Vanderbeck v. Vanderbeck

30 N.J. Eq. 265
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 30 N.J. Eq. 265 (Vanderbeck v. Vanderbeck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vanderbeck v. Vanderbeck, 30 N.J. Eq. 265 (N.J. Ct. App. 1878).

Opinion

The Ordinary.

The question argued on the hearing was, whether the respondent, Henry H. Yanderbeck, is chargeable with the amount of a certain promissory note and interest, given by him* to the testator, his father, in or about 1870. The appellant alleges that the amount of the note was $1,750-that it was given to the testator for so much money lent by [266]*266him to the respondent; that the latter obtained possession of it in the life-time of his father, through an arrangement between them, by which it was delivered up to him in consideration of the delivery to his father of his title-deeds for his land, to be held as security for the payment of the debt which the note represented and the interest thereon; that his father held the deeds, accordingly, up to the time of his death; that, after his father’s death, and at the time of making the inventory and appraisement, the respondent, who was one of the executors of his father’s will, wrongfully took the deeds from among the testator’s papers, on the occasion of their being produced by the executors to the appraisers, and has ever since retained them, denying all liability for or on account of the note, and claiming that his father forgave him the debt, and delivered the note up to him, accordingly, to be cancelled, and that his' father held the deeds merely for safe-keeping and at the respondent’s request.

It is clear, from the evidence, that the note in question was given up by the testator to the respondent, to be can-celled, about two years before the death of the former. It is also clear that the note was for the sum of $1,550, and not $1,750, as the appellant insists. It was given for money advanced by the testator to the respondent for part of the purchase-money of a small tract of land which the latter purchased in May, 1870, for a place of residence, from Samuel P. Bush, at the suggestion of the testator, who promised to aid him in paying for it. It appears that the respondent then contemplated removing, with his family, to Paterson, to which the testator was opposed, and urged him to buy that property. Of the purchase-money ($2,500), the respondent paid $1,000 of his own funds, and the rest he obtained from the testator, who, a few days afterwards, requested him to give him his note for the money, which was don.e. The respondent, on giving the note, expressed to the testator his dissatisfaction at being required to do so, saying, among other things, that he had purchased the [267]*267property in deference to the wishes of the testator and against his own inclination; expressed a wish that the testator would take a conveyance of the property from him, and pay him what he had contributed to the purchase-money, and added that he would not be able to pay the interest, and that his brothers and sisters would, after the testator’s death, compel him to pay the note out of his share of the testator’s estate. The testator replied that he would see that that did not take place, and, adding that he always had an idea of keeping the loaf under his own arm, took the note and put it in his pocket. The respondent says that he never after that spoke to the testator on the subject of the note, nor did the testator speak to him in reference to it, until the spring of the year 1873; that then the testator’s wife, the respondent’s mother, came to his house and told him that the testator had requested her to tell him to come down—that he was going to give him the note. He further testifies that he, accordingly, a few days afterwards, went to see his father, and that the latter called for his box of papers, which was handed to him; that he then took out the envelope containing the notes which the respondent had given him, and took from it the note of $1,550, and laid it on the table before him; that he then handed to the respondent the note for $250 (which was a note also given by the respondent to the testator), and told him to endorse the interest on it, which the respondent accordingly did, and thereupon handed him the amount of the interest, calculated at the rate of seven per cent, per annum; that the testator counted the money and returned part of it to him, saying that the other children paid him only six per cent., and that he would take no more from the respondent; that he then put that note in the envelope, and replaced it in the box, and handed the note of $1,550 to the respondent, saying, “Now I give this to you, and you can take care of it; I I give it in your hand, and you know you have it;” that thereupon the respondent’s mother said to the testator; “Now, man, you must know what you are doing, for the [268]*268rest will no doubt find fault with it;” to which the testator replied: “If they don’t find this note when I am gone, I don’t see what they can do about it;” and that she said, in answer, that perhaps it would be better if the testator “should write something about it,” to which he rejoined, “I bedeve I can do with my own ás I will; I have written all that I think is necessary.” He further says, that the testator then turned to him and said: “Now you make away with it, so that it cannot be found when I am gone, and I will risk it.” The respondent took the note, and, aftei; cutting off the upper part of it, containing the amount in figures, the stamp and the date, with a view to keeping it as a memento of his father, burnt the rest of the paper.

The respondent’s wife and his mother corroborate him in these statements. His mother, who was called as a witness for the appellant, testifies that, when the testator handed the note to the respondent, she said to him: “Now, do you know what you are doing?” that he replied, “Yes, I know what I am doing;” and that she then said, “Now, don’t you be too fast.” She says that she might have said, “You must know what you are doing, for the rest will very likely find fault;” and she adds that he then said, in answer to her, that “ he had a right to do with his own as he had a mind to.” The respondent produces the strip of paper cut by him from the note. It corroborates him in his statement as to the amount. His mother, also, it may be remarked, corroborates him on that head. The respondent and his wife testify that the deeds for his property, which were in the testator’s possession at the time of his death, were left with him merely for safe-keeping.

The evidence on which the appellant relies to establish an equitable mortgage, by deposit of the respondent’s title-deeds, falls far short of the mark. Jacob IT. Vanderbeck, indeed, testifies that when he asked the respondent what those deeds were there (in the testator’s box, among the papers,) for, the respondent replied that he left them with his father for the note; but he afterwards says that what the [269]*269respondent said was, that he had offered his father his deed of the property for the note, as he could not pay the interest. This is in accordance with the testimony of the respondent, for, as before stated, he says that, in connection with the note, he offered to give up the property to his father on receiving the amount which he had contributed of his own money to the purchase.

Albert Gr. Zabriskie testifies to a statement voluntarily made to him, by the respondent, after the testator’s death, in a casual conversation in the street, in reference to the controversy which existed between him and his brothers, in reference to the note. He says that he asked no questions of the respondent, and paid “ no very particular attention” to what was said, any more than he would in any conversation which did not concern him, or in which he had no personal interest. The conversation took place about two years before the witness gave his testimony.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Allen v. Small
271 A.2d 840 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1970)
Klotz v. Klotz
191 A. 854 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1937)
Copp v. Van Vleck
144 A. 450 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 N.J. Eq. 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vanderbeck-v-vanderbeck-njsuperctappdiv-1878.