Turner v. Cole

173 A. 613, 116 N.J. Eq. 368, 15 Backes 368, 1934 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 72
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJuly 6, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 173 A. 613 (Turner v. Cole) 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
Turner v. Cole, 173 A. 613, 116 N.J. Eq. 368, 15 Backes 368, 1934 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 72 (N.J. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Joseph R. Johnson was the son of Josiah B. Johnson and Mary Turner Johnson, who was Josiah's second wife. On the death of Josiah, he left him surviving his widow, his son Joseph and a son Benjamin F. Johnson, by the former wife.

Josiah B. Johnson died testate and by his will devised all of his property, real, personal or mixed, with a minor exception, to his wife, Mary Turner Johnson, and son, Joseph R. Johnson, the wife and Joseph "to hold and use said property in common until Joseph should attain his majority and then to be equally divided between them, the wife to have and enjoy her portion during her natural life and widowhood, and in case of her death or remarriage, her portion to be divided equally between the sons and half brothers, Benjamin F. and Joseph R. Johnson."

The property so devised by Josiah consisted of two tracts of land on the east side of Ohio avenue and a tract having a frontage on Atlantic avenue, beginning at the southwest corner of Ohio and Atlantic avenues, one hundred and twenty-five feet on Atlantic avenue by one hundred feet in depth.

After the death of Josiah, and on January 23d 1894, Joseph R. Johnson, by quit-claim deed, conveyed to his mother, for life, one of the lots on the east side of Ohio avenue, fifty by one hundred and fifty feet, and the westerly fifty feet of the Atlantic avenue property, and on the same day, the mother, by quit-claim deed, conveyed to Joseph her interest in the other lot on the easterly side of Ohio avenue and seventy-five by one hundred feet at the southwest corner of Ohio and Atlantic avenues.

The above conveyances were executed at a time when Joseph was approximately twenty-one years and three months of age, Joseph having been born on October 1st, 1872. *Page 371

The conveyances between the mother and son were evidently made with the intention of carrying out the terms of the will of the father, Josiah B. Johnson.

On February 24th, 1894, Joseph, by deed of special warranty, conveyed to his mother, Mary Turner Johnson, all of his right, title and interest in all of the property which he took by virtue of the will of his father and which Mary Turner Johnson had quit-claimed by deed of January 23d 1894, and also including the farm in Galloway township, of which property Joseph became seized by deed from the executors of his father's estate, and a quit-claim deed from Benjamin F. Johnson.

On July 25th, 1900, Joseph conveyed to his mother other lands of which he was then seized and of which he had become possessed other than through the will of his father.

In addition to the real estate of which the mother of Joseph became seized by virtue of the conveyances above recited, she was the owner of other properties which she had purchased and of which she had become such owner through others than her son.

The mother died on the 25th day of November, 1900, testate, and by her last will and testament devised all of her real estate holdings to her son, Joseph, absolutely.

After the death of the mother, and on the 2d day of January, 1901, Joseph purchased from his half brother, Benjamin F. Johnson, the one-quarter interest of Benjamin in the Ohio avenue property and the Ohio and Atlantic avenues property, which one-quarter interest Benjamin had inherited from his father, as above recited.

On April 5th, 1901, Joseph was adjudicated a lunatic and at the time of his adjudication, and prior thereto, had been committed to the New Jersey State Insane Asylum.

The Atlantic Safe Deposit and Trust Company was appointed guardian of the person and estate of Joseph and continued as such up until the time of its merger with the Guarantee Trust Company, which company continued as guardian. *Page 372

During the continuation of the guardianship, most, if not all, of the real estate of which Joseph was seized and possessed, was sold, and it is admitted that so much of the property or securities held by the guardian of Joseph, which represents the proceeds from the sale of the real estate of the lunatic, and accumulations thereof since his death, descends to those heirs of the lunatic who would have received the real estate had it not been converted. See 2 Comp. Stat. p. 2788 § 9.

Joseph never regained his sanity and died on February 23d 1933, testate. A caveat was filed against the probate of Joseph's will and such proceedings were had thereon that probate was refused in the orphans court of Atlantic county, which refusal was affirmed in the prerogative court. In re Johnson, 115 N.J. Eq. 249.

Joseph left him surviving, as next of kin, on his father's side of the family, a son and daughter of Benjamin F. Johnson, and on his mother's side of the family, thirteen relatives of equal degree, first cousins.

These first cousins of the mother's blood, either as complainants or defendants, allege that as such, under the laws of descent, they inherit all of the lands of which Joseph was seized at the time of his death, of which he became seized by virtue of the will of his mother, and concede that real estate other than that devised by his mother descends to the niece and nephew, Vincent Jerome Johnson and May Wilson, defendants herein.

The defendants Vincent Jerome Johnson and May Wilson admit that under 2 Comp. Stat. p. 1919 § 5 and 2 Comp. Stat. p. 939 §6, under ordinary circumstances, the real estate which Joseph obtained by the will of his mother would descend to his heirs-at-law who are of the blood of his mother, and that so much of the assets in the possession of the guardian of Joseph as represent the investment of moneys received from the sale of such real estate would likewise descend to his heirs who are of the blood of his mother, but they allege that the conveyance by Joseph to his mother of February 24th, 1894, as well as that of July, 1900, did not *Page 373 vest the mother with the property therein described because, they say: "Joseph Johnson was mentally incompetent and that there was a relationship of trust and confidence existing as between Joseph and his mother, so that he was entirely under her control and influence, as a result of which she caused him to make the conveyances referred to, for her own benefit, without any consideration and without independent advice to him, as a result of which he was entirely deprived of his property and that, therefore, she became the trustee of said property for the benefit of the said Joseph R. Johnson."

This defense is raised by the answer and affirmative defenses set forth therein, and is averred in the counter-claim under which defendants pray that the deed of February 24th, 1894, and July 2d 1900, be construed to make the mother the trustee for Joseph, "and that it should be adjudged and decreed that Mary Turner Johnson had no interest in the premises so involved in this litigation."

By an amendment to the answer, it is alleged that Joseph R. Johnson, after becoming vested, according to the record, with the entire title to premises situate on Ohio avenue and Ohio and Atlantic avenues, executed a mortgage covering all of that property to Benjamin F. Johnson, and that he later defaulted under the terms of the mortgage by failing to pay the taxes within the time stipulated in the mortgage, which failure to pay was a default under the terms and conditions of the mortgage and thereby destroyed all rights of those in the blood of the mother to that property, of which defense more hereafter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 A. 613, 116 N.J. Eq. 368, 15 Backes 368, 1934 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-cole-njch-1934.