Union Brick & Tile Manufacturing Co. v. Lorillard
This text of 44 N.J. Eq. 1 (Union Brick & Tile Manufacturing Co. v. Lorillard) 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.
Opinion
The bill alleges that, on March 24th, 1882, Rachel Van Buskirk leased to the complainant twenty-five acres of her farm, of about one hundred and forty acres, situate in Monmouth county, on the Raritan bay, for the term of twenty years and two months, from March 1st, 1882, at an annual rental of $500. The lease contained the following agreement:
“ That the said company is to have the privilege of buying the aforesaid premises at any time within five years from the commencement of this demise, at the price or sum of seven thousand dollars, but such privilege is given upon the condition that all rent due is first paid, and the other agreements herein ■of said company first performed.”
When the lease was executed, the lessor was the wife of Hiram Van Buskirk. The husband did not join in the instrument, but, at the foot of it, for valuable consideration, agreed, in writing, that if the lessee should determine to purchase the leased lands, he would join with his wife in a deed which would convey the property to the company.
Upon the execution of the lease the complainant took possession of the demised premises and erected thereon valuable buildings, and, upon the filing of the bill, still retained that possession.
Hiram Van Buskirk died in 1886, and, in February, 1887, his wife conveyed the entire farm to Jacob Lorillard, who is co-defendant with her in this suit. Following the habendum in the deed by which this conveyance was made, is a clause which provides that the conveyance is subject to two mortgages upon the property, and in the following language:
“And also subject to a certain lease, and agreement in said lease to convey a portion of the premises herein described and conveyed made by Rachel A. Van Buskirk and Hiram Van Buskirk, her husband, (dated March 24th, 1882), to The Union Brick and Tile Manufacturing Company, and recorded in Liber 345 of deeds for Monmouth county, page 494 &c., and subject to all the agreements and covenants in said lease contained.”
[3]*3It is not disputed that the bill makes it appear that within five years from the commencement of the demise the complainant, having performed the lease on its part, duly elected to buy the leased premises for the price agreed upon in the lease, and made proper tender and demand for a deed.
The bill prays that the defendants jointly, or that Jacob Lorillard alone, may be decreed to convey the leased premises to the complainant upon payment of the purchase money.
The defendants jointly demurred to the bill, and, upon the argument of the demurrer, insisted, as their ground of objection, that Mrs. Man Buskirk was a feme covert at the time the lease was executed, and, in consequence, had no legal power to bind herself by contract to convey the leased land, and that the defendant Lorillard, taking the land subject to such illegal agreement to convey, was not bound to perform that agreement. No question is raised upon the form of the agreement to convey. It is settled in this state that such a provision as that which is ■contained in the lease is tantamount to an agreement to convey the land. Hawralty v. Warren, 3 C. E. Gr. 124; Lounsbery v. Locander, 10 C. E. Gr. 554.
The question which was discussed is,-whether a married woman can make a contract to convey her lands.
At law, before the Revision of 1874, such an agreement was clearly void, and, because of its illegality, courts of equity would not enforce it. Wooden v. Morris, 2 Gr. Ch. 65; Pentz v. Simonson, 2 Beas. 232; Pierson v. Lum, 10 C. E. Gr. 390.
The fifth section of the act to amend the law relating to the property of married women (Rev. p. 637),
While I perceive that a question may arise as to the power of the court to order the specific performance of a wife’s contract to convey her land while her husband lives with her, in full possession of his faculties, and refuses to join in a conveyance, and refrains from doing any act which may give the court jurisdiction to compel him to join in a conveyance, I am decidedly of the opinion that, in virtue of the statute, the wife’s contract is legal and binding upon her.
In Sullivan v. Barry, 17 Vr. 1 (affirmed on error, 18 Vr. 889), ■in which it was held that a married woman may make a lease for years without joining with her husband, Chief-Justice Beasley comments upon the statute that enables a married woman to ■contract, as follows: “The leading object of the statute is to give the married woman her property, both real and personal, as though she were a feme sole, and to clothe her with all the rights • and authorities requisite for its possession, enjoyment and disposition, and it is indisputable that she is to have the exclusive use and benefit of her realty, as though she had no husband. The limitation upon this right is that she cannot convey it, nor can she put a mortgage or similar burthen upon it without the cooperation of her husband.”
At the death of the husband, the limitation upon the execution of the contract by conveyance, and with it, the objection to • a specific performance of the contract, is removed. I conceive that the only purpose of the limitation is to enable the husband •to preserve from alienation a property of his wife in which he •may acquire an estate. The possibility of such acquisition is ■extinguished at his death.
Prior to the complainant’s exercise of its privilege to buy, Mrs. Van Buskirk sold the leased premises to Jacob Lorillard, by ■deed, in which he was distinctly notified of her agreement with the complainant, and by which he took the land subject to that •agreement.
[6]*6By virtue of the statute (Rev.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
44 N.J. Eq. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-brick-tile-manufacturing-co-v-lorillard-njch-1888.