Semon v. Terhune

40 N.J. Eq. 364
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 40 N.J. Eq. 364 (Semon v. Terhune) 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
Semon v. Terhune, 40 N.J. Eq. 364 (N.J. Ct. App. 1885).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

This suit is brought to foreclose a mortgage dated and acknowledged September 17th, 1880, and recorded on October 15th fol[365]*365lowing, given by the defendants, John G. Semon and wife, to-Richard M. Johnson, upon land in Jersey City, to secure the-payment of $750 and interest, according to the condition of' Semon’s bond to Johnson. The bill states that the mortgage was given for purchase-money on the sale of the mortgaged, premises by Johnson to Semon, but the fact is not admitted by the answer. The deed to Semon was dated September 30th,, 1880, was acknowledged October 1st, 1880, and recorded oa November 24th following. The bill states that while the date-of the mortgage is prior to that of the deed, the mortgage was-not delivered until the time of the delivery of the deed, but this is not admitted by the answer. Johnson assigned the mortgage-February 9th, 1881, to James M. Connor, by assignment of' that date, recorded February 16th, 1881. On June 2d, 1884,, James M. Connor assigned it to James P. Connor, executor &c„ of William C. Connor, deceased, and he assigned it September 4th, 1884, to the complainant. When John G. Semon bought the property of Johnson it was encumbered by a mortgage for-$1,000, given September 10th, 1866, by William Nattrass, who. then owned the-premises, to Jane C. Vreeland. That mortgage-came to the hands of Jacob C. Terhune, by assignment. He died June 15th, 1882. His executors were the defendant, John "V. [366]*366H. Terhune and Peter Schoonmaker. On September 27th, 1882, •they filed a. bill in this court to foreclose that mortgage. The only defendants to that suit were John G. Semon and his wife. There was a final decree in the suit, by default. It was entered February 5th, 1883, and execution was issued thereon for the sale of the mortgaged premises, which under it were sold May 3d, 1883, to John V. H. Terhune, for $500, and a deed therefor was given to him by the sheriff. He took possession under his deed and has been in. possession ever since. The bill asks that an account be had with him, and that the property may be sold to pay, in the first place, to him the amount which may be found due to him in respect to the first mortgage, and then to pay the complainant Avhat may be found due to him on his mortgage, with his costs, and that any balance of the proceeds of the sale be paid to Terhune. Terhune, by his answer, admits the making and recording of the complainant’s mortgage, and states that the omission to make the holder thereof a party to the foreclosure suit upon the first mortgage was due to the fact that the record of the complainant’s mortgage was indexed in a wrong place. The. answer further alleges that in 1884 the then holder of the complainant’s mortgage threatened to sue John G. Semon for the money due upon the bond, and that the latter then paid it and took an assignment >of the bond and mortgage to the complainant, who has no interest in them but holds them for the use and benefit of John G. Semon and subject to his control. The complainant filed no replication, and the cause comes in for hearing upon bill and answer.

In Bingham, v. Kirtland, 7 Stew. Eq. 889, T. H. made a deed to L. H. in 1867, which was recorded. L. H. made a deed back to T. H. in 1868, which-was never recorded. T. H. gave a mortgage to B. in 1871 which, was recorded.. L. H. made a second deed to T. H. in 1872. In 1874 T. H. gave a mortgage to P. — Held, that P.’s mortgage was superior in lien to B.’s, P. having no actual' notice of B.’s mortgage or of the deed to T. H. in 1868; see Salisbury SavBank v. Gutting, 50 Conn. US, 138, note. In Veazie v. Parker, 83 Me. 170, a vendee received a deed from a debtor-prior to an attachment against him, but did not record it until afterwards. He gave a mortgage to the debtor when his deed was executed, and this mortgage-was recorded prior to the attachment. — Held, that the record of the mortgage was not notice of the unrecorded deed ; also, Pierce v. Taylor, Id. 846; Brown-v. Tuthill, 1 Greene (Iowa) 189. — Rep.

[366]*366The foreclosure proceedings upon the first mortgage were a nullity as to the holders of the second mortgage. By his purchase at the sheriff’s sale under them, Terhune obtained the title of the holders of the -first mortgage and the equity of redemption of John G. Semon and his wife. But that equity of redemption was subject to the payment of the second mortgage if that mortgage was a valid lien, of which the purchaser at the .sheriff’s sale had notice, upon the property; and if that mortgage were such lien, and Terhune had taken an assignment of it after his purchase, equity would not- have permitted him to enforce payment from Semon of the bond which it was given to secure, [367]*367without giving Semon the benefit of a resort to the proceeds of the sale of the premises after satisfying the first mortgage therefrom. Vanderkemp v. Shelton, 11 Paige 28. The only question on this point in this case is whether the purchaser had notice— that is, whether he had constructive notice from the record. Had he consulted the record (the index is no part of it) he would have discovered that the title to the mortgaged premises remained in Richard M. Johnson up to September 30th, 1880, and that by a deed of that date Johnson conveyed them to John G. Semon, who, by a mortgage recorded after, although dated before that date, mortgaged them to Johnson. The fact that the mortgage bears date prior to the date of the deed would not, under the circumstances, have justified the purcliasér in concluding that it was given before Semon acquired title, for it might have been due to a mistake in the date of the one instrument or the other. There was at least enough upon the record to put him, as a prudent man, upon inquiry. He had notice of the mortgage from the record; for in searching for mortgages by Semon from the date of his deed, September 30th, 1880, he would have found the mortgage. The doctrine of the cases of Losey v. Simpson, S Stock. 246, and Spielmann v. Kliest, 9 Stew. Eq. 199, is not at variance with that now enunciated. The doctrine of those cases is that one who proposes to purchase land or to take a mortgage upon it, is not bound to take notice of the record of a conveyance or mortgage made by one whose title-deed has not been recorded. And the reason is, that he has no clue to guide him in searching the record. But here the record showed the searcher the deed to Semon and his mortgage to his grantor. The mortgage was indeed dated before the date of the deed, but it was recorded after the latter date, and the deed itself was on record. It is urged that, according to the record, it appears that after Semon gave the mortgage to Johnson the latter conveyed the property to him by deed of a subsequent date, and so extinguished the mortgage; for, according to the dates of the instruments, Semon had no title when he mortgaged to Johnson, and, having no title, he mortgaged the property to the person who owned it. The inference from the condition of the record would be that there [368]*368was some mistake in the dates, and that in fact Johnson conveyed to Semon and then Semon mortgaged to him; or, that Semon mortgaged to Johnson before he acquired title, and, havings acquired title afterwards, might be estopped from denying that the mortgage was valid. The record was notice of the mortgage..

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 N.J. Eq. 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/semon-v-terhune-njch-1885.