Niemaseck v. Bernett Holding Co., Inc.

4 A.2d 794, 125 N.J. Eq. 284, 24 Backes 284, 1939 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 98
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 15, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 A.2d 794 (Niemaseck v. Bernett Holding Co., Inc.) 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
Niemaseck v. Bernett Holding Co., Inc., 4 A.2d 794, 125 N.J. Eq. 284, 24 Backes 284, 1939 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 98 (N.J. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Defendants move to strike the bill which has been filed by Mrs. Rosalie Niemaseck, widow of Bernett A. Niemaseck and residuary devisee and legatee under his will.

The first, second, fifth and sixth causes of action stated in the bill show that testator, June 25th, 1930, caused the Bernett Holding Company to be incorporated and that he was at all times, until his death, the beneficial owner of all of its capital stock. The same day it was incorporated, he conveyed to it lands in Irvington and Newark, and the following year he procured one George Hayes to deed it other property on which testator held a mortgage. In 1932, testator assigned to the company a chattel mortgage which had been made by Kronika Publishing Company. On June 5th, 1934, the testator's *Page 286 brother, Carl S. Niemaseck, conveyed to the company certain other lands in Newark. The Bernett Holding Company paid no consideration for any of these transfers. On the two conveyances by third parties, the consideration was paid by testator. The transfers were intended by all the parties to vest title in the Holding Company, as trustee, for the sole use and benefit of testator.

Testator, after legal title to the properties was vested in the corporation, disbursed from his personal funds large sums of money for taxes thereon, as well as mortgage interest and other carrying charges. In 1934, he opened a bank account in the name of the corporation and from time to time deposited his personal funds in said account.

Testator died July 20th, 1938, at which time there was standing in his name eight shares of stock of the company. Two other shares were outstanding, one in the name of his sister, Julia C. Niemaseck, and one in the name of his brother, Joseph E. Niemaseck. By his will, testator gave one and one-half shares each to Julia, Joseph, Carl and complainant, and two to his parents for life, remainder in one share to Carl and in the other share to complainant. He appointed as executors Joseph and one Milton Weinik. The legatees other than complainant have taken control of the company and have elected themselves directors and officers thereof.

The corporation not only claims beneficial as well as legal title to the property so transferred to it and denies any debt to testator, but also asserts that testator was indebted to the company at the time of his death, because he used its funds for his personal purposes. The company has filed a claim with the executors for such alleged indebtedness and the executors have allowed, or are about to allow, the claim.

The bill prays that it be decreed that the company held the property above mentioned in trust for testator in his lifetime and that it be directed to convey the lands to his residuary devisee, the complainant, and the chattel mortgage to his executors; that an account be taken of the moneys advanced by testator to or for the benefit of the company and that the *Page 287 company be decreed to pay to the executors the sum found to be due.

The third count relates to the two shares of stock which were issued to Julia and Joseph Niemaseck in the lifetime of testator. It shows that neither of them paid anything for the stock and that the shares were either never delivered to them or else were delivered to be held by them for the sole use and benefit of testator. Complainant prays that the shares be transferred to the executors as a part of the estate.

Complainant has another theory which finds expression in the fourth cause of action. It is there set up that when testator transferred, or caused to be transferred, the several properties to the corporation, he was contemplating marriage and the conveyances were made with intent that any woman he might marry should have no dower in said lands. The count further charges that prior to his marriage to complainant on August 10th, 1933, and for the purpose of inducing her to marry him, testator represented to her that he owned real estate in New Jersey, and complainant, relying upon such representations and not knowing legal title was in the Holding Company, did marry him. She prays that her right to dower be established. The defendant company argues that this count discloses no cause of action in equity but only a common law action of deceit for damages. This objection may stand over until the final hearing.

The seventh cause of action is quite distinct from the others. It shows that testator from time to time loaned and advanced various sums to Julia, Joseph and Carl, or to other persons for their benefit; that these sums were not repaid; and also that Julia collected rents for him and at the time of his death, held a large sum so collected and which she has not yet turned over. She prays that these three may account and pay their debts to the executors.

The bill shows that the executors refuse to prosecute any of the causes of action alleged in the bill.

I. The first objection to the bill which I need notice is that it does not show that the company holds in trust the property which is the principal subject of the litigation. *Page 288

"A resulting trust arises where a person makes, or causes to be made, a disposition of property under circumstances which raise an inference that he does not intend that the person taking or holding the property should have the beneficial interest therein, unless the inference is rebutted or the beneficial interest is otherwise effectively disposed of." 2 Restatement: Trusts §404.

Such is the general principle of which the most common illustration is a conveyance by A to B upon a consideration paid by C. In this class fall the conveyances to the defendant company by Hayes and by Carl S. Niemaseck. But the bill discloses that testator, who paid the consideration, also owned all the capital stock of the company. That circumstance, in my opinion, rebuts any presumption which may be drawn from testator's paying the purchase price. There are two possible inferences to be drawn from the transaction — one that testator intended his company to have absolute title; the other that he desired a bare legal title to vest in his company and equitable title to be his own. The first fulfills the usual purpose of a personal holding company; the second — the split title — has no honest advantages that I perceive. The court should not infer that testator intended equitable title to result in himself. The conveyances and the mortgage assignment from testator himself to the company fall into another class of transactions. If the bill did allege that the deeds expressed a money consideration or declared a use to the grantee, a resulting trust would be negatived. Down v.Down, 80 N.J. Eq. 68. Even without these factors, a gift rather than a trust is presumed, according to eminent authority. 2Restatement: Trusts § 405. And the fact that testator was the sole beneficial stockholder of the grantee corporation clinches the inference that a gift was intended. Fidelity Union TrustCo. v. Roest, 113 N.J. Eq. 368.

But the bill further shows that testator and the company as well as Hayes and Carl S. Niemaseck all intended that title should be vested in the company as trustee for the sole use and benefit of testator. That is a sufficient averment of a trust, overriding whatever presumptions to the contrary may be drawn from the circumstances which I have already discussed. I need not now decide whether in support of the *Page 289 trust, complainant may prove circumstances tending toward a resulting trust, or may only prove an express trust.

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Bluebook (online)
4 A.2d 794, 125 N.J. Eq. 284, 24 Backes 284, 1939 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/niemaseck-v-bernett-holding-co-inc-njch-1939.