Tate v. Security Trust Co.

52 A. 313, 63 N.J. Eq. 559, 1902 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 48
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 26, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 52 A. 313 (Tate v. Security Trust Co.) 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
Tate v. Security Trust Co., 52 A. 313, 63 N.J. Eq. 559, 1902 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 48 (N.J. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Reed, V. C.

On February 2d, 1900, Charles S. and William Solomon entered into a written agreement with Samuel H. Tate, the terms of which were that the Solomons would sell the San Marcos Hotel, in Atlantic City, to Tate for $50,000, free of encumbrances, except a $15,000 mortgage. The consideration to be paid to the Solomons was in the shape of certain properties that were to be conveyed to them by Tate and a promissory note of $3,000 [560]*560made by Tate. It was also agreed that, to enable the Solomons to raise money upon the $3,000 note, for the payment of taxes and for other payments, Mr. Tate was to make a second mortgage of $4,000 upon the hotel property sold, which mortgage was to be used by the Solomons to secure the said $3,000 note,, and when this n'ote jvas paid the mortgage was to be reassigned to Tate.

The agent who acted for Tate in the transaction was Charles B. Prettyman, a real estate broker, who signed the agreement for his principal.

After the agreement for the sale or exchange was signed, Mr. Prettyman sold the property to a Mr. Stehle, and a part of the consideration for such sale was a $4,000 mortgage to be executed, by Mr. Stehle upon the said hotel property. By an arrangement between Prettyman and the Solomons this mortgage was made to the Solomons, instead of to Tate, for the purpose of being' used by them to secure the $3,000 note, in accordance with the agreement already mentioned. It was made in this shape, according to the statement of Mr. Prettyman, to avoid the expense of' two papers—first, a mortgage to Tate, and then an assignment from Tate to the Solomons. This mortgage, therefore, belonged to Mr. Tate, after the payment of the $3,000 note, for the-security of which it was made to Solomon. William Solomon had the $3,000 note discounted by the defendant the Security Trust Company, of Camden, and the mortgage was delivered as security. Five hundred dollars were paid upon the note, and the trust company refused to redeliver the mortgage to Tate, in case the note should be paid, claiming to hold the mortgage as security for other indebtedness due to them from the Solomons. This bill is filed to compel such delivery.

It is thus perceived that the litigation arises by reason of the-incapacity of the agent in conducting the transaction. Had the mortgage for $4,000 been made to Tate, and by him assigned to-the Solomons, by an instrument stating the purpose of such assignment, there could not have been the least trouble. As the-affair was conducted, the Solomons were invested with the power to make an absolute assignment of the instrument, and this they seem to have done.

[561]*561It appears that the Solomons are indebted to the Security Trust Company to an amount in excess of the face value of the $4,000 mortgage. This indebtedness, other than the $3,000 note which was discounted at the time of the pledge of the mortgage, so far as appears, was one existing at that time. What occurred between the officers of the trust company and Mr. Solomon, or his agent, at the time of the discount of the $3,000 note and the delivery of the mortgage does not appear, as neither of the parties to the transaction was sworn. The right to hold this mortgage for a pre-existing indebtedness is rested upon an agreement, endorsed upon a note for $3,000, dated February 8th, 1898. By this endorsement William Solomon agreed that the securities hereby pledged (that is, in 1898), together with any that may be pledged hereafter, shall be applicable in like manner to secure the payment of any past or future obligations held by the trust company, and that

“all of my securities in their hands shall stand as one general continuing collateral security for the whole of my obligations, so that the deficiency of any one shall be made good for collaterals for the rest.”

The query is thus presented whether the trust compa^, taking this mortgage as collateral security for a pre-existing debt, stands in a position superior to Tate, who had an equitable interest in the $4,000 mortgage, which, as against him, Solomon misapplied by pledging it for amounts in excess of the $3,000 note.

The general rule that an assignee of a mortgage takes subject to the equities existing in favor of a mortgagor does not apply in this case, because the equity of Tate was a secret equity. While there is some conflict between the cases (Davis v. Cressman, 12 Dick. Ch. Rep. 619), I think the rule should be settled in this state that a bona fide assignee for value of a mortgage takes it free from all latent equities existing in favor'of third parties. Vredenburgh v. Burnet, 4 Stew. Eq. 229.

It is first said that the trust company is not a bona fide holder. The point is made that, at the meeting of the parties when the mortgage and the note were finally passed to Solomon, Mr. Cooper, the president of the trust company, was present and [562]*562took part. It is insisted that he had notice of the purpose for which the $4,000 mortgage was made to Solomon, and that his knowledge of that purpose is equivalent to notice to the Security Trust Company, of which he was the head. Mr. Cooper says that he appeared at that conference as counsel for the Solomons, and not as a representative of the trust company. I think he took, for the Solomons, away from that meeting the note and the mortgage. He knew, I think, that the note was to be presented to the trust company for the purpose of raising money upon it. He has no recollection of taking any part in the actual presentation of the note and mortgage to the financial officers of the trust company, and thinks the transaction was with Mr. Longstreth. As already remarked, it does not appear who actually conducted that particular transaction, and as it is not proved that Mr. Cooper took any part in the reception of the bond and mortgage on behalf of the trust company, it is not chargeable with any knowledge of which he may have been possessed.

It is, in the second place, insisted that if the trust company took the mortgage without notice of the equity of Tate, yet it is not a holder for value. I think it quite clear that, to enable an assignee to hold free of any equitjr existing in a third party, he must not only have taken the mortgage bona fide, but for value.

In nearly all the cases in which the doctrine of the immunity of an assignee of a chose in action from latent equities has been recognized, the matter of consideration paid by the assignee has not been discussed, but the general rule stated that the assignee takes free from such equities. Losey v. Simpson, 3 Stock. 246; Woodruff v. Depue, 1 McCart. 168; Danbury v. Robinson, 1 McCart. 213; Starr v. Haskins, 11 C. E. Gr. 414.

In Putnam v. Clark, 2 Stew. Eq. 412, it was, however, said, obiter, that it was the established rule in this state that while the purchaser for value of a chose in action is bound by the equities existing against it, in the hands of the original obligor, he is not bound by the equities in favor of third parties, of which he had no notice, citing the line of cases just mentioned.

In Vredenburgh v. Burnet, 4 Stew. Eq. 229, Vice-Chancellor [563]

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Bluebook (online)
52 A. 313, 63 N.J. Eq. 559, 1902 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tate-v-security-trust-co-njch-1902.