Schmid v. First Camden National Bank, C., Co.

22 A.2d 246, 130 N.J. Eq. 254
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 5, 1941
DocketDocket 129/415
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 22 A.2d 246 (Schmid v. First Camden National Bank, C., 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
Schmid v. First Camden National Bank, C., Co., 22 A.2d 246, 130 N.J. Eq. 254 (N.J. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Complainant-trustees hold title to a tract of land known as Silver Lake Park in Clementon, Camden County. They were the purchasers at a foreclosure sale May 10th, 1940. Their bill of complaint, quia timet in form, seeks to have their interest in the premises, together with the interest, if any, of the several defendants, established.

Silver Lake Park Association, a corporation, owned the property from in December, 1927, until sale by the sheriff to complainants. It created two mortgages on the land; the first, in the sum of $10,000, was dated December 5th, 1927, and made to First Camden National Bank and Trust Company; the second, in the sum of $5,000, was dated April 27th, 1935, and made to complainants. From the inception of the enterprise, Silver Lake Park was operated at a loss and, in 1933, the owner ceased to operate it. The corporation was entirely without funds and, on January 21st, 1936, the state repealed its corporate charter for non-payment of taxes.

On October 31st, 1933, the bank filed suit in the Camden County Circuit Court to foreclose its mortgage. In addition to the mortgagee, Silver Lake Park Association, Theodore W. Gibbs, Edgar B. Gibbs and James W. Davis were made defendants. A final decree was entered against all defendants January 22d 1934, in the amount of $7,753.74 debt, and $127.54 costs. Execution was delivered to the sheriff but sale was not made. Instead, Theodore W. Gibbs, to protect himself, effected an arrangement with the bank as a result of which Clementon Lake Park Co., a corporation, which owned and operated a larger amusement park nearby, went into possession of Silver Lake Park and thereafter operated both.

Defendant Theodore W. Gibbs had signed the original bond for $10,000 with the Silver Lake Park Association, and to avoid a foreclosure of the accompanying mortgage personally advanced and paid a total sum of $2,551.16 from June 5th, 1931, to December 5th, 1932, on account of principal and interest. After it took over the operation of Silver Lake Park, Clementon Lake Park Co., on February 7th, 1934, paid the bank $500 on account of mortgage principal and interest and thereafter made other payments until December 5th, *Page 257 1935, to a total, in all, of $1,989.36. Also, to keep fire insurance in effect, it paid between $300 and $400 in premiums. The operation of Silver Lake Park continued to be a losing venture after Clementon Lake Park Co. took it over; no salaries were paid to officers or for management but, even so, the income was insufficient to meet running expenses. Clementon Lake Park Co. also made up this operating deficiency.

Shortly before November 19th, 1936, a fire occurred at Silver Lake Park. Various insurance companies carrying the fire risk paid to the bank $6,200. To "protect" or "salvage" what they had already paid on account of the mortgage, Theodore W. Gibbs, on that day and for the account of Clementon Lake Park Co., also paid the bank $1,500 and had the mortgage and the final decree assigned to it.

Silver Lake Park Association, prior to the creation of the second mortgage to complainants, was indebted to Clementon National Bank on promissory notes. Complainants are liquidating trustees of certain assets of that former banking institution. They requested and were given the second mortgage as additional security for those obligations. They had paid nothing to prevent the foreclosure and a sale under the first mortgage. At the time they took their mortgage Clementon Lake Park Co. had been operating Silver Lake Park for more than a year.

On October 27th, 1939, complainants filed a bill to foreclose their mortgage in this court. A final decree was entered February 23d 1940, for $6,443.33, with interest and costs; execution was issued, and sale made May 10th, 1940. The sheriff's deed to complainants was dated May 29th, 1940; it was recorded July 11th, 1940.

First Camden National Bank and Trust Company was made a defendant in this cause; it filed an answer alleging an assignment of the decree and of the bond and mortgage and disclaiming any interest in the premises. Defendant J. Palmer Earl did not appear at final hearing and no evidence was offered for him.

Complainants' contention, on argument, was: If Clementon Lake Park Co. is entitled to a lien it must be limited to *Page 258 $1,500, but it is not entitled to a lien because of its actual identity with Silver Lake Park Association; any other payments made by Clementon Lake Park Co. or Theodore W. Gibbs were purely voluntary or actually made by Silver Lake Park Association.

Defendants insist that Clementon Lake Park Co. is entitled to protection under its assignment for its payment of $1,500, and that it and Theodore W. Gibbs hold equitable liens or should be subrogated to the security of the mortgage and final decree to the extent of other payments made by them, respectively, to the bank.

Complainants' bill, while somewhat unusual, presents an equitable cause of action. DeCorso v. Concordia Fire InsuranceCo. (Court of Errors and Appeals), 116 N.J. Eq. 529;174 Atl. Rep. 482.

In charging actual identity of parties, complainants rely, of course, on the exception to the fundamental principle that a corporation is to be regarded as an entity separate and distinct from its stockholders and from other concerns with which it may be connected. Peckett v. Wood (C.C.A., 3d Cir.),234 Fed. Rep. 833. In our leading case of Stockton v. Central RailroadCo., 50 N.J. Eq. 52; 24 Atl. Rep. 964; 17 L.R.A. 97, Chancellor McGill quoted Lord Mansfield: "It is a certain rule that a fiction of law shall never be contradicted so as to defeat the end for which it was invented, but for every other purpose it may be contradicted." Johnson v. Smith, 2 Burr. 962. Vice-Chancellor Sooy in Murtland Holding Co. v. Egg HarborCommercial Bank, 123 N.J. Eq. 117, 122, said: "The corporate form is as much recognized by equity as law and this court is bound by the laws governing the conduct of the corporate action." Our Court of Errors and Appeals declared, in Jackson v.Hooper, 76 N.J. Eq. 592; 75 Atl. Rep. 568: "It is fundamental that, no matter how the shares of stock are held, the corporation itself is an entity wholly separate and distinct from the individuals who compose and control it."

In most positive language, our court of last resort in two instances reversed this court for failure to properly distinguish between the fundamental rule and this exception. In *Page 259 Jackson v. Hooper, supra, the bill rested upon the theory that complainant, who united with the defendant in acquiring equal shares of all the stock of two corporations, pursuant to an agreement claimed to create a partnership, was entitled to treat the two corporations, organized under foreign laws, as mere agencies or instrumentalities in the conduct of the joint business and to subject not only the stock owned by both parties, but all the corporate property to the control of the Court of Chancery according to the principles of the law of partnership. The Vice-Chancellor held that "the complainant and the defendant Horace E.

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Bluebook (online)
22 A.2d 246, 130 N.J. Eq. 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmid-v-first-camden-national-bank-c-co-njsuperctappdiv-1941.