Tomkins v. Tomkins

3 N.J. Eq. 512
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1858
StatusPublished

This text of 3 N.J. Eq. 512 (Tomkins v. Tomkins) 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
Tomkins v. Tomkins, 3 N.J. Eq. 512 (N.J. Ct. App. 1858).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The complainant and defendant, with their two brothers and two sisters, were seized, as tenants in common, of a tract of land of about forty acres, in the county of Morris. It had been set oil* as their mother’s dower. She occupied it, from the year 1825 until she died, in the year 1850. In the year 1833, the complainant left the state of New Jersey, and was absent until after his mother’s death. When he left the state, he left behind him, wholly unprovided for, his wife, who was partially deranged, and several children, one of whom was a daughter, four or five years of 'age. The mother was sent to the poor-house of the county. The daughter was sent to her grandmother, the complainant’s mother, with whom she lived, and by whom she was provided for until the year 1838, with the exception of one year during that period, when she was taken care of and supported by her brothers.

In a few days after the death of Nancy Tomkins, the complainant’s mother, the defendant proved her will, as one of the executors. Two days after proving the will, he caused a writ of foreign attachment to be issued against the complainant, and attached the complainant’s interest in the forty acre tract. On the 10th of August, 1850, he presented before the auditors a written claim for fourteen hundred and forty-three dollar, for the maintenance, by his testatrix, of the complainant’s daughter, from March, 1838, to March, 1848. The auditors reported there was due to the executor the sum of eleven hundred and sixty-[514]*514five dollars and twenty cents. The complainant’s interest in the property was sold upon the judgment in attachment, ■ and the defendant purchased it for fifty dollars, which was very much below its real value. The defendant purchased for himself and his two brothers and two sisters. They afterwards sold the land for twenty-eight hundred dollars.

The bill alleges, that the proceedings on the part of the defendant, in causing the attachment to be issued against the complainant, and in procuring judgment to be entered, was fraudulent; that it was all a mere contrivance to get hold of the complainant’s interest in the property, and that it is against good conscience, under the circumstances, for the defendant to hold the consideration he received for the property. The bill prays that the defendant may be decreed to account to him for the value of that interest.

The power of a court of equity to look into the judgments of other courts, and relieve against them, on the ground of fraud, is well established. It was affirmed in this court, in Glover v. Hedges, Saxton 119; Boulon v. Scott’s adm’rs et al., 2 G. C. R. 236, 241; Vanmeter v. Executor of Jones, 2 G. C. R. 523; Gifford, administrator, v. Thorn, 1 Stockton 703. The authorities are cited, in these several cases, where the jurisdiction has been sustained. Where the judgment has been procured by artifice or concealment, on the part of the plaintiff, and the court where the fraud has been perpetrated is not able to afford adequate relief, there this court will take hold of the party who has committed the fraud, and will prevent his using the judgment to the injury of his adversary; or if he has enforced his judgment, this court will hold him as a trustee, and compel him to account for the fruits of his iniquity. In Barnesty v. Powell, 1 Ves. 285, case 146, Lord Hardwick says—“ though this court cannot set aside a judgment of a common law court obtained against conscience, yet it will decree the party to acknowledge satisfaction [515]*515on that judgment, though he has received nothing — because obtained where nothing was due; so it cannot set aside a fine for being obtained by fraud and imposition, as the court of C. B. to a certain degree and with some restriction may: yet, on a conveyance so obtained, this court never sent the plaintiff to C. B. to set it aside; hut considers the person obtaining the estate, even by fine, as a trustee, and decreed him to reeonvey on the general ground of laying hold of the ill conscience of the party, to make him do what is necessary to restore matters as before.” This court may grant an injured party relief against the fraudulent use of a bona fide judgment. If by any artifice, or unconscionable contrivance, ethe plaintiff has become himself the purchaser of the defendant’s property at a grossly inadequate price, this court will grant relief by holding him a trustee, and will compel him to account for the property at its fair value, or subject it to another sale. And as this court has frequently granted relief against awards fraudulently obtained against verdicts and probates of wills, and even against private acts of legislative bodies obtained by fraud, with much greater propriety will it relieve against a fraudulent judgment, where the defendant has had no opportunity of being heard. The usual ground, upon which a court of equity refuses to interfere with a judgment, is because the defendant should have protected himself in the court where the judgment was obtained. In a case like the present, of foreign attachment, where the proceeding is in rem, and the judgment is obtained without the knowledge of the defendant, and the proceedings are all necessarily ex parte, it would be hard, indeed,'if this court could not interpose to protect a party against the fraud of the plaintiff’. The propriety of this court’s interfering in such cases is too obvious to require its being vindicated. But even in a case where a judgment has been obtained in the absence of a party, and upon a hearing entirely ex parte, this court will not try the merits of a ease over [516]*516again where those merits have been properly submitted to the tribunal established by law to hear and adjudicate upon them. In the case of foreign attachments, auditors are appointed by the court, before whom the claims are proved. There is no appeal from their decision. If the plaintiff imposes a fictitious claim upon the auditors, or a claim which has been satisfied, and for which the defendant has a receipt — in fine, if he conceals from the auditors any fact which tends to show that his claim is not a valid one, he commits a fraud upon the absent party, against the consequences of which this court will protect him, if it is within its power to do so, either by enjoining the enforcement of the claim at law, or, if the judgment is executed, by compelling such restitution to be made as is just under the circumstances of the case.

The complainant alleges that there was nothing due from him to the defendant, as the executor of Nancy Tomkins, and that the defendant knew it. That the complainant’s daughter was supported by the testatrix, from the year 1833 until the year 1848, is not disputed. But it is said there was no express contract that she should be remunerated for the support and maintenance of the child, and that the law would not imply a contract. Whether the law would imply a contract,, or not, must depend upon circumstances. The parties have both gone into evidence in this suit in support of and in opposition to the claim. But if this question was properly presented to the auditors without any concealment, it is not open for investigation here. If the complainant had shown an agreement between himself and mother that she would adopt the child, and maintain her without compensation, I am inclined to think that he would have been entitled to relief, even without proof of any knowledge on the part of the defendant of such an agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.J. Eq. 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tomkins-v-tomkins-njch-1858.