Thiel v. Perkins

111 A. 666, 92 N.J. Eq. 79, 7 Stock. 79, 1916 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 16
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedSeptember 25, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 111 A. 666 (Thiel v. Perkins) 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
Thiel v. Perkins, 111 A. 666, 92 N.J. Eq. 79, 7 Stock. 79, 1916 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 16 (N.J. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Stevenson, V. C.

The important question in this suit is whether, under the circumstances proved, the vendee of a corner lot twenty-five by one hundred feet, in the town of Guttenberg, is entitled to have the whole transaction rescinded because both grantor and grantee were under a mutual mistake—both supposing in good faith that the brick building, which apparently occupied the corner lot, stood wholly within the boundaries of the lot, whereas in. fact the brick walls encroached on adjacent property and on the street at certain points about an inch and a half, a condition which greatly injured the value of the structure.

[81]*811. It is somewhat surprising that the diligent efforts of industrious counsel have produced no- case in which rescission has been sought on the ground of an encroachment of a building covering the land conveyed which was unknown to the parties— in fact, unsuspected by them and undiscoverable by careful observation with the eye.

If a vendor offers a corner lot for sale, with a valuable brick building apparently covering it, and conceals the fact known to him that the building encroaches upon adjacent property owned by a third party', it may be conceded that a clear case of fraud is made out—fraud which consists in suppressio veri—and that the right of the vendee to relief is not affected by the fact that he refrained from making a survey which would have disclosed the encroachment. A vendor is guilty of fraud when he falsely represents that there is no mortgage upon the property, whereas there is a mortgage duly recorded which the vendee would have discovered if he had made a search. It is unnecessary to point out that the neglect of a vendee to' search the public records when purchasing real estate has far more fatal effect in the way of depriving Irinr of remedies than his failure- to have a survey made to see whether the owner of a lot twenty-five by one hundred, which he is about to buy, or such owner’s predecessors in title, have been foolish or careless enough to erect an expensive brick building covering the lot without having the walls of tire building located in accordance with an accurate survey.

A variety of cases may be stated which it would be perhaps • very difficult to place in one class and under the operation of one rule with respect to liability on account of an encroachment as between vendor and vendee.

If the vendor himself erected the building, and this fact is known to the vendee, it would seem to be somewhat harsh to hold that the vendee could not accept the offer of the property as. a representation on the part of the vendor that he had erected the building upon his own land, and not in part upon the land of his neighbor. If the vendor knows what the truth is and knows, as, of course, he must, that the truth is not discoverable by the eye, and that the vendee unless he'makes a survey will be deceived, the case would seem, a® I have above intimated, to be [82]*82one of fraud. If both parties are innocent it would seem to be a case of mutual mistake, and there are .strong grounds for holding that generally the vendor is responsible as the cause of the mistake.

When we take the case of a building which, was erected by a former owner, the present owner and grantor being ignorant of the encroachment, there seems to be room for considerable argument concerning the comparative equities of the parties and the just allotment of liability. In other words, the question then arises whether when men buy and sell real estate in good faith the vendee does or does not take subject to what a survey would disclose, and if he sees fit to carry out the transaction without a precautionary survey, whether he must not under the old rule “look to his covenants.”

In the present, case the right of the complainant to rescind is more difficult to establish because of the history of the lot and building in question. Treating the defendant the Tuttle Corporation, the holder of the title, who made the deed to the complainants, as the mere agent and trustee for Mr. Perkins, and treating Mr. Thiel as representing his wife as well as himself, it appears that Mr. Thiel, or his attorney, in some degree was responsible for the original honest but erroneous belief among all these parties, that the brick building was located wholly within the lines of the corner lot twenty-five by one hundred feet. Without going into the more or less complex transactions between the parties which preceded the conveyance from the Tuttle Corporation to the complainants, which conveyance they now seek to rescind, it is enough to point out- that Mr. Thiel filed a lien claim against this building and the curtilage upon which it was alleged to have been erected, and described the curtilage as lot 414, in block 27, on a certain specified map, declaring that the lot was situate on the northeast corner of Hermann avenue and Second street. All parties to this whole transaction at all times knew that this corner lot was twenty-five by one hundred feet. Mr. Thiel, so far as he is concerned, swears to this fact positively. Mr. Thiel, or his attorney, who drew the lien claim, thus placed on record the representation! that the brick building in question was erected upon the curtilage described, viz., this [83]*83corner lot twent3r-five by one hundred feet. If Mr. Thiel is to be charged with notice that the walls of this building upon which he filed his lien encroached upon the neighboring lot, and, notwithstanding that fact, filed his lien claim, and carried through the proceedings thereon to an execution sale, and stood by, as he did, at such sale and gaye no notice of the facts to purchasers, it would seem that, according to the argument now made in this case on behalf of the complainants, any purchaser at such sheriff’s sale would have a right to a rescission as against Mr. Thiel upon discovery of the encroachment.

If, however, as no doubt was the case, neither Mr. Thiel nor his attorney had any suspicion that the curtilage which was described in the lien claim did not contain the entire building, then a different 'situation, of course, would be created which need not now be discussed. The point to be observed is, that Mr. Thiel, being the cause of the representation that the corner lot contained the whole building, and was the curtilage upon which it was erected, prosecuted his lien claim suit to judgment and caused a sheriff’s sale of the property described in the lien claim to be held, at which sale the property was offered in its apparent condition, no notice being given of those encroachments which were apparently discoverable only by a survey. At the sheriff’s sale Mr. Perkins, having a mortgage interest which he held as trustee of an estate to protect, made an. arrangement with Mr. Thiel—a bargain was made between the two—by which Mr. Perkins bought in the property for the amount off Mr. Thiel’s claim, something over $1,100. Mr. Perldn'Si had no notice of the encroachment, but bought the propert3r under the same mistake under which it was subsequently purchased by Mr. and Mrs. Thiel. The sheriff’s deed, by the direction of Mr. Perkins, was made to his agent or trustee, the defendant the Tuttle Corporation. Mr. Perkins had no personal interest in this property but acted as trustee for an estate and the Tuttle Corporation, his agent, held the property for the protection of the mortgage and other interest of this estate, of which Mr. Perkins was the trustee.

It thus appears that Mr. Thiel, not only brought on the sale of this property and caused it to be offered for sale to the public, [84]

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Bluebook (online)
111 A. 666, 92 N.J. Eq. 79, 7 Stock. 79, 1916 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thiel-v-perkins-njch-1916.