Nash v. Leiderman & Nash Building Co.

143 A. 349, 103 N.J. Eq. 287, 1928 N.J. LEXIS 645
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedOctober 15, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 143 A. 349 (Nash v. Leiderman & Nash Building Co.) 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
Nash v. Leiderman & Nash Building Co., 143 A. 349, 103 N.J. Eq. 287, 1928 N.J. LEXIS 645 (N.J. 1928).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

ICatzenbach, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the court of chancery dated Bebruary 17th, 1928, made in the' above-entitled cause. Bor the proper understanding of the provisions of the order appealed from a brief review of the proceedings in the case prior to the making thereof is necessary. The appellant is the Eastern Sash and Door Company (hereinafter called the Eastern Company). On January 13th, 1925, the Leiderman and Nash Building Company, Incorporated (hereinafter referred to as the Building Company), entered into a written agreement with the Eastern Company by which the Building Company agreed to purchase and the Eastern Company agreed to sell certain building materials for four houses being erected by the Building Company in the town of Irving-ton, in the county of Essex. The Eastern Company delivered the materials for the houses between the date of the contract and April 13th, 1925. The price of the materials delivered *289 was $10,131.14. Apportioned to each of the four houses, it amounted to $2,532.79 for each house. The Eastern Company was not paid. On April 30th, 1925, it filed a mechanics’ lien against the houses and instituted suit thereon. On May 5th, 1925, the Building Company, upon a bill filed in the court of chancery, was declared insolvent and a receiver. appointed. The houses had been mortgaged prior to the appointment of the receiver. All of the materialmen, with the exception of the Eastern Company, had received payments from the proceeds of the mortgages and had signed postponements of their liens to the liens of the mortgages. The Eastern Company claimed that its lien was prior to the liens of the mortgages. There being an opportunity to sell the houses, application was made to the court of chancery in behalf of the receiver for an order to sell. On June 22d, 1925, an order to sell was made by the court of chancery in which it was recited that the legality, order and priority of the mortgages and liens was in question. The order provided that the receiver should sell the houses subject to the mortgages and that the proceeds of sale should remain in the hands of the receiver subject to the same liens of all parties in interest as they had against the real estate. No. appeal from this order was taken by the Eastern Company as it undoubtedly felt itself sufficiently protected by the terms of the order.

The Eastern Company thereupon prosecuted its lien claim action. On November 4th, 1925, the court of chancery, by another order, directed the Eastern Company to deliver to the receiver its proper warrant, duly executed and proved, discharging and cancelling the lien claim. The order further provided for the delivery to the purchaser of the property by the Eastern Company its release from the lien of the judgment entered in the Essex county circuit court. It was also provided in said order that if the lien of the Eastern Company should be established as a prior lien to the mortgages, said lien should be a first lien on the moneys in the hands of the receiver. No appeal was taken from this order by the Eastern Company as it directed the doing of those matters necessary to effectuate the order of June 22d, 1925, and accorded, the *290 same protection to it as provided in said order of June 22d, 1925. On April 30th, 1926, the court of chancery made in the proceedings a decree fixing fees for the receiver and his counsel. This order provided that the-balance of the funds should remain in the hands of the receiver until the further order of the court.

In the meantime the Eastern Company diligently prosecuted its action at law. When the case was reached at the circuit it was referred to a referee. Before the referee the issues presented weré fully tried. The .referee filed his report in which he found that the Eastern Company was entitled to the full amount of its lien claim, $14,316.86, and that its lien claim was prior to the lien of the mortgages of the Eleventh Ward Building and Loan Association. When the order of reference at the circuit was made each party reserved the right of trial by jury. The building and loan association, upon the coming in of the report, demanded a trial by jury. The cause was then placed on the list for trial.

On December 20th, 1927, the solicitor of the receiver gave notice to the Eastern Company that he would apply on December 27th, 1927, to the court of chancery for an order modifying that part of the order of November 4th, 1925, providing as follows:

“The lien of the said Eastern Sash and Door Company, if established as prior to the lien of said mortgages affecting said property, or either of them, and to the extent that it is so established, shall be a first lien on the moneys now in the hands of the said receiver, which he realized from the sale to Nathan Turkel of the said lands and premises, and to the extent that said lien of the Eastern Sash and Door Company is not established as a prior lien to said mortgages, or either of them, it shall be a lien as against the funds, in the hands of the receiver, in the same class with all other lien claimants, the priority to be determined according to law.”

The grounds assigned in the notice for such action were (a) that the provision was not made on the application of the receiver, (b) that it was improvidently entered, and (c) that said provision is contrary to the determination of the receiver *291 and of the order of the court of chancery affirming the determination of the receiver.

The motion was apparently argued. About Pebruary 17th, 1928, the vice-chancellor before whom it was argued rendered the following opinion:

“I will in this case advise an order vacating the provision in the order of November 4th, 1925, complained of. The Eastern Sash and Door Company may then have the opportunity of proving its claim against the fund in the receiver’s hands, with the usual right to review.”

Thereupon an order dated Pebruary 17th, 1928, was entered vacating the provision of the order of November 4th, 1925, hereinbefore recited at length, and ordering that the receiver accord to the Eastern Company an opportunity of proving its claim before him, with the usual right to review the determination of the receiver.

The order is of somewhat doubtful meaning. It apparently deprives the Eastern Company of its right to establish, if it can, its priority to the fund in the receiver’s hands, which it has always claimed, and in which it was- protected by the orders of the court of chancery of June 22d, .1925, and November 4th, 1925. The order of Pebruary 17th, 1928, is, however, clear to the extent that it purports to nullify all the proceedings in the Essex county circuit court taken by the Eastern Company to establish its lien as prior to the lien of the mortgages, or any of them, upon the properties sold by the receiver. Prom this order of Pebruary 17th, 1928, the Eastern Company has appealed.

An inspection of the order under review shows that it is a material alteration, if not a reversal, of the order of November 4th, 1925. It was made some two years and three months after the order it purports to alter or modify was made. The time for appealing from the order of November 4th, 1925, had long since expired. No appeal had been taken therefrom by the receiver or any party in interest.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 A. 349, 103 N.J. Eq. 287, 1928 N.J. LEXIS 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nash-v-leiderman-nash-building-co-nj-1928.