Swedesboro Loan & Building Ass'n v. Gans

55 A. 82, 65 N.J. Eq. 132, 20 Dickinson 132, 1903 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 36
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJune 5, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 55 A. 82 (Swedesboro Loan & Building Ass'n v. Gans) 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
Swedesboro Loan & Building Ass'n v. Gans, 55 A. 82, 65 N.J. Eq. 132, 20 Dickinson 132, 1903 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 36 (N.J. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Reed, V. C.

This suit is brought to have a mortgage which has been can-celled upon the record re-establishe'd and foreclosed. The facts, as I gather them from the pleadings, from the meagre testimony and from the position taken by counsel, are as follows: One Charles Gans, of Gloucester county, made a mortgage, dated March 11th, 1892, to the Swedesboro Loan and Building Association to secure the sum of $1,100, payable in one year. Charles Gans, the mortgagor, died June 9th, 1894, intestate, leaving him surviving his widow, Kate P. Gans, and as his heirs, two brothers — James and John — and three sisters — Jennie, Phebe and Mary.

On April 1st, 1895, the widow released to the complainants her right of dower in the mortgaged premises. The complainant accepted a deed from one Sebastian Gans, the father of [133]*133Charles, the deceased mortgagor, under the belief that on the death of Charles the property descended to his father. After the execution of this deed, the loan and building association, believing that it held the legal title to the premises^ on August 5th, 1895, cancelled its mortgage. The procuration of the ,deed from Sebastian Gans seems to have been accomplished by one Benjamin McAllister, who was a scrivener and was at one time a director of the building association and did writing for them, and who seems also to have been mixed up in the settlement of the estate of Charles Gans. He apparently acted as intermediary between the building association and the Gans’, and got the deed which the complainant accepted upon his word as a conveyance of the equity of redemption in .the mortgaged premises. Upon the execution of this deed the complainant went into possession, and has since received the rents and -profits therefrom. There can be no doubt that the cancellation of. the mortgage was • induced by the belief that by force of the deed of Sebastian Gans the land association owned a complete title to' the property.

It is thus manifest that the equity of the situation is entirely with the complainant. The defendants, as heirs of Charles Gans, received the property subject to the lien of this mortgage. The cancellation of the mortgage was, a pure gift to the defendants of the mortgagee’s interest in the property. The heirs had not paid one cent to bring about this change in the respective position of mortgagee and heirs.

Neither has any purchaser, bona fide or otherwise, come into' existence upon the faith of the cancellation of the mortgage.

It is clear, therefore, that unless some inexorable rule compels otherwise, the complainant should be - relieved .from the predicament into which it was misled by its belief in its ownership of a complete title to the mortgaged property.

The substantial ground upon which the heirs resist the granting of this relief is that wnile the cancellation was-caused by a mistake of the complainant, it was a mistake of. law and not of fact. The maxim juris ignorantia non excusat is invoked by the defendants. This maxim is subject to so many exceptions that it is quite as often inapplicable as applicable to supposed mistakes of law.

[134]*134That the present case, involving the release of private rights under a mistaken notion as to private ownership of property, is one in which the English courts of chancery would afford prompt relief cannot be doubted. The line of cases granting relief where a man purchased his own property through mistake (Bingham v. Bingham, 1 Ves. Sr. 127), or where a release was made so broad in its terms as to release rights of property of which the party was ignorant.(Chalmondeley v. Clinton, 2 Mar. 171), or where a party, under the misapprehension that he had no title, surrendered to the supposed owner (Pusey v. Desbouvrie, 3 P. Wms. 315), exhibit the degree in which courts of equity granted relief from such mistakes. In Livesey v. Livesey, 3 Russ. 287, an executrix, who, under a mistaken construction of a will, had overpaid an annuity, was permitted to deduct the amount overpaid from subsequent paj'ments. In McCarthy v. Decaix, 2 Russ. & M. 614, a person was relieved where he had renounced a claim of- property made under a mistake respecting the validity of a marriage, the lord-chancellor saying: “What he has done was in ignorance of the law, possibly of fact; but in a case of this kind this would be one and the same thing.”

In Cooper v. Phibbs, L. R. 2 H. L. 149, 172; S. C., 22 Eng. Bul. Cas. 870, an agreement was cancelled because it had been entered into through a mistake as to the ownership of a fishery. In this case Lord Westbury expressed the much-discussed sentiment that the word “jus” in the maxim is used to denote a general law, and has no application to private rights. The result of this decision of the house of lords was that an act caused through a mistake as to ownership of property would be remedied in equity. In Beauchamp v. Winn, L. R. 6 H. L. 223, 264; S. C., 22 Eng. Rul. Cas. 889, a mutual mistake in an agreement as to the rights of the- parties resulted in a correction of the agreement.

The result of the English cases is summed up by Mr. Kerr in the remark “that if a man through misapprehension or mistake of the law parts with or gives up private rights to property, or assumes obligations upon grounds upon which he would not have acted but for such misapprehension; a court of equity may grant relief, if under the general consideration of the case it is [135]*135satisfied that the party benefited by the mistake cannot in conscience retain the benefit or advantage so acquired.” Kerr Fr. This statement of the equitable rule was cited with apparent . approval by Chancellor Kunyon in Macknet v. Macknet, 2 Stew. Eq. 54, 59, and in Martin v. New York, Susquehanna and Western Railroad Co., 9 Stew. Eq. 109, 112.

The equity cases in this cuuntry, more particularly the earlier cases, exhibit a less liberal spirit in granting relief for mistakes in law. 'This resulted mainly, I think, from the great influence which the early reported cases decided by Chancellor Kent had in sha’ping the early equity jurisprudence of this country.

The case of Lyon v. Richmond, 2 Johns. Ch. 60, was an application to set aside an agreement, because it was entered into under the influence of a supposed condition of the law, and afterwards the court of errors rendered a decision which changed the law as it was supposed to exist when the agreement was made. In deciding that the court could grant no relief, Chancellor Kent, having in mind, of course, the particular facts of that case, made some general remarks in respect to the impolicy of a court of equity attempting to relieve against mistakes of law. These remarks appear again and again in the earlier cases, being used as a general authority against the granting of relief in all cases of mistakes of law.

These remarks appear in the opinion in the case of Garwood v. Administrator of Eldridge, 1 Gr. Ch. 145, which case is invoked as conclusive against the restoration of this mortgage. In that ease Chancellor Pennington declined to re-establish certain mortgages which had been cancelled by a mortgagee who purchased the equity of redemption, and by the cancellation, a judgment, of the existence of which the mortgagee was ignorant, became a superior lien upon the property.

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Bluebook (online)
55 A. 82, 65 N.J. Eq. 132, 20 Dickinson 132, 1903 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swedesboro-loan-building-assn-v-gans-njch-1903.