Phillips v. Phillips

86 A. 949, 81 N.J. Eq. 459, 11 Buchanan 459, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 82
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 9, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 86 A. 949 (Phillips v. Phillips) 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
Phillips v. Phillips, 86 A. 949, 81 N.J. Eq. 459, 11 Buchanan 459, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 82 (N.J. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Baokes, V. O.

The bill is filed for the purpose of establishing a resulting trust in favor of the complainant in a farm of eighty-eight acres, situate near Trenton, in the county of Mercer, the legal title of which is in the defendant.

On March 14th, 1910, the defendant entered into the following agreement with -John L. Weber:

"Tbenton, N. J., Mch. 14th, 1910.
“This is to certify that I have this fourteenth day of March, 1910, sold to Jennie P. Phillips my farm in Lawrence Township, Mercer County and State of New Jersey, containing eighty-eight acres, more or less, for three thousand dollars, subject to a mortgage of one thousand dollars, and the said Jennie P. Phillips is to pay fifteen hunderd dollars in cash and note at 3 months, for five hundred dollars, with the privilege of renewal with the payment of one hundred and twenty-five each time until the amount of five hundred dollars and interest on same is paid; this agreement to he in force by the payment of five dollars to bind this agreement until Mch. 16th, 1910, or until the deed is delivered to said Jennie P. Phillips, as per this agreement.”

By deed dated March 16th, Weber and wife conveyed the premises to the defendant. The complainant paid the consideration price substantially in compliance with the terms of the contract. He claims that the defendant acted as his agent in effecting the purchase, and that because of this, and inasmuch as he had paid the purchase price, a trust resulted in his favor. On the other hand, the defendant’s contention is that the purchase-money was loaned, to her by the complainant and with it she bought the farm for her own use. The testimony of the parties [461]*461is in irreconcilable conflict, each firmly maintaining his and her own and denying the other’s alleged status. Counsel contend that the burden of proof is upon his opponent, and because of the other’s failure to sustain it, claim a favorable decree.

The burden of establishing a resulting trust is on the party asserting it. He must prove not only that the consideration for the conveyance was paid by him or out of his funds, but also that the money was paid as the purchase price and not as a loan. When there is evidence from which it may be inferred that the money was advanced as a loan, the burden is on him to overcome this inference by clear and satisfactory proof. Cutler v. Tuttle, 19 N. J. Eq. (4 C. E. Gr.) 549, 560; Perry Trusts (6th ed.) 133.

The parties to this-transaction are strangers m the sense in which that term is used in eases of this kind, and from the mere payment of the purchase price by the complainant, a trust would ordinarily be implied, were it not for circumstances which rebut such an implication.

A resulting trust arises by operation of law from contemporaneous circumstances which give the legal and equitable titles different directions. It must, therefore, arise at the instant the deed is taken and the legal title is vested in the grantee, and the situation of the transaction when the title passes is to be looked to, and not the situation preceding or following that time. Krauth v. Thiele, 45 N. J. Eq. (18 Stew.) 407.

By this, of course, is not meant to exclude an investigation of preceding and subsequent events, which may throw light upon the situation when the title passed.

For two years next preceding the purchase, the defendant occupied the land as a tenant, using it for pasture in connection with her homestead farm. More than a year before the conveyance she treated with the owner for its purchase and obtained a refusal at $3,000. At the beginning of the year 1910 she sought an extension of her tenancy for another year, but the owner declined a renewal, and by representing that he had another likely purchaser, persuaded the defendant to buy. The defendant had made repeated visits to the owner to obtain a better figure, but he was obdurate and she closed the bargain at his price without [462]*462con suiting, and apparently against the protest of, the complainant. The defendant handed the contract to the complainant, and later on Weber, the owner, delivered the deed to him and he had it recorded. Both are in the complainant’s possession. The defendant executed the $500 note and renewals mentioned in the agreement, until finally the amount was paid. At the instance of the complainant, the defendant executed two mortgages on the farm; one to secure her note of $1,100, the other to secure her bond for $1,750. Upon both the complainant realized. He redeemed the former and also the mortgage of $1,000 on the property when it was conveyed.

The parties are first cousins, and until this dispute arose were on veiy friendly terms. The defendant was engaged in agriculture on an extensive scale on her homestead farm, and other farms adjoining, which she rented. At the complainant’s solicitation she negotiated with him the possession of her homestead farm at a yearly sum of $1,700. Thereafter, she says, upon learning that she had an option on the Weber farm, the complainant offered to ¡orovide her with the money to bujr it, and after she concluded the agreement with Weber, the complainant carried out his promise of financial assistance; she aiding him in raising part of the purchase price by executing the securities already referred to. The details of transferring the title she left to the complainant, because he was her friend and she says her attorney in the matter. Her testimony upon the crux of the case is corroborated by two witnesses. Mr. Weber,, after verifying the defendant’s long-standing option, says that he had difficulty in getting the complainant, from whom he understood the defendant was to obtain it, to pay the purchase-money, and that upon one occasion when dunning the complainant, the latter told him he had nothing to do with the property; that it was Jennie Phillips’s; that he helped her with the money and he helped her buy it, and lent her the monejq and that every time he asked the complainant for the money he was met with the answer that it was Miss Phillips’s monejq and he was merely getting it for her. To an inquiry of a Mr. Applegate, as to whether he had bought the place, the complainant replied that Jennie Phillips was the owner; that it belonged to her.

[463]*463That the complainant was not altogether altruistic in advancing the money to the defendant appears from the fact that in the course of the year he would become the defendant’s debtor to the sum of $1,700 for the rental of the homestead farm.

The reason he assigned in camera for putting the legal title to the land in the name of the defendant, and the prelude to a diabolical plot against his wife, which has for its prototype iSTapoleon’s outrage upon Josephine, is not calculated to inspire confidence in the complainant’s testimony, nor are any of the attending circumstances which the complainant enlists in the support of his claim of a resulting trust, out of harmony with the theory of a loan.

That "Weber demanded of him the purchase price is not in discord. Weber had been informed by the defendant that the complainant was to supply the means. This the complainant affirmed, and only after considerable effort was Weber able to obtain the money.

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Bluebook (online)
86 A. 949, 81 N.J. Eq. 459, 11 Buchanan 459, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-phillips-njch-1913.