Stockton v. Dillon

57 A. 487, 66 N.J. Eq. 100, 21 Dickinson 100, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 121
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 2, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 57 A. 487 (Stockton v. Dillon) 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
Stockton v. Dillon, 57 A. 487, 66 N.J. Eq. 100, 21 Dickinson 100, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 121 (N.J. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Reed, V. C.

There were two mortgages upon the property of Dillon and Donnelly; the first was held by the complainants and the second by Mary Ann Connor. On May 28th, 1900, a bill was filed to foreclose the first of these mortgages, and on August 1st. a final decree was made directing a sale of the premises, and that out of the proceeds there should be paid to the complainant '$1,627.23, and then to Mary Ann Connor, the holder of the second mortgage, $1,381.66.

On June 30th, 1903, the Bergner & Engle Brewing Company filed a petition setting up the filing of the bill by the complainants and final decree entered in the suit on August 1st, 1900, as already set out. The petition set up that after the making of the said decree Dillon and Donnelly solicited the brewing company to advance them sufficient money to stay the sale of the said property under said decree; that thereafter it was agreed between the browing company, through its agent, William H. Eiegel, and Dillon and Donnell}', that the company would advance $1,381.66 (the true sum being $1,400) to Dillon and Donnelly; that said sum would be sufficient to satisfy the amount of accrued interest and costs on said decree, and would satisfy the said Mary Ann Connor the amount due to her, and would procure from her an assignment of her mortgage on said premises, and that in consideration of the advancement of the said sum Dillon and Donnelly would give the petitioners a lease ■on said premises for four years and eight months from the 1st day of October, 1900, the rent to be paid in advance; that in accordance with said agreement, entered into with the knowledge of the complainants in the foreclosure suit, the petitioners did advance the said sum to Dillon and Donnelly, who made a lease to Eiegel, the agent of the brewing company, for four [102]*102years and eight months, and also procured an assignment of the Connor mortgage to the company as a guarantee that the brewing company would not be disturbed in its possession of the leased premises by reason of anything in complainants’ mortgage. The petition then set out that on May 14th, 1903, the complainants made an affidavit of the amount due upon the decree and that execution was issued, under which the property was advertised for sale; that the petitioners have tendered the full amount of the decree to the complainants, requesting them to assign the decree, which the complainants refused to do.

The petition prayed that the petitioners might be made a party to tire foreclosure suit and be permitted to file an answer or cross-bill. The rule upon all the parties in the foreclosure suit, including Dillon and Donnelly, was allowed, and upon its return an order was made admitting the petitioners as a party and permitting it to file an answer or cross-bill.

In its cross-bill the brewing company set out the same facts-as appeared in its petition, and asked to be permitted to redeem the mortgage of the complainants upon paying the amount due upon the decree, with accrued interest and costs, and in a supplemental cross-bill and affidavits asked that the sheriff been] oinecl from selling the property under the said decree. An interlocutory injunction was directed.

The brewing company deposited in this court the amount of the decree, and the money was taken out by the complainants' on July 28th, 1903.

Dillon and Donnelly filed an answer to the cross-bill. In the answer they admitted that the sum of $1,400 was advanced by the brewing company for the purposés set out in the cross-bill, and that a lease was given, and that the Connor mortgage was assigned. But it denies that there was any understanding that the foreclosure proceedings should be indefinitely postponed.

The answer asserts that a payment of the $1,400 was made as a loan, with the security of the said lease, and that it was agreed that in case Dillon and Donnelly should pay the said loan, without interest, that then the brewing company should deliver up [103]*103all obligations lielcl by it for the security of the loan. It asserts, also, that the Connor mortgage ivas an additional security for the said loan. It sets up a.tender to the brewing company of the amount due upon the said loan, and the refusal of the com-, pany to deliver up the lease and mortgage. It also sets up that they are ready and willing to pay the amount of complainants’ decree, as well as the amount due to the brewing company. Upon this cross-bill and answer, the case was set down for final hearing.

Upon the hearing it appeared that the brewing company advanced the $1,400, out of which $242.49 was paid upon the Connor mortgage and $219.79 was paid as the costs, with accrued interest upon the complainants’ decree, upon payment of which complainants consented to stay the sale of the premises. And it also appeared that the lease for four-years and eight months, the term beginning October 1st, 1900, at the yearly rent of $300, to be paid in equal monthly payments of $25 each, was made. Attached to this lease was a receipt given by Dillon and Donnelly to Mr. Riegel, the agent of the brewing company, for the sum of $1,400, expressed to be in full for rent of said premises herein described, for the term of four years and eight months. This receipt is dated “Trenton, October 1st, 1900.”

On October 7th, 1900, the brewing company took an assignment of the Connor mortgage.

It is perceived that tire effort by Dillon and Donnelly is practically to redeem the lease and the decree from the control of the brewing company. The pleadings are not exactly conformable to practice, as the effort should have been made by cross-bill and not by answer. But the object of the parties is clear and the pleadings can be amended if it is found necessary to reach the result aimed at, namely, to determine the character of the lease. It is manifest that Dillon and Donnelly, as mortgagors, have the right to pay off the mortgage decree against them whenever they choose to do so. This, however, does not seem to be their purpose, so far as that purpose is disclosed in their answer, unless they can, at the same time, redeem the lease.

[104]*104I will therefore consider their right to redeem.

It is perceived that the lease was given for a term which, at the rental named, viz., $25 a month, would amount to exactly the amount of money advanced. As already observed, the brewing company insists that the $1,400 was understood to be advanced as payment of rent in full for the term. It insists that while the money was advanced for the benefit of Dillon and Donnelly, it was not advanced as a loan, but was payment ■of a consideration for the term, just as the company might have bought any other property of Dillon and Donnelly and paid them the cash for the purpose of aiding them financially. As already observed, the assignment of the Connor mortgage to the brewing company is said by it to. have been as security that the company would have the enjoyment of the full term of the lease, and, as said by Dillon and Donnelty, that it was as security, in addition to the lease, for the repayment of the same loan.

There is nothing in the case or upon the face of the papers to show that the lease is a mortgage, unless a statement made tip on January 5th, 1903, by someone in the office of the brewing compan}', can be so regarded. This statement was made up at the request of the solicitor of the complainants, for the purpose of ascertaining how much was due upon the Connor mortgage.

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Related

McFarland v. Withers
191 A. 808 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 A. 487, 66 N.J. Eq. 100, 21 Dickinson 100, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stockton-v-dillon-njch-1904.