Titus v. Phillips

18 N.J. Eq. 75
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1866
StatusPublished

This text of 18 N.J. Eq. 75 (Titus v. Phillips) 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
Titus v. Phillips, 18 N.J. Eq. 75 (N.J. Ct. App. 1866).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The object of the bill of complaint in this case, is the reconveyance of a farm in Mercer county, conveyed by the complainant to the defendant, on the ground that the deed conveying the same was delivered without the authority, and contrary to the orders, of the complainant; the complainant offering to repay to the defendant the amount expended by him in improvements on the property, above the net income received from it since the conveyance.

The chief, if not the only controversy in the case is, -whether the deed was delivered without the authority, and contrary to the orders, of the complainant. The farm, on the second day of February, 1861, belonged to Andrew R. Titus, who is the brother of the complainant, and the son-in-law of the defendant. A. R. Titus, who was a merchant in Trenton, at that time was much in debt, and embarrassed, and was largely indebted to the complainant, who was also liable, to some extent, as an accommodation endorser on his notes. The farm in question, which was subject to mortgages amounting, with the interest, to about eighty-eight hundred dollars, was, on the second day of February, 1861, conveyed by A. R. Titus and wife to the complainant, by deed dated and acknowledged on that day, and recorded on the sixth day of the month. The consideration recited in the deed was twelve thousand five hundred dollars. On the 28th day of March next ensuing, the complainant executed and acknowledged a deed to the defendant for the same property, dated on that day, in which the consideration recited was eleven thousand two hundred and seventy-seven dollars. This deed was handed by the complainant to A. R. Titus, to be delivered to the defendant, about the time of its date, and was by him delivered at that time ; the complainant alleges that it was to be delivered only [78]*78upon defendant’s signing a note sent with the deed, for twenty-five hundred and ten dollars, which sum he insists was to be the consideration of the deed above the encumbrances; and that A. R. Titus delivered it, contrary to such instructions, without getting the note.

The complainant alleges that the consideration given by him to A. R. Titus for the farm, was twenty-five hundred and ten dollars, the amount due on three notes of A. R. Titus held by him, and a check of two hundred dollars of A. R. Titus held by E. Kingman, paid by complainant, over and above assuming eighty-eight hundred and seven dollars and fifty cents due on mortgages upon the farm; and. that the defendant was to pay him for the property the amount that he had paid to A. R. Titus. And that the note sent with the deed to be given as the consideration, was to secure this sum above the encumbrances, which were assumed by the defendant.

The defendant contends that he agreed with the complainant to take a deed for the property, and that the only consideration was, that he should assume and pay the encumbrances ; that the deed was delivered and accepted upon this understanding, and that A. R. Titus was authorized to deliver it, and did deliver it, without requiring that the note should be signed. Both parties admit, that after the delivery of the deed, the complainant requested the defendant to sign the note or to return the deed, and that the defendant offered to reconvey the property, if the complainant would refund the amount expended by him for improvements; which offer the complainant did not accept, believing that he could compel the defendant to pay the price he had agreed to pay, as alleged by the complainant.

The complainant brought an action for the consideration in the Mercer Circuit, in which the- jury gave a verdict for the defendant. That verdict, it is not disputed, is conclusive evidence in this suit,' that the defendant did not agree to pay anything above the amount of the encumbrances.

But the complainant correctly contends that it does not debar him from proving here, that he did not intend or agree to convey the farm for the encumbrances, or from proving that [79]*79ho instructed his agent not to deliver the deed 'without the note; and that he may show in this court, that even if he had once agreed to convey, without other consideration, he had subsequently changed his mind, and declined to deliver the deed without the payment of the sum demanded above the encumbrances.

These positions are admitted, and the real issues in the case are, whether the complainant did authorize the deed to be delivered, only in case the note should be signed; and whether he has not, by his subsequent conduct, sanctioned and confirmed the delivery.

The question, whether the agreement between the defendant and complainant was to pay twenty-five hundred and ten dollars above the encumbrances, is important in this suit, only so far as it gives probability to the insistment of the complainant that he required the note as a condition of the delivery. That question is settled against the complainant, not only by the verdict in the suit at law, but by the weight of evidence in this cause. The responsive answer of the defendant, and the ■evidence of the defendant and A. R. Titus, are against him. The discussion in Kingman’s office, proved by Kingman, A. R, Titus, and the defendant, as to the consideration to be inserted in the deed, is inconsistent with that being the agreement. Exhibit 1, of which 16 is a copy, does not sustain the complainant; he is clearly mistaken as to the time at which, and the object for which, it was made. It could not have been made until after the personal property, valued at twelve hundred and twenty-three dollars, had been transferred to the defendant, which was, as all agree, some time after the deed to the complainant; nor could it have been made to determine the consideration in that deed. If made to fix the consideration in the deed to the defendant, it shows that snch consideration was not made up by adding twenty-five hundred and ten dollars to the amount due on the mortgages, but was made up by deducting the valuation of the personal property from the sum of twelve thousand five hundred dollars, the original consideration arbitrarily fixed for both.

[80]*80And the weight of evidence is not only that the defendant did not agree to pay anything beyond the encumbrances, but that the complainant agreed to convey for the amount of the encumbrances; the answer and evidence of the defendant, and the evidence of A. R. Titus and Kingman, must outweigh the unsupported oath of the complainant.

If we assume it as established, that both parties had agreed that the oonveyance should be for the amount of the encumbrances only, it will have great weight in the consideration of the testimony as to the instructions given by the complainant to A. R. Titus, about the delivery of the deed.

The allegation in the bill, as to the instructions to A. R. Titus, is in these words: “ That your orator gave the said note to the said Andrew, together with the said deed, telling him to get the said Henry to sign the said due-bill, and to give him the said deed.” In his testimony, the complainant says: “ After I drew tire note I gave it to Andrew, with the deed; I told him to get that executed by Mr. Phillips, and then he could leave him the deed.”, Although it is put in a much stronger form in his testimony than in the bill, yet if he had agreed -to convey the premises for the encumbrances only, which is the assumption on which we are reasoning, and if he had been told by the defendant that he

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.J. Eq. 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/titus-v-phillips-njch-1866.