Turner v. Hill

39 A. 137, 56 N.J. Eq. 293, 11 Dickinson 293, 1897 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 33
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJanuary 3, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 39 A. 137 (Turner v. Hill) 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. Hill, 39 A. 137, 56 N.J. Eq. 293, 11 Dickinson 293, 1897 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 33 (N.J. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Grey, V. C.

A computation of the amounts due on the several mortgages is necessary to an understanding of the action of the parties in the premises. The testimony shows that at the time of the assignments to the complainant, May 11th, 1894, there was due on the mortgage of Hill to Trimmer—

For principal and interest.................................... §1,061 39
On the Hill to Dill mortgage (which was pledged to Trimmer by Karr) the consideration of the assignment to the complainant on May 11th, 1894, is stated to be..................................................... 1,296 26
On the Washington Bank mortgage there was due on the notes it secured on July 2d, 1891 (the date when this mortgage and notes were assigned to Karr), after crediting all payments made by Hill.... §2,123 65
[296]*296There is no proof of any payments to Karr on these notes or mortgages. I therefore add interest on the principal of the notes from July 2d, 1891, to May 18th, 1894, the time of the transfer to complainant. The aggregate principal sum of the note is $2,077.24, and the interest from July 2d, 1891, to May 18th 1894, is........................................... $358 46
Making amount of principal and interest due on Washington Bank mortgage, &c., on May 18th, 1894 (date of assignment to complainant), to be................ $2,482 11
The Iiackettstown Bank had two mortgages, both securing the same set of notes ; on these there was due for principal on the notes at the time Karr purchased the securities, July 9th, 1891..... $1,224 15
Interest then due .................. $26 52
Interest from July 9th, 1891, to date of assignment to complainant, May 18th, 1894....... 209 88 -- 236 40
Amount due on Haekettstown Bank mortgage on May 18th, 1894 (date of assignment to complainant), if no allowance be made by applying the credit in Mr. Karr’s hands due the mortgagor.......... 1,460 53
Total amount due on all mortgages, not applying the credits due Hill, in Karr’s hands....................... $6,300 29

For the assignments of these mortgages which were made on May 11th and May 18th, 1894, to the complainant, the sum of $5,000 was paid by her. Mr. Karr made an absolute transfer of them to the complainant. He gave no obligation of his own which these mortgages, &c., were pledged to secure. He owes nothing to the complainant, and she has become, by her purchase, the absolute owner of all that is due on the securities. When Karr sought to raise the $5,000 on the mortgages which he held, it appeared that- the mortgagor’s wife had not signed the later mortgages, and he was obliged to secure an additional mortgage to be made to the complainant on all the tracts, in [297]*297which the wife joined, in order to secure the money. This mortgage is the complainant’s last mortgage, and, Judge Morrow testifies, was given as a collateral mortgage.

Judge Morrow disbursed the fund, and testifies that he paid—

To Trimmer, for the Hill-Trimmer mortgage........... $1,061 39
To Trimmer for Karr, for the Dill mortgage ........ 1,296 26
To Karr, for the Washington Bank and Hackettstown Bank mortgages, the following cheeks were given by Judge Morrow :
May 18th, 1894.................................... $1,200 00
June 2d, 1894..................................... 750 00
August 30th, 1894................................ 578 63
-- 2,528 63
Making the total expenditure by Morrow for the purchase of all the mortgages to be.......................... $4,885 28

In addition to the above payments Judge Morrow states that out of the complainant’s advance of $5,000 he was paid for his services in conducting the business, and that he also paid some arrearages of interest on an outside mortgage with Mr. Karr’s assent.

The testimony is somewhat confused as to these detailed items of the subsequent disbursement, but it is quite clear that the complainant’s money was all paid either to Mr. Karr himself or by his direction to others, and that she became by the assignments the owner of all the mortgages which she now seeks to foreclose.

The defendant insists that the Hackettstown Bank mortgage, dated April 28th, 1890, which is the only one held by complainant which is a lien upon the undivided one-half of the thirty-seven and one-half acre tract (No. 14 in the bill), has been actually paid by the application of the credit in- the hands of Mr. Karr (while the holder of that mortgage), in favor of William Hill, the mortgagor; and that if such a credit was. not actually made, then that in equity it ought to be made, because the defendant claims it was directed -to be made by the mortgagor, or if not so directed then that the credit in the hands of the holder of the mortgage, having arisen from the issues and [298]*298profits of the mortgaged premises, it should be made by the court.

The proof shows that this credit arose as follows : The mortgagor, Hill, had accepted a lease of the mortgaged premises-from Mr. Karr. Hill continued to have the actual possession not only of the mortgaged premises, but also of horses, cattle and the stock equipment of the farm, which had been bought by Karr at a chattel mortgage sale, upon an understanding between Hill and Karr that these chattels were to belong to Hill as soon as he had paid for them. Mr. Karr paid the running expenses aud supplies of the farm, interest on some of the mortgages, the expenses of a foreclosure and the purchase of stock,, horses and cattle. He received in actual gross receipts $3,946.27. He did not apply any'of it to the payment of the Hackettstown Bank mortgage which he held. He had a balance of $1,287.83 in his hands, a credit in Hill’s favor that had not been applied when all the mortgages were about to be assigned to the complainant. He swears that while it was a matter of discussion between him and Hill, the mortgagor, as to what mortgage it should be applied on, the Hackettstown Bank mortgage and the Washington Bank mortgage both being mentioned, that Hill spoke as if he wanted it applied on the Hackettstown Bank mortgage, but Karr swears that Hill did not give him (Karr) any direction or order to apply it to any particular mortgage.

The testimony of Mr. Karr on this point was fairly shown by these questions aud answers :

“ Q. Have you any of that money in your hands now ?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. Had you when you assigned the Hackettstown Bank mortgage to Miss Turner?
“A. I had; I had an account with Mr. Hill, debit and credit account of the-whole transaction, and when this account was closed up there was $1,287.83-that should have been endorsed on those mortgages.
“Q. Which mortgages?
“A. That I can’t say; on the whole of them.
“Q. Which mortgage was it to be endorsed upon by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
39 A. 137, 56 N.J. Eq. 293, 11 Dickinson 293, 1897 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-hill-njch-1898.