Peterson v. Reid

74 A. 662, 76 N.J. Eq. 377, 6 Buchanan 377, 1909 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 21
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedNovember 8, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 74 A. 662 (Peterson v. Reid) 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
Peterson v. Reid, 74 A. 662, 76 N.J. Eq. 377, 6 Buchanan 377, 1909 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 21 (N.J. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Stevenson, Y. C.

1. In view of the specification of grounds of demurrer and the argument of counsel in this case, it is unnecessary to discuss the technical question whether the defence set up in the answers by way of cross-bill could or should have been presented to the court by the answers. The cross-bills pray not only for an abatement of the mortgage debt, but, in case of such abatement, the mortgage debt shall be found to have been discharged, as the defendants insist is the case, that the mortgage be surrendered up for cancellation. This court will consider that for all present purposes the equitable claims which the defendants set forth against the mortgage indebtedness are properly presented by answers by way of cross-bill, even though the defendants might have gained the benefit of any abatement of the mortgage debt by an answer. See O’Brien v. Hulfish (Court of Errors and Appeals, 1871), 22 N. J. Eq. (7 C. E. Gr.) 471, 475; McMichael v. Webster (Court of Errors and Appeals, 1898), 57 N. [379]*379J. Eq. (12 Dick.) 295; Dayton v. Melick (Chancellor Runyon, 1880), 32 N. J. Eq. (5 Stew.) 570; S. C. (Court of Errors and Appeals, 1881), 34 N. J. Eq. (7 Stew.) 245.

2. The first objection, to the demurrer is that the Carteret Eealty Company, the original mortgagee, ought to have been brought in as a party in accordance with the practice prescribed or recommended in Green v. Stone, 54 N. J. Eq. (9 Dick.) 387, 401. See Haberman v. Kaufer, 60 N. J. Eq. (15 Dick.) 271, 277. It is unnecessary, I think, in this case to discuss the extent to which new parties may be brought into a cause in this court by making them parties defendant to a cross-bill, or an answer by way of cross-bill, or in what manner, in case the pleading is an answer by way of cross-bill, the new parties may or must be brought into court. The elaborate brief for the demurrant, which seems to present every possible argument against the sufficiency of the answers by way of cross-bill on the merits, does not undertake to state any reason whatever why the Carteret Eealty Company should be made a party to this suit. If it be conceded that the Carteret Eealty Company is interested in the question of damages from its breach of covenant raised by the answers by way of cross-bill, it may follow that this company is a proper party to the cross-bills. It does not follow that this company is a necessary party to this litigation for the accomplishment of justice between the parties who are already before the court. The result of leaving out the Carteret Eealty Company is simply to leave that company unaffected by the decree in this cause. The cross-bills allege that the complainant in fact has no interest in this litigation, but is prosecuting the same for the benefit of the Carteret Eealty Company, and in fact is a mere cover or representative of that company. The complainant may amend her bill by making the Carteret Eealty Company a party, but I see no basis for any objection on the part of the complainant that the defendants by cross-bills or answers by way of cross-bill do not bring the Carteret Eealty Company into this litigation.

3. The,only other objection to the sufficiency of these answers by wajr of cross-bill is the general one of want of equity.

[380]*380The facts set forth in the answers by way of cross-bill are somewhat complex and voluminous. It will not be necessary to state all these facts in order to set forth distinctly the point on which is placed the decision that the demurrers should be overruled.

The Carteret Bealty Company conveyed to one Beid, to whose rights the defendants succeeded, a tract of land containing a little over three acres. The price was $5,000 per acre. The land was low and marshy and of small value unless filled in. As a part of the consideration on Beid’s part the Carteret Bealty Company covenanted that on or before a date specified it would fill in a certain portion of the premises, and within six months after the conveyance it “would fill the whole of said premises to the height of three feet above the surface as it then existed.” Mr. Beid paid $5,000 in cash and gave back a purchase-money mortgage to secure the balance of the price of the land, viz., $10,365, payable in about three years thereafter. The mortgage contains a provision to the effect that the same was “given to secure part of the purchase price and conditions named in said deed.” The Carteret Bealty Company failed almost completely to perform its covenant, having partially filled in only a small strip of the land in question. A large part of the consideration of the mortgage has manifestly failed. What the Carteret Bealty Company in effect contracted in its deed of conveyance to give the mortgagor was this parcel of land containing about three acres filled in to a certain grade.

After the conveyance and purchase-money mortgages were made the Carteret Bealty Company assigned the mortgage to the complainant. This assignment appears to have been made after the Carteret Bealty Company had defaulted in its agreement to fill a portion of the land, but before the six months had expired within which the company was obliged by its contract to fill in the remainder. The grantee and mortgagor, Beid, acted merely as agent for one Morrill to whom he conveyed the land and transferred all his rights in the covenant with the knowledge and consent of the Carteret Bealty Company. Subsequently Morrill transferred the land and all his rights in the covenant [381]*381to the defendant corporation Frank T. Morrill & Company. It appears distinctly that the defendant Frank T- Morrill & Company has succeeded to all the rights of the defendant Reid under the conveyance from the Carteret Realty Company and the covenant of the company therein contained. It also appears that the assignment of the bond and mortgage made by the Carteret Realty Company to the complainants “was made without any valuable consideration and with the intention of defrauding” Reid, Morrill and the Frank T. Morrill & Company, “by having the complainant enforce the payment of said mortgage for the benefit of said Carteret Realty Company, without said company performing its said covenant.” The cross-bills allege that the Carteret Realty Company has no assets from which any judgment against it could be satisfied, and that the cost of filling in the land to the height called for by the covenant “will alone exceed the said principal sum of said bond and all interest alleged by the complainant to be due thereon.”

It is argued strenuously on behalf of the complainant that the answers by way of cross-bill set up no equity which can be recognized or enforced in favor of the defendants or either of them in this suit. The defendant Reid stands liable upon the bond which accompanied the mortgage. The defendant Frank T. Morrill & Company own the land which the complainant seeks to have sold for the satisfaction of her mortgage. The case will be considered as if the two defendants had united in a single answer and a single answer by way of cross-bill.

It seems to me upon both principle and authority that if the allegations of these answers by way of cross-bill are established by the proofs, the defendants have a clear equity to have the damages from the breach of covenant of the Carteret Realty Company ascertained and applied as an abatement of the mortgage debt. In case the mortgage debt is found to be extinguished, the bond and mortgage should be delivered up for cancellation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 A. 662, 76 N.J. Eq. 377, 6 Buchanan 377, 1909 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-reid-njch-1909.