Staats v. Bergen

17 N.J. Eq. 297
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 N.J. Eq. 297 (Staats v. Bergen) 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
Staats v. Bergen, 17 N.J. Eq. 297 (N.J. Ct. App. 1865).

Opinion

The Master.

In the year 1840, Abraham. I. Staats, father of the complainant, James B. Staats, died intestate, leaving, surviving him, his widow, Mary Staats, and three sons, to wit, the said James B. Staats, and John A., and Evert B. Staats. By agreement between said widow and heirs-at-law, they placed one thousand dollars in the hands of her brother, Zaccheus Bergen, the defendant, as trustee, the interest of which was to be paid to her during her life, in lieu of dower, and after her decease, the principal was to be paid equally to her said three sons. Mr. Bergen thereupon executed a declaration of trust in writing, under seal, dated 3d May, 1845, which is as follows, to wit: “ Whereas, I, Zaccheus Bergen, of the county of Somerset, and state of New Jersey, have this day received of Greorge H. Brown, attorney of Mary Staats, widow, and John A. Staats, James B. Staats, and Evert B. Staats,. heirs-at-law of Abraham I. Staats, deceased, of the same place, the sum of one thousand dollars, of which the said widow is to receive the interest during her life, in lieu of her dower in the real estate of' her late husband, by agreement between her and the said heirs-at-law. Now, therefore, know all men by these presents, that I, the said Zaccheus Bergen, have received the said sum of money, as trustee o.f the said widow and heirs-at-law, and I do hereby agree to place and keep the same at interest, upon good security, during the natural life of the said widow, and to pay her the interest arising from the said sum, annually, so long as she may live. And I do further agree to and with tlie said heirs-at-law, to pay over, within one year after the death of the said widow, the said sum of one thousand dollars, with the interest that may have accrued thereon [299]*299after lier death, to the said John A. Staats, James B. Staats, and Evert B. Staats, their heirs or assigns.”

Annexed to said instrument is a written confirmation thereof, of the same date, signed by the said heirs, which is as follows: “The above trust is pursuant to agreement between us and the said Mary Staats, widow, as above said, and we do ratify and confirm the same:”

Afterwards, and about May 1st, 1846, Mr. Bergen, the trustee, lent to said James B. Staats the sum of $333.33, one-third of said trust money, being the portion thereof which, on the decease of said widow, would be due to him. To secure this loan, the said James B. Staats executed to Mr. Bergen a mortgage upon his farm of about ninety-two acres, in Somerset county, and upon which there was then existing a prior mortgage for $1100, given to P. P. Quick, to secure certain trust moneys, which he held for said Allotta Ann Staats, and which he had lent to said James B. Staats, her husband.

In a foreclosure suit, afterwards brought in this court by a Mr. Van Nest, upon a mortgage subsequently given on said farm, and in which suit Mr. Bergen and others holding mortgages thereon, were defendants, a decree for the foreclosure and sale of the mortgaged premises was made, and under an execution issued thereon, the sheriff, in March, 1859, sold the farm to John A. Staats for 83910, and conveyed it to him. This sum so raised by the sale, was more than enough to pay the amount due to Mr. Bergen, on the said mortgage held by him as trustee, after paying the prior mortgage, and the costs and expenses of sale.

The purchaser, John A. Staats, executed four mortgages on the farm as follows, to wit: one to Wm. S. Cook, for $1200; one to said Z. Bergen, for $333.33; one to P. P. Quick, for $1000; and one to J. M. Mann, for $800. The first three were dated 4th April, 1859; the other was dated one day later. And these four mortgages were so recorded, that in regard to their priority as liens, they stood in the order in which they are here mentioned. The mortgages to [300]*300Quick and Mánn were given to secure moneys, which they respectively held in trust for said Aletta Ann Staats. The mortgage so given by John A. Staats to Zaccheus Bergen; does not, on its face, show that it was given to him, as trustee, to secure one-third of the trust moneys so placed in his hands. But, in his answer, Mr. Bergen admits that it was. He appears simply to have continued the investment of that portion of the trust moneys, by taking a new mortgage for it upon the same farm, from the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale.

On the 31st of October, 1861, Mr. Bergen, still holding said last mentioned mortgage, executed in writing, under his hand and seal, a second declaration of trust, Which is as follows, to wit: “This writing witnesseth that I, Zaccheus Bergen, of the township of Hillsborough, and county of Somerset, hold a bond and mortgage given by John A. Staats and his wife on a farm in Bridgewater township, in said county, to secure the sum of $333.33, with interest thereon, as trustee, to be appropriated by me to the support of Mary Staats, as far as it may be necessary, during her natural life, and to the payment of her funeral expenses; and within one year after her decease, I promise, and bind myself, my heirs, executors, and administrators, to pay the residue that may remain in my hands, to James B. Staats, of Newark, in the county of Essex, his heirs or assigns.”

The James B. Staats here mentioned, is the same who was mentioned in the first declaration of trust. On the ninth of February, 1861, by writing, under his hand and seal, he assigned all his interest in said bond and mortgage and the moneys secured thereby, to his son Abraham I. Staats, who, in his testimony in this case, states that it was so assigned to him in trust for his mother, the said Aletta Ann Staats, though it is not so expressed in the instrument itself. On 10th September, 1863, and before the commencement of this suit, he assigned directly to her all his interest in said bond and mortgage and the moneys thereby secured.

On the thirty-first of May, 1860, J. M. Mann filed in this court, a bill to foreclose the mortgage for $800, upon said [301]*301farm, executed to Mm as trustee of Mrs. Staats, as before mentioned, making Zaccheus Bergen and the other persons holding mortgages thereon, defendants in said suit. A decree was made for the sale of said farm, to raise and pay the moneys due on said four mortgages given by John A. Staats, in the following order, and to the following amounts, to wit, 1st, Wm. S. Cook, $1363.06; 2d, Zaccheus Bergen, $372.82; 3d, P. P. Quick, $1203.34; 4th, J. M. Mann, trustee &c., $969.39; with interest on said sums from 28th March, 1861. Under execution issued on this decree, the said farm was exposed to sale by the sheriff, on the twenty-seventh of May, 1861, and was struck off to said Zaccheus Bergen for $1850, he being the highest bidder therefor, and the sheriff executed to him a deed for the property.

After the sale, Aletta Ann Staats requested Mr. Bergen to convey the form to her, because, as she alleged, he had agreed to buy it for her at the sheriff’s sale, and also because at such sale he was acting as trustee, and she was entitled to the moneys secured by the mortgage so held by him in trust, and to satisfy which, with other encumbrances, the farm was so sold; she offering, if Mr. Bergen would convey it to her, to re-pay him what he had paid for it, and something in addition for his trouble. Mr. Bergen at first seemed disposed to accede to her request, hut finally refused, and claimed to hold the farm as his own. Afterwards he conveyed an undivided half of the farm to his son James L. Bergen, one of the defendants in this case.

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In Re Bender
192 A. 718 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.J. Eq. 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/staats-v-bergen-njch-1865.