State v. Public Service Electric & Gas Co.
This text of 291 A.2d 32 (State v. Public Service Electric & Gas 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.
Opinion
STATE OF NEW JERSEY, PLAINTIFF,
v.
PUBLIC SERVICE ELECTRIC & GAS COMPANY, A NEW JERSEY CORPORATION, DEFENDANT.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division.
*265 Mr. Lemuel Skidmore, for claimant J. Malcolm Mossman (Messrs. Hartlaub, Braun, Thorn, Dotten and Skidmore, attorneys).
Mr. Robert W. Dempsey, Deputy Attorney General, for State of New Jersey (Mr. George F. Kugler, Jr., Attorney General, attorney).
SEIDMAN, J.C.C. (temporarily assigned).
This matter is before the court on a claimant's motion to reopen and amend a final judgment of escheat. The basic facts are not in substantial dispute.
The question to be resolved is whether a claimant who has made a timely application to reclaim some escheated property can, more than two years after the filing of the escheat judgment, present a claim for additional escheated property mistakenly omitted from the prior application.
There appears to be no reported case in this State on the precise issue involved herein.
Although the State does not challenge the claimant's allegations, its position is that the application is barred by the expiration of the statutory two-year period. The claimant contends that on the facts here present the court has the power to grant the relief sought notwithstanding the passage of time.
The final judgment, entered September 12, 1969 and amended December 22, 1969, escheated to the State unclaimed interest on bonds of the Public Service Electric & Gas Company or its predecessor companies in the aggregate amount of $16,712.50, and unclaimed funds representing moneys for the redemption of the bonds in the aggregate amount of $13,888.75.
In August 1971 J. Malcolm Mossman, the claimant herein, applied pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:37-28 to reopen the *266 judgment in order to establish his ownership of part of the escheated property. According to the supporting affidavits and documents, Mossman, a resident of New York City and described as a person of advanced years who lived alone and failed to pay close attention to his business affairs, claimed ownership of coupons in the total amount of $11,500 which had formerly been attached to 10 $1000, 5% first mortgage bonds of the Hudson County Gas Company (a predecessor of Public Service Electric & Gas Company). His New York counsel and attorney-in-fact, Irving D. Goodstein, related that on or about November 10, 1970 he caused the bonds to be presented for payment to Commercial Trust Company of New Jersey, together with attached uncollected coupons in the sum of $2000 for the period May 1, 1946 to November 1, 1949. He further stated that although the principal of the bonds was paid in full, he was advised by the bank that the funds of the payment of the coupons had escheated to the State. Payment of 380 additional detached coupons, each valued at $25, for the years 1927 through 1945, found in Mossman's safe deposit box, was refused for the same reason. The claimant denied previous knowledge of the escheat proceedings.
The court being satisfied that the claimant was the owner of the coupons and that he had not had actual notice of the escheat action, and no opposition being offered by the State, an order was entered August 13, 1971, amending the final judgment and directing the State Treasurer to pay the sum of $11,476.19 to the claimant, representing the accumulated interest on the bonds less a pro rata share of the expenses incurred by the State.
The present application, filed in March 1972, is "for an order pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:37-28 amending the Judgment entered in the above entitled matter on August 13, 1971, which reopened and amended the final judgment entered September 12, 1969, as amended December 22, 1969, to direct that the sum of $10,000, represents (sic) the principal of $10,000 bonds of Hudson County Electric and Gas Company *267 (sic), less expenses of this action attributed thereto," be paid to the claimant.
Goodstein's supporting affidavit sets forth, in substance, that in January 1972 he discovered the bonds had in fact not been redeemed but were being held by Chemical Bank in New York. An attached copy of a Chemical Bank Trust department form, dated November 10, 1970, acknowledges receipt of the bonds which, apparently, were to be sent to the Commercial Trust Company of New Jersey for redemption. The latter bank, on November 19, 1970, informed Chemical Bank that "[c]oupons of Hudson County Gas Company for $2,000.00 are not collectable in usual manner," and suggested that contact be made with the New Jersey Department of the Treasury. The lack of reference to the bonds is not explained. Photocopies of 10 Hudson County Gas Company bonds dated November 1, 1899, and due November 1, 1949, are also attached to the supporting affidavits. Goodstein's position is that he had assumed mistakenly that the bonds had been redeemed.
N.J.S.A. 2A:37-28 deals with the reopening of an escheat judgment:
Any person whose property may have escheated to the State as provided herein, or any rightful heir or next of kin entitled to such property by descent or succession may, within 2 years after the filing of the final judgment in the Superior Court, apply to said court to reopen the said judgment and upon proof that he was without actual knowledge of such escheat action, and upon proof of ownership of such property or the right to possession thereof, the court may in its discretion reopen the judgment and in the event that the aforesaid judgment in part or in whole be revised or amended, the court may direct the State Treasurer to repay such part of the moneys received by the State Treasurer by reason of such judgment, to the party in the amended judgment entitled to have the same, and upon the entry of such final judgment the State Treasurer shall repay the said moneys as provided in such judgment; provided, however, that there shall first be deducted all expenses and charges that may have accrued or been paid out by reason of the entry of the original judgment. * * *
The State argues that property is presumed abandoned and subject to escheat after it has remained unclaimed for *268 at least 14 successive years, N.J.S.A. 2A:37-13, and that a claimant has two years after the escheat judgment to rebut such abandonment. The conclusion it draws is that "the additional two year period relates to the abandonment of the property rather than to an extension of time to a particular claimant." Expressing sympathy for the claimant's plight, the State, nevertheless, urges that the court cannot engraft on the period of limitation established by the Legislature exceptions not contained therein, however inequitable the enforcement of the statute, without such exceptions, may be.
The claimant's thesis is that since he had made a timely application to reopen the judgment, and since the omission of the bonds therefrom resulted from mistake, the intention to abandon the bonds has been rebutted and he should now be allowed to submit further proof of ownership of the bonds in question.
It is clear from the claimant's allegations, if accepted as true, that his earlier failure to assert ownership of the bonds and claim so much of the escheated money as would be required to redeem them came from an erroneous belief that they had already been redeemed. There is no doubt the bonds would otherwise have been included in the prior application, well within the two-year period prescribed by the statute.
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291 A.2d 32, 119 N.J. Super. 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-public-service-electric-gas-co-njsuperctappdiv-1972.