Schneider v. Schmidt

88 A. 179, 82 N.J. Eq. 81, 12 Buchanan 81, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 37
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedAugust 25, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 88 A. 179 (Schneider v. Schmidt) 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
Schneider v. Schmidt, 88 A. 179, 82 N.J. Eq. 81, 12 Buchanan 81, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 37 (N.J. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Complainants Dinah Schneider and Valentine, her husband, are creditors of the defendants Charles Schmidt and John Huber, their debt being founded on a decree of this court, obtained on October 4th, 1904, for the payment of $1,004, besides costs, all of which, with interest, is still due except $100, which was realized by sale under execution of the right of defendant debtor Schmidt in certain real estate. Under execution upon this decree, issued in the cause, on August 22d, 1911, levy was made by the sheriff on August 31st, 1911, upon a carousel or merry-go-around, with its engine, boiler, organ and other equipments in the possession and management of the defendant Emma Schmidt, wife of the judgment debtor, and then located at Hillside park, Newark, New Jersey.

Previous to the securing of the decree, and on November 4th, 1903, Charles Schmidt and John Huber had given a chattel mortgage to Mrs. Schmidt upon a carousel, with its engine, boiler and equipments, then located at Passaic wharf, Newark, New Jersey, to secure $1,500, with interest for one year. Complainants issued an execution on their decree under which a levy was made on November 2d, 1905, upon the mortgaged chattels, and in a suit afterwards brought in this court to set aside the mortgage as invalid and fraudulent, a decision was rendered sustaining the mortgage and advising a dismissal of the bill.

The present bill charges that in the year 1907, and after default in payment, Mrs. Schmidt took possession of the mortgaged chattels as mortgagee in possession, and has since continued *Page 83 in possession thereof as such mortgagee. Complainants claim that the chattels of which she took possession under her mortgage are the same chattels as those upon which the levy under their said execution was made in August, 1911, and that Mrs. Schmidt since taking possession as such mortgagee has received the rents and profits of their use without accounting therefor, or applying the same to the redemption of her mortgage, and that such receipts over and above the expenses of operation and maintenance of the carousel have been more than sufficient to pay the entire amount due on the mortgage; that these receipts have not been so applied, but the mortgage has been kept alive and uncanceled, in order to impair complainants' lien under their execution. An account of the amount due is prayed, with an application of payments to the mortgage, and the sale of the carousel under complainants' execution free of the encumbrance.

In reference to the claim that Mrs. Schmidt took possession as mortgagee in 1907, the complainants' bill specially charges that by her petition filed in this suit after the levy on the execution in August, 1911, and to prevent an injunction against the sale thereunder, she set up an agreement of the mortgagors in 1907, to transfer to her all their right, title and interest in the chattels so that she might become owner, and that she took possession as owner, and has remained in possession thereof, and from time to time purchased new appliances to replace portions of the old carousel.

The defendant Mrs. Schmidt (who answers jointly with her husband) admits taking possession in 1907 of the chattels mortgaged to her, under an agreement with the mortgagors to transfer all their right and interest to her, so that she might become owner, and that she then took possession as owner and has since remained in possession, she herself conducting the business of running.

At the time of this taking possession, about February 14th, 1907, the goods, she claims, were sold at public auction for $650, their full value at that time; and after her acquiring the property in 1907, and before the levy, she had largely replaced the equipments of the carousel, so that at the time of the levy, in *Page 84 August, 1911, the only portions of the original carousel left were the rim and a few small figures. The identity of the chattels included in the mortgage with the chattels levied on is denied.

Defendant, also, as an additional defence, claims that the complainants' delay, and their omission to proceed on their previous executions issued on the decree, allowing her to incur the expense and risk of maintaining and operating the carousel, amounted to an abandonment of a claim that there was any value in the mortgaged chattels beyond her mortgage, and complainants are now barred from any equitable relief by way of accounting.

Evidence was taken at the hearing bearing upon the question of the amount of rents, profits and income from the business since defendant took possession, and which would show apparently that the expenses for maintenance, repairs, new equipments, c., were largely paid out of the receipts of Mrs. Schmidt from the business, and that (if no allowance to her for her services in managing the business) the amount of profits she has made from the business is sufficient, and more than sufficient to pay her mortgage, if the complainants at the time of their levy were entitled to redeem the mortgage and have an accounting.

The primary question to be decided is the right of the complainants as creditors under the execution and levy set out in the bill, to any accounting against Mrs. Schmidt as mortgagee.

So far as relates to personal property, a judgment creditor's right to an accounting against a mortgagee depends not upon the judgment or decree alone, as in the case of real estate, but upon the lien obtained under the execution, which lien alone gives the creditor any right or standing for an accounting or other relief against the judgment debtors or those claiming under them. Dunham v. Cox (Court of Errors andAppeals, 1855), 10 N. J. Eq. (2 Stock.) 437, 467; Hall v. Nash(Court of Errors and Appeals, 1899), 58 N. J. Eq. (13 Dick.) 554.

This distinction as to the time when the judgment creditor's right attaches is important, and in the present case is vital. For the levy on personal property is a seizure of the judgment debtor's rights at thetime of the delivery of the execution to the sheriff, and the judgment debtor, therefore, stands in the *Page 85 debtor's place, and the property levied on is subject to all valid transfers previously made, whether to mortgagees or others. A transfer of personal property previously made is subject to attack by an existing creditor claiming under a subsequent execution if the transfer of his equity was in effect substantially a gift of the debtor's property in fraud of creditors, or otherwise substantially a fraud.

But a mortgagor may release or convey the equity of redemption to the mortgagee, and although always subject to inquiry in a court of equity, the transfer, if fairly made, is binding upon the mortgagor and those claiming under him by rights in the property subsequently acquired. There is no question, I think, that upon the facts proved, the mortgaged chattels in their condition when taken over by the mortgagee in 1907, were not worth the amount then due upon the mortgage. The carousel and equipments were originally bought by Schmidt and Huber in 1899 for $2,300, $1,000 of which was secured by a chattel mortgage to the vendor. It had been in use since that time and was property of a character which rapidly deteriorated in value unless kept in repair and renewed. A dealer in these equipments who saw the carousel about the time of the transfer, and subsequently renewed or replaced a large portion of the equipment, fixes its value as not over $1,100 at that time. This is the most reliable evidence given as to the value. The amount then due on the chattel mortgage, $1,500 principal sum with over three years' interest at six per cent.

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Bluebook (online)
88 A. 179, 82 N.J. Eq. 81, 12 Buchanan 81, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schneider-v-schmidt-njsuperctappdiv-1913.