Smith v. Smith

93 A. 890, 84 N.J. Eq. 299, 14 Buchanan 299, 1915 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 89
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 1, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 93 A. 890 (Smith v. Smith) 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
Smith v. Smith, 93 A. 890, 84 N.J. Eq. 299, 14 Buchanan 299, 1915 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 89 (N.J. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Stevenson, V. C.

The bill is filed in the usual form to foreclose a mortgage for $7,500 on a farm of fifty acres or more in the county of Middle-sex, made by the defendants Catherine J. Smith and William E. Smith, her husband, to the complainant, Elizabeth H. Smith, who' is a sister of the husband. The mortgage is dated June 26th, 1899, was acknowledged November 15th, 1899, and was recorded November 24th, 1899.

Alfred W. Law, as executor, is made defendant because over three years after the complainant’s mortgage was executed and recorded, he brought suit and obtained a final decree in this court against the mortgagor, Catherine J. Smith, for the sum of $5,882.53 and costs, in pursuance of which decree an execution was issued under which the sheriff sold the mortgaged premises to the said defendant Alfred W. Law, executor, for $100. The bill claims that any interest that Law so acquired is subject to the encumbrance of the complainant’s mortgage.

The defendants, the mortgagors, Catherine J. Smith and husband, suffered a decree pro confessor to be entered against them, and, as witnesses on the trial, have shown their desire to aid the complainant.

The defendant Alfred W. Law, as executor, filed an answer by way of cross-bill, in which he alleges that the complainant’s mortgage was made with intent to defraud the mortgagors’ creditors, and particularly his testatrix, Alice M. Law, his deceased wife, and the evidence makes out a strong case in his favor [302]*302on this point — in favor of the view that the mortgage, so far as a legal consideration moving to Mrs. Catherine J. Smith, the owner and mortgagor, was concerned, was a voluntary conveyance and tainted with an actual purpose on the joart of the mortgagors to defraud Mrs. Law. The cross-bill prays that the mortgage may be decreed void as to Mr. Law, the owner of the farm under the sheriff’s deed, and be surrendered for cancellation.

The cross-bill sets forth the nature of the suit in which Mr. Law obtained the decree against Mrs. Catherine J. Smith for $5,88.2.53 above mentioned, and the ease under the name of Law v. Smith is reported in the court of chancery in 68 N. J. Eq. 81, and is not further reported because no appeal was taken. For present purposes, it is enough to say that the suit was in form a suit for the specific performance of a contract made by Catherine J. Smith with Alice M. Law, the defendant Alfred W. Law’s testatrix. This contract is printed at length on page 82 of the above-mentioned report. In brief, Mrs. Smith agreed with Mrs. Law that in consideration of Mrs. Law’s loaning a New York corporation, in which Mrs. Smith and her husband were interested, $5,000 upon a mortgage which the corporation proposed to give to Mrs. Law, she, Mrs. Smith, at the maturity of the mortgage, on November 18th, 1899, and on notice, &c., from Mrs. Law, would purchase the mortgage. The contract ends with the following statement:

“For the purpose of inducing her (Mrs. Law) to loan said money and take this guarantee, I hereby state' that I am worth ten thousand dollars ($10,000) at the present time, consisting of real estate in the county of Middlesex, State of New Jersey.”

The proofs show that this statement in regard to Mrs. Smith’s real estate referred to the mortgaged premises, the farm above mentioned, and that Mrs. Smith had no other property. The complainant’s mortgage for $7,500 was dated back nearly five months, and was acknowledged three days before the mortgage of the New York corporation fell due, and a few days after Mrs. Law had given notice that she desired Mrs. Catherine J. Smith to purchase the New York mortgage, i. e., pay the $5,000 and interest.

[303]*303It will be observed that the price which Mrs. Smith agreed to pay for the mortgage is not mentioned in the contract, but is left to implication, and that the use of the word “guarantee,” in connection with the technical imperfections of the instrument, suggest that the actual intention in the minds of the parties was that Mrs. Smith was to guarantee the collection of the mortgage to Mrs. Law when the same fell due. If the mortgage was paid, of course, Mrs. Smith would not be notified in any way to come forward and take up the mortgage.

The complainant, Mr. Law, conducted his litigation strictly as a suit for the specific performance of a contract, and the case was so treated by the distinguished and learned equity judge before whom the same was conducted, the late Vice-Chancellor Pitney, who accepted the analysis of the case which counsel for the complainant had made, and rejected the view that the complainant’s remedy was at law in an action for the breach of a contract of guaranty or otherwise.

The elaborate and interesting opinion of Vice-Chancellor Pitney, in this case of Law v. Smith, while bringing out distinctly and sustaining the view that the cause was properly in equity, involving the exercise of the jurisdiction of the court of chancery of New Jersey to specifically enforce contracts, indicates that the vice-chancellor’s mind did not deal with the exact form of decree or the possible conditions under which the collection of the money awarded to Mr. Law, as executor, should be made. The vice-chancellor covers this whole subject by the following brief propositions at the conclusion of his opinion:

‘T will, therefore, advise a decree that the defendant repay to the complainant the amount due on the mortgage, with costs, and that the complainant have execution therefor according to the practice of the court, and that upon payment of the amount •so decreed the complainant shall assign the mortgage in question * * * to the defendant.

“If the defendant shall so desire, I will listen to a motion to stay the execution while proceedings may be had to enforce all the mortgages, both -the real estate and chattel, in the ordinary way in the court of New York, and credit the amount received .therefrom upon the decree.

[304]*304“The precise terms of the decree may be settled by me upon notice.”

It does not appear that there was any settlement of the decree or any further consideration of its form by the vice-chancellor. At any rate, the decree is brief, reciting that the complainant entered into the contract set forth in the bill “and that' the complainant is entitled to have said contract specifically enforced in accordance with the prayer of the bill,” and thereupon adjudges “that the defendant do forthwith pay to the complainant or his solicitors the sum of $5,882.53, being the principal due upon the mortgage” of the New York corporation to Alice M. Law, deceased, together with interest and costs, and “that upon the payment of the amount herein adjudged to be due, the complainant shall forthwith assign to the defendant the said mortgage mentioned in the contract set forth in the complainant’s bill of complaint, and also the chattel mortgage held by the complainant as additional security for said mortgage debt; and that the complainant have execution for the amount herein adjudged to be due to him according to the practice of this court.”

It will be observed that this decree contemplates that the complainant upon receipt of the money awarded to him, whether by payment made by the defendant Mrs. Smith or through the proceeds of the execution or executions to be issued, was to stand able and ready to transfer the New York mortgages to the defendant Mrs. Smith.

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In Re Hardon
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 A. 890, 84 N.J. Eq. 299, 14 Buchanan 299, 1915 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-smith-njch-1915.