Suplee v. Eckert

152 A.2d 289, 38 Del. Ch. 359, 1959 Del. Ch. LEXIS 92
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 23, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 152 A.2d 289 (Suplee v. Eckert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Suplee v. Eckert, 152 A.2d 289, 38 Del. Ch. 359, 1959 Del. Ch. LEXIS 92 (Del. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

Seitz, Chancellor:

This action is brought by six plaintiffs in their own behalf and in behalf of all others similarly situated, against two named defendants. The complaint seeks to have the court remove a cloud from the asserted title to certain lands in Fenwick Island which were subject to the lien of a mortgage when the mortgage was foreclosed. Though it is a class action, the class is defined as being limited to those persons, like plaintiffs, who hold title under the sheriff’s deed resulting from this foreclosure.

Defendants, by their answer and by answers to the interrogatories propounded by plaintiffs, deny plaintiffs’ title to the lands in question and aver that they are the owners thereof. Defendants seek no affirmative relief; they merely seek to have the court deny plaintiffs’ prayers and dismiss their action.

In certain of their answers to interrogatories, and elsewhere, defendants assert that they own “all of Fenwick Island.” The land as to which relief is sought by the complaint, however, only constitutes a part of Fenwick Island. Therefore the issue before the court is not the ownership of Fenwick Island, but is confined to that part of it as to which plaintiffs seek relief, namely the land described in the mortgage referred to in the complaint.

The mortgage in question contains a description of certain lands situate in Fenwick Island. Plaintiffs claim title to these lands by virtue of a sheriff’s deed given to them or their predecessors in title upon foreclosure of that mortgage. Defendants aver that plaintiffs do [362]*362not have title to all of the lands described in the foreclosure deed, because the mortgagor had conveyed portions of its land to others prior to the recording of the mortgage, and because certain other portions of the mortgagor’s lands were released from the mortgage.

This dispute gives rise to the first issue in the case, namely, precisely what lands are involved in the controversy ? More particularly, do the lands in dispute consist of those described in the foreclosure deed, as claimed by plaintiffs, or were portions of such lands conveyed away prior to recordation of the mortgage or released therefrom thereafter, thus restricting the dispute to the lands described in the foreclosure deed, minus specified portions thereof, as claimed by defendants.

This court has ruled that since plaintiffs have a prima facie record title to all of the lands described in the foreclosure deed, the burden is on defendants to prove that such description embraces lands not subject to the mortgage. See letter, dated September 30, 1958.

Following the court’s letter, and following defendants’ answers to certain interrogatories (see interrogatories, answers, filed 3-3-58 and 12-5-58) plaintiffs resolved this issue by an abandonment of their assertion of title to all of the lands described in the foreclosure deed. Their attorney addressed a letter to the court, bearing date of January 21, 1959, which stated in part:

“Therefore, although the plaintiffs’ prayer is for ‘cancellation’ of a certain tax deed which conflicted with the foreclosure deed, it follows that the scope of plaintiffs’ remedy must be limited in the final judgment in this action by subtracting from the description appearing in the sheriff’s foreclosure deed, and in the complaint in this cause, the following portions thereof:
“1. The two parcels excepted from the foreclosure proceedings by the 1939 restraining order, which the Court of Chancery issued on the eve of the foreclosure sale.
“2. All the lands deeded away by the Fenwick Island Land Company prior to the recording of the mortgage. It was recorded on September 10th, 1908.
[363]*363“3. All the 88 lots released from the mortgage by the release of which a copy was attached as an exhibit to the defendants’ answers (filed on or about March 3, 1958).”

With respect to the initial issue of what land is in dispute, it now appears that both plaintiffs and defendants are in agreement that the court is concerned only with the lands described in the foreclosure deed, minus: 1) the two described parcels excepted therefrom in the foreclosure deed itself, 2) all lands deeded away by the mortgagor prior to the recording of the mortgage on September 10, 1958, and 3) the 88 lots described in the release of the mortgage. See defendants supplemental answers to interrogatories filed 12-5-58, which indicate defendants now claim only 88 lots were released. Plaintiffs agree that all lots deeded away prior to recording of the mortgage are to be excepted from the land in dispute. While not entirely clear, such lots seem to be included in the 88 lots which were identified by defendants as being released lots. See defendants’ supplemental answers to interrogatories sworn to December 5, 1958, answer to interrogatory No. 3. If this is true, defendants have purported to give record references concerning such lots. Unless plaintiffs put these record references in issue within a fixed future time they will be taken as true. One question may be as to whether the dates are the deed dates or the recording dates. Defendants may not hereafter refer to other lots.

Plaintiffs claim rcord title to the lands in dispute, as set forth above, by virtue of the foreclosure deed. Defendants dispute plaintiffs’ claim on several grounds, as follows:

First: Defendants take the position that the tax deed gave them record title (free from encumbrance of the mortgage) and hence that the mortgagor owned no lands on which the mortgage could later be foreclosed. The Supreme Court opinion in Shockley v. Abbott Supply Co. compels a rejection of this contention. See 11 Terry 510, 135 A.2d 607.

Second: Defendants aver that plaintiffs do not have record title to the lands in dispute by virtue of the foreclosure deed, because, for various reasons, both the mortgage and foreclosure proceedings were invalid. The court has ruled that defendants may not attack the [364]*364validity of the mortgage or the foreclosure proceedings. See letters, dated September 30, 1958 and October 22, 1958.

Third: The defendants aver that plaintiffs have no title to a portion of the lands in dispute, namely the lands once known as “James Fassett’s part of ‘Lydias Pasture,’ ” consisting of 110 acres, because:

1. The mortgagor, Fenwick Island Land Company, did not own these 110 acres at the time the mortgage was put on; defendants assert such land was not owned by the mortgagor at that time;

2. That Fenwick Island Land Company began the adverse possession of this portion of the lands in dispute in 1902;

3. That in 1908 when the mortgage was entered, the mortgagor did not own these lands, but merely had an adverse possession claim that had run for 6 years; 14 years short of the statutory period;

4. That though the mortgage description included these 110' acres, the mortgage did not attach to them, because the Fenwick Island Land Company did not own these lands until about 1922 (or 1925), at which time its adverse possession claim matured by the running of the 20-year statute of limitations, 10 Del.C. § 7901 et seq.

5.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cheetham v. Cheetham
335 A.2d 327 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1975)
Suplee v. Eckert
152 A.2d 289 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1959)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 A.2d 289, 38 Del. Ch. 359, 1959 Del. Ch. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/suplee-v-eckert-delch-1959.