Miller v. Jamison

26 N.J. Eq. 404
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 26 N.J. Eq. 404 (Miller v. Jamison) 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
Miller v. Jamison, 26 N.J. Eq. 404 (N.J. Ct. App. 1875).

Opinion

The Chaxeeelob.

The complainant, a creditor of Charles B. Dungan, is the purchaser, at auditors’ sale, in foreign attachment, of the right, title, and interest of Dungan in a cottage and lot of land in Cape May city, known as the “ Tilge Cottage.” The attachment was issued on the 2d of September, 1865, and was executed on the 13th of the same month. The auditors’ sale took place on the 15th of April, 1869, and their deed to the complainant is dated on the 15th of May following. At the time of the issuing and execution of the attachment, the title to the property in question was in James S. Dungan, a son of the debtor. He, subsequently, and on the 6th of November, 1865, about two months after the execution of the attachment, executed a deed for the property in fee to his aunt, the defendant, Mrs. Jatnison, the debtor’s sister. She, on the 27th of September, 1870, executed a mortgage on the property to her sister, the defendant Mrs. Scattergood, to secure the payment of $2500.

The bill alleges, that at the time of the execution of the ■attachment, the debtor, Charles B. Dungan, was the owner ■of the property ; that he had paid for it $5800 ; that it was held in trust for him by his son, to whom he, being pecuniarily embarrassed, had caused it to be conveyed, to put it beyond the reach of his creditors ; that, with the like design and object, and to effectuate the same fraudulent purpose, he caused his son to execute the deed to Mrs. Jamison, after the execution of the attachment, and that Mrs. Scattergood’s mortgage,, made in 1870, was taken with full notice of the attachment. It prays an account of the rents and profits of the property from Mrs. Jamison; that the auditors’ deed may .be decreed to convey a good and valid title, and that the deed [406]*406from James to his aunt may be decreed to have passed no title to her, or that she may be decreed to convey the property to the complainant. The defendants have all answered.

That Charles B. Dungan, the debtor, was embarrassed by his debts at the time of the purchase of the property, which was about the 18th of March, 1865, is, notwithstanding his positive and unequivocal denial in the answer, proved beyond all controversy. The testimony of Mrs. Jamison herself furnishes abundant evidence, not only of the fact, but that she was fully aware of it. That he purchased the property, and paid for it with his own money, and that he caused it to be conveyed to his son, James, who held the title when the attachment was executed, and who was then not yet twenty-two-years of age, is admitted. But, it is insisted, that the purchase of the property was made by the debtor, not for himself, but for Mrs. Jamison; that he was indebted, to the amount of over $12,000, to her husband, who died in 1860, and that, after the settlement of Mr. Jamison’s estate by his executors, they had delivered over to her, as legatee under the will, a schedule of certain debts, including that of Charles B. Dungan, which were either deemed uncollectible or difficult of collection, or which had not been collected because of reluctance to press for payment; that Mrs. Jamison, being desirous of purchasing the cottage, and her wish being made known to Charles B. Dungan, he proposed not only to conduct the negotiations for the purchase with the owner, with whom it was supposed he could deal with better advantage, but to buy the property for her, and pay for it with his own money, asking only that the purchase money might be credited on the debt due from him to her husband’s estate. The improbability of this account of the transaction is clearly manifest. Mrs. Jamison admits that she knew her brother was “ in trouble ”—that he was embarrassed pecuniarily. She says she had asked for payment several times before the purchase of the cottage, and that he had never paid her anything ; that when she asked for payment, he said he thought he would pay in a short time, and that his business was such [407]*407that he could not do it. Duncan White, who is the debtor’s brother-in-law, he having married Charles B. Dnngan’s sister, testifies, that before the purchase of the cottage Mrs. Jamison had applied to Dungan for $5000 of the money due her, and he had not paid it, though he said he was anxious to raise it for her. Besides, both Charles I». Dungan and his son, James, give as a reason for taking the title in the name of the latter, that they proposed to raise $2500 on a mortgage of the property, for the purposes of James’ business, which appears to have been his father’s also. Charles B. Dungan says that he endeavored to get Tilge, the owner of the property, to take a mortgage for so ranch of the purchase money, but he insisted on the payment of the whole of the $5800 in cash. It seems quite incredible that Charles B. Dungan, who was notoriously embarrassed in bis pecuniary idfaii';;, should have voluntarily, unnecessarily, and unexpectedly interposed, as Mr. White alleges Le .lid, in the transaction of the proposed purchase of the property by Mrs. Jamison, and have offered, not only fo negotiate for her, but to pay the purchase money ($6000, if the property could not be bought for less,) in cash, in consideration of an old debt vine from him to his wealthy sister, especially when, according to his own statement, it was important to his business operations that he should have $2500 of the money for use therein.

In the answer, which is joint and several, Charles and James say that it was understood by them, at the time of the conveyance, that Mrs. Jamison would permit James, who, they say, had recently entered into the business of furnishing railroad ties, to borrow the sum of $2500 on the property, and, for this purpose, Charles requested Tilge to take a mortgage on the premises for that amount, as part of the purchase money; but Tilge refusing to take a mortgage, and a difficulty being suggested about the bond and mortgage of.a woman, in case the conveyance should be made to Mrs. Jamison, and she should give the mortgage, it was thought advisable to have the title to the property conveyed to James temporarily, and [408]*408until he could negotiate the required loan, and then he would convey the property to Mrs. Jamison. They further say, that the conveyance was thus made to James for his own convenience, and without Mrs. Jamison’s knowledge or consent. Now, in the first place, the purchase .was closed in the office and under the supervision of a counsellor-at-law of this state, of learning and experience in business, by whom the most careful searches of the records in respect to the title of the property were made. He was employed by Charles B. Dungan. He could not have advised the Dungans that the bond of Mrs. Jamison, who was a widow, would be objectionable ; indeed, he testifies, that he remembers no conversation in the transaction on that point; and surely the obligation of this lady, who, as appears by the answer, received from her husband’s estate a fortune of upwards of $150,000, (or as the witness, White, says $200,000, or $225,000,) would, among money lenders, have been preferred to that of James, who was but just of age, and apparently without property. On this point, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.J. Eq. 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-jamison-njch-1875.