Reilly v. Brown

2 N.J. Misc. 832, 1924 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 88
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedAugust 11, 1924
StatusPublished

This text of 2 N.J. Misc. 832 (Reilly v. Brown) 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
Reilly v. Brown, 2 N.J. Misc. 832, 1924 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 88 (N.J. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Foster, Y. C.

The bill in this cause seeks to have certain conveyances set aside on the ground that they were obtained fraudulently and as a result of a conspiracy among some of the defendants, or, in, the alternative, that they be decreed to be mortgages, and also for an accounting and for other relief.

The deeds attacked are, a deed from complainants to the defendant Myron Y. Brown, dated August 24th, 1920, and duly recorded and conveying certain premises in Red Bank, in Monmouth county, and a deed for the same premises from Myron Y. Brown and wife to the Reilly Storage and Transportation Co., Inc., dated May 12th, 1921; both of these conveyances were made subject to five- mortgage encumbrances, amounting to about $21,000, and also other en[833]*833cmnbrances, suelt as taxes, water rents, &c., amounting to about $1,500, or a total of $22,500, in liens.

It was developed at the hearing that the defendant Myron V. Brown is a nephew of Louis E. Brown, and at the conclusion of idle hearing, and before the accounting, I announced that I found Myron Y. Brown had failed to account for about $50 belonging to the complainant Reilly, which he had received as part of the consideration of $1,500, paid him by tlie Reilly Storage and Transportation Co., or Louis-E. Brown, for making the conveyance to the company above mentioned.

It was also shown that the defendant Miss McCormick is and has been the secretary of Louis E. Brown for several years, that she is a notary public, and as such that she took the acknowledgment of complainants to some, If not all, of the mortgages, chattel mortgages and deeds for the premises in question, and which are involved in this controversy, and I find no evidence to support the charge that she was a party to any fraud or conspiracy to deprive Reilly of his property.

From the proofs it appears that Reilly, the complainant, had worked for the father of the defendant Louis E. Brown, hereafter, for convenience, referred to as Brown, a number of years ago, and that he was acquainted with Brown from Ms boyhood; out of this acquaintance grew an intimacy between Reilly and Brown which resulted in a series of financial transactions between them involving thousands of dollars, and extending from June 20th, 1913, to June, 1922.

The nature, extent and amounts involved in these transactions were so varied and extensive that six days were occupied in their accounting, and hundreds of exhibits were offered in evidence.

Complainants have filed, twenty-two exceptions to the master’s report on this accounting, and aside from criticisms of clerical and other immaterial mistakes, these exceptions-are addressed to thirteen distinct transactions between Reilly and Louis E. Brown.

Considering these exceptions in their order, and before-taking up the consideration of the main issues in tlie cause, [834]*834viz., the alleged conspiracy and the fraudulent conveyances produced thereby, it appears from the proofs that Reilly, in 1912, had built a large and substantial storage warehouse, part of the premises in question, and was engaged in the trucking and warehouse business. To build his warehouse he borrowed, in July and August, 1912, a total of $5,100 on mortgages from the Red Bank Building and Loan Associatioip These mortgages were paid and were canceled of record on August 5th, 1917.

In September, 1913, Reilly was struck on the head with a crane, and in December following he suffered a stroke of paralysis, and for over two years thereafter he was mentally affected, and was ill until June, 1917, and during this period he was unable to carry on his business. Dr. Young, who treated him daily from January 19th, 1914, until April 29th, 1914, states that during this period Reilly was unconscious for part of the time, that he continued to treat him from time to time until January, 1917, and that in his opinion up to April, 1917, Reilly was not capable of reading or under- , standing a legal document. The significance of this testimony is that Reilly testifies he has no recollection of many of the transactions to which the exceptions are addressed, and that he has no books, accounts, papers or documents relating to these matters, and because of this condition, and the death of his former wife in 1918, he is without corroboration on many of the items involved in the accounting.

The first exception is to a transaction of June 20th, 1913, relating to a chattel mortgage for $1,700, given by Reilly to Brown; but as counsel for complainants states in her brief that it was agreed this matter should be omitted from the accounting and that it is now referred to merely for the purpose of showing that although it took place before Reilly’s illness and continued until the mortgage was canceled in May, 1921, that therefore Brown must have known of Reilly’s impaired and weakened mentality in 1914, 1915 and 1916, and particularly in 1917, when the second transaction to which exception is taken was entered into. I am unable to follow or to adopt this line of reasoning, but as the exception [835]*835is nut pressed 1 will pass to the consideration ol the second exception, which relates to a mortgage made by Eeilly and wife to George E. Borden for $6,500. Borden was the father 7 in-law of Brown, and it was Brown who obtained this loan for Eeilly, because the latter had defaulted in the payment of the dues and interest on the building and loan mortgages for 85,1-00, above mentioned, and foreclosure proceedings were begun thereon. Brown turned over the proceeds of this loan to his attorneys, Eeilly, Quinn & Parsons, and it appears they made disbursements in connection with this loan to the building and loan association, and for taxes and in settlement of judgments, &c., against Eeilly, aggregating $6,508.62, or an over payment of $98.62.

Included in these disbursements is the sum of $1,013.75, in satisfaction of a judgment held by "Myron Y. Brown against Eeilly. It is claimed Eeilly never heard of this judgment until the check showing its payment was produced on the accounting, and therefore it should not be-allowed, and it was also claimed that it should not he allowed for the fu rther reason that the testimony of the witness was not corroborated by a certified copy of the judgment.

I find no merit in either objection, and therefore overrule this second exception.

The third and fourth exceptions are also addressed to a payment from this $6,500 loan, of $752.25, made by Brown’s attorneys to Earling, Johnson & Erake, in satisfaction of a mortgage given them by Eeilly and wife in August, 1915. I am satisfied this payment was made for this mortgage, not for a judgment, as erroneously stated in the report, but I do not understand why Brown, having paid the mortgage from the proceeds of this loan, took an assignment of it to himself instead of having it canceled of record, and wiry under this assignment he kept this mortgage open as a prior lien to the Borden mortgage until August 2d, 1919, when he had it canceled.

It will be recalled that Dr. Young testifies that at the date of this $6,500 loan, on April 3d. 1917, Eeilly. in his [836]*836opinion, was not capable of reading or understanding a legal document, and it appears that Reilfy was present in the attorney’s office when these disbursements were made. Reilly states he does not recall the details of .this transaction, and claims that he subsequently paid the amount of this $740* with interest to Brown by a series of monthly notes for $50 each.

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Bluebook (online)
2 N.J. Misc. 832, 1924 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reilly-v-brown-njch-1924.