Turner v. Ridge Heights Land Co.

111 A. 675, 92 N.J. Eq. 64, 7 Stock. 64, 1920 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 13
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedNovember 12, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 111 A. 675 (Turner v. Ridge Heights Land Co.) 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. Ridge Heights Land Co., 111 A. 675, 92 N.J. Eq. 64, 7 Stock. 64, 1920 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 13 (N.J. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

This is a suit to foreclose a mortgage upon several tracts of real estate in Rutherford, New Jersey. The testimony is quite voluminous and the exhibits are numerous, presenting a somewhat complex case. This memorandum will undertake merely to state so much of the evidence as is necessary for the proper understanding of the points which are decided.

[65]*651. In the )rear 1907 Mr. Addison Ely was interested in a number of land companies, and, perhaps, other corporations, located at Eutherford, of all of which apparently he had the control and management. He kept accounts for these corporations with the complainant the Eutherford National Bank. While Mr. Ely seems sometimes to have used the credit of one of these companies for the benefit of another, there i'si nothing in the emdence which warrants the view that these corporations were not distinct entities. The defendants the Eidge Heights Land Company, the Addison-Ely Company and the Colonial Construction Company were three of these corporations which Mr. Ely controlled and managed.

On July 26th, 1907, Mr. Ely procured the Eutherford National Bank to discount a note of $4,400 for the benefit of the Addison-Ely Compare, on which the Eidge Heights Land Company appears as maker, and the Addison-Ely Company appears as endorser. The Eidge Heights Land Company was in fact an accommodation maker having no interest in. the proceeds of the discount, the same having been credited to the account of the Addison-Ely Compare

On the same day, and in order to secure this note, the Eidge Heights Land Company executed a bond and mortgage in the usual form for $4,400 to Andrew H. Brinkerhoff, as trustee. Mr. Brinker’hoff was at the time the cashier for the Eutherford National Bank, but there is no disclosure made in the bond or mortgage of the party for whom Mr. Brinkerhoff was acting' as trustee in taking this security. It also may be noted that there was no mention made in any writing that has been produced, of any relation between the bond and mortgage to Mr. Brinkerhoff and the note for the same amount which the bank discounted as above mentioned. As a. matter of fact the evidence establishes beyond question that the bond and mortgage were given to secure the payment of the note and for no other purpose. Inasmuch as the complainant the Eutherford National Bank was governed by the National Bank act, we may surmise reasons why the transactions under consideration took the form they did.

While the making of this independent bond and mortgage may have put remedies within the reach of the bank which would not [66]*66have been available if the mortgage had been' given directly to the bank to secure the note, the whole transaction resulted in the common situation in equity where a mortgage or a bond and mortgage are given to secure a debt. Payment of the debt extinguishes the mortgage.

2. After this mortgage for $4,400 had been duly recorded on August 5th, 1907, a series of mortgages which, some of the defendants now hold were placed upon a portion of the tracts included within the said mortgage for $4,400. At a later time Mr. Brinkerhoff assigned the bond and mortgage which he held as trustee for an undisclosed beneficiary to the complainant Mr. Edward J. Turner, as trustee also for an undisclosed beneficiary. Mr. Turner was, and is, now the president of the Rutherford National Bank. The connection between the note and the mortgage was still concealed, but the evidence shows, and the fact is not disputed, that Mr. Turner merely stepped into- the place of Mr. Brinkerhoff and held the bond and mortgage for the sole benefit of the Rutherford National.Bank and solely as security for the payment of tire note of $4,400.

After the junior mortgages above mentioned had been, made and recorded the trustee, Mr. Brinkerhoff, and later Mr. Turner, executed a series of releases whereby they discharged from the lien of their mortgage certain portions of tire lands covered by their mortgage not covered by the junior mortgages.

3. The note for $4,400 originally given, asi we have seen, on July 26th, 1907, was at two months, while the bond and mortgage ran for one year. The inference would seem to- be that renewals of the note were contemplated, but, however that may be, in fact the note was renewed a great many times through a series of years, and partial payments upon it were made. Complainants in their bill allege that the amount due om the mortgage is $2,850. Complainants’ counsel argue that this is a mistake and that the amount actually due i'si $3,000 and interest. The defendants say that the note, at most, if not wholly, paid stands to-day only for $1,750 and interest. I do not think that it will be necessary to consider these conflicting claims in detail.

4. On July 10th, 1911, the last renewal or partial renewal of the note for $4,400, amounting then- to $3,000, fell due. The [67]*67situation of the parties with reference to this last renewal note for $3,000 was precisely the same as their situation with reference to the original note for $4,400. All the renewal notes clown to this date (July 10th, 1911), were in the same form. The Addison-Bly Company was primarily liable; the Eiclge Heights Land Company was secondarily liable as accommodation maker, while the land of the Eiclge Heights Land Company mortgaged' to Mr. BrinkerlioiS stood as collateral security for the note. When this last-mentioned note for $3,000 fell due on July 10th, 1911, the same in fact was not renewed. Mr. Ely, as the manager of both of .these corporations, the Eiclge Heights Land Company and the Addison-Ely Company, tendered to the bank what is on its face his individual promissory note to the Addison-Ely Company for $3,-000, dated July 10th, 1911, drawn at two months and signed with his proper name, Addison Ely, and endorsed by the Addison-Ely Company, without a suggestion anywhere of the Eiclge Heights Land Company. The only possible qualification of this last statement I think arises from the fact that the clerk who drew the note used the phrase “We promise” instead of “I promise.” The Eutherford National Bank accepted this note in payment of the note of the Eiclge Heights Land Company which they held, and thereupon surrendered the note of the Eiclge Heights Land Company. The new note of Addison Ely, individually, was thereupon entered in the books of the Eutherford National Bank, and all mention of the Eiclge Heights Land-Company as a party to the original note of $4,400 or any renewal or partial renewal of that note ceased to be made. The loan was carried on the note of Mr. Ely with the endorsement of the Addison-Ely Company—Mr. Ely stepping into the place of the Bidge Heights Land Company as accommodation, maker. The note was not paid when it fell due—was protested and not renewed.

5. The defences which are set up are the following :

(1) The defendants claim that the whole mortgage debt for which the note for $4,400 and itsi renewals a.t all times stood as the primary security was fully paid when the Eutherford National Bank accepted the obligation above mentioned of Addison Ely, individually, and surrendered for cancellation the promis[68]*68sory note upon which the Riclge Heights Land Company was only secondarily liable.

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Bluebook (online)
111 A. 675, 92 N.J. Eq. 64, 7 Stock. 64, 1920 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-ridge-heights-land-co-njch-1920.