Reinfeld v. Fidelity Union Trust Co.

198 A. 220, 123 N.J. Eq. 428, 22 Backes 428, 1938 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 84
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMarch 25, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 198 A. 220 (Reinfeld v. Fidelity Union Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reinfeld v. Fidelity Union Trust Co., 198 A. 220, 123 N.J. Eq. 428, 22 Backes 428, 1938 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 84 (N.J. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Complainants Joseph Reinfeld and Fred Neiburg sue to enjoin defendant from prosecuting an action at law for a deficiency on a mortgage bond. They present that they are sureties and not the principal debtors; that the term of the bond and mortgage was extended without their consent or knowledge, and that thereby they were released from liability.

The bond bears date March 18th, 1926, but my statement of the facts must begin three years earlier. In 1923, the complainants and two others decided to buy at foreclosure sale property known as 156 Market street, Newark, and to vest title in a corporation to be formed for that purpose and of which they would be the stockholders. They employed a member of the bar, Mr. David N. Popik, to attend to the matter for them. He bid in the land in his own name at the sheriff's sale and in due course received a deed from the sheriff. Immediately, pursuant to direction of his principals, he executed a bond and mortgage dated June 9th, 1923, in favor of Jacobina Neu, to secure $50,000. The same day, Mr. Popik recorded in the county clerk's office the certificate of incorporation of Essex Realty Holdings, Incorporated, and in September, he conveyed the property to that company subject to the Neu mortgage, as well as to a prior mortgage which had not been cut off by the foreclosure. His clients became the sole stockholders.

I now pass to the creation of the bond and mortgage, the immediate subject of the present suit. Toward the end of *Page 430 1925, Essex Realty Holdings, Incorporated, applied to Fidelity Union Title and Mortgage Guaranty Company for a loan of $225,000 to be secured by a first mortgage on 156 Market street. The Guaranty Company agreed, provided the four individuals interested in the borrowing company would join in the bond. They consented to do so, and the bond and mortgage were executed and the loan made March 18th, 1926. The Guaranty Company disbursed the money, $140,760 to satisfy an old first mortgage on the property, $43,109 to pay off the Neu mortgage, $4,731 for sundry charges in connection with the loan and the balance, $36,400 to the Essex Realty Holdings, Incorporated. Within a day or so, that corporation paid to each of its four stockholders $10,000 or $40,000 in all, of which the principal source was the money just borrowed from the Guaranty Company.

On these facts, complainants argue that they were sureties on the bond given to the Guaranty Company and were known so to be by the Guaranty Company. But defendant replies that the complainants and their two colleagues were the real debtors on the Neu bond which was paid off out of the loan and that they were the actual recipients of the cash turned over to Essex Realty Holdings, Incorporated, and hence that they are principals and not sureties.

Popik had executed the bond to Neu as agent for his four clients. It is not proved that the corporation was then in existence and if it was not, it could not have been his principal. Even though the corporation had been created before the execution of the bond, there is no evidence that the corporation had organized, or authorized Popik to perform any act. So at this stage, the complainants were two of the real debtors. But when the property was conveyed to the corporation in consideration of the issuance of stock, the corporation, under the circumstances of the case, impliedly assumed liability on the bond. Seacoast Railroad Co. v. Hood, 65 N.J. Eq. 530, 538; DuVivier Co. v. Gallics, 149 Fed. Rep. 118; 80 C.C.A. 556. I may add that the Guaranty Company appears to have known nothing of the history of the Neu mortgage. It was merely paying the liens on the *Page 431 borrower's property in accordance with the understanding on which it was making the loan.

Although $36,400 of the Guaranty Company loan was very shortly distributed by Essex Realty Holdings, Incorporated, among the four stockholders, the presumption is that they received it as a dividend, and not that they took it as money borrowed by them individually from the Guaranty Company. The individuals joined in the bond to the Guaranty Company only because of the insistence of that company that they do so. All the money loaned was used to pay off liens on the property of the borrower or else was paid directly to the borrower. The four individuals, in equity, were sureties on the bond to the Guaranty Company and this the Guaranty Company knew. Burack v. Mayers, 121 N.J. Eq. 135;122 N.J. Eq. 5.

On June 29th, 1926, Essex Realty Holdings, Incorporated, conveyed the premises to Harry Kalisch for a consideration which included payment to it of $138,983. As 156 Market street had been the only asset of the corporation, the transfer left it without property other than cash on hand. It immediately distributed among its stockholders the money, except enough apparently to meet outstanding bills, and in March following distributed the balance still remaining, $420 to each stockholder. Thus the four stockholders, although well aware of the corporation's debt to the Guaranty Company, divided all its assets among themselves and left it an empty shell. They did not take the statutory steps to dissolve the corporation but permitted it to drift until, because of failure to pay the state tax for 1926, its charter was revoked by proclamation of the governor, January 7th, 1929. P.L. 1929 p.874.

The stockholders, dividing up the company's property, did not intentionally commit a fraud on the Guaranty Company, for the mortgaged property was then worth much more than the amount due on the bond. Liability thereon was remote; the obligors unlikely ever to be called to answer. Nevertheless, the distribution was made in disregard of the statute. Meyerhoff v. BankersSecurities, Inc., 105 N.J. Eq. 76. If *Page 432 the proper steps for a dissolution had been pursued, the mortgagee would have been notified and could have insisted on a reasonable provision for its protection. United StatesIndustrial Alcohol Co. v. Distilling Co., 89 N.J. Eq. 177. Clearly when complainants and their colleagues, without lawful warrant, stripped the principal debtor of its property and made impossible that it should pay the debt, they took its liability as well. They estopped themselves from claiming to be mere sureties; they promoted themselves to the rank of principals.

But complainants advance another equitable defense to the action on the bond.

The conveyance by Essex Realty Holdings, Incorporated, to Harry Kalisch was made pursuant to an agreement, whereby the former agreed to convey the property and the latter agreed to pay and satisfy $370,000 as the consideration, $145,000 in cash and $225,000 "by accepting the premises subject to a mortgage to be held by the Fidelity Union Title and Mortgage Guaranty Company or their nominee." Title passed in accordance with the agreement. On the settlement, Kalisch was charged with the purchase price $370,000 and credited with the amount of the mortgage. The rule applies stated by Mr. Justice Depue in Crowell v. Hospital ofSt. Barnabas, 27 N.J. Eq. 650, 655. "If, by the terms of purchase, the mortgage money is, by agreement, taken as part of the consideration money, equity raises upon the conscience of the purchaser an obligation to indemnify the mortgagor against the mortgage debt."

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Bluebook (online)
198 A. 220, 123 N.J. Eq. 428, 22 Backes 428, 1938 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reinfeld-v-fidelity-union-trust-co-njsuperctappdiv-1938.