed was returned by the register of Hudson county to his attorney after it had been recorded. The defendant had been in the office where the deed was drawn on the day before its date, admittedly, and I am convinced was there at the time it was executed, although this he denies. It is one of the weaknesses of human nature that only an exceptional man can resist the temptation to be present personally and see the execution and fruition of a scheme long maturing and of great benefit to his fortunes. It is not difficult, when vitally interested, to remain quiescent even when things are running smoothly and all the auspices are good.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Marte v. Oliveras
875 A.2d 969 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2005)
Hackensack Trust Co. v. Nowacki
3 A.2d 615 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 A. 538, 99 N.J. Eq. 683, 14 Stock. 683, 1926 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melos-v-hagen-njch-1926.