Weinberger v. Brumberg

61 A. 732, 69 N.J. Eq. 669, 3 Robb. 669, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 59
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedAugust 12, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 61 A. 732 (Weinberger v. Brumberg) 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
Weinberger v. Brumberg, 61 A. 732, 69 N.J. Eq. 669, 3 Robb. 669, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 59 (N.J. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Stevenson, Y. C.

The cross-bill of the defendant Abraham Einkelstein is filed to have the mortgage for $5,000 held by him given priority over the mortgage for $9,000 held by the defendant Emmanuel Heilner. Ileilner’s mortgage bears date January 27th, 1900, and was recorded January 29th, 1900. Einkelstein’s mortgage bears date September 26th, 1902, and was recorded on October 7th, 1902.

The facts set forth in the cross-bill upon which FinkelsteiiTs claim of priority is based are as follows:

The defendant Einkelstein, on September 26th, 1902, was the owner of the mortgaged premises, which are situate in Passaic eitjr, in this state. The premises were then subject to complainant’s mortgage for $6,000, which is not called in question in this suit, and a second mortgage originally for $11,000, on which, however, only $9,000 remained unpaid, then held, according to the record, by the defendants' Estella Brumberg and Grace Brumberg, but now held by the defendant Heilner. This mortgage for $9,000 had been originally given on January 27th, 1900, by the defendant Einkelstein and one Eeder to the defendant Solomon J. Brumberg, the father of Estella and Grace, to secure a. part of the purchase price of the conveyance of the property then made by Solomon J. Brumberg to Einkelstein and Eeder. Subsequently Eeder conveyed his interest to Einkelstein, who thereby became the sole owner, subject to the two mortgages above mentioned, on which $6,000 and $9,000 were due respectively. It is important to hold in mind while dealing [671]*671with the facts that this second mortgage for $9,000 secured' the obligation of Einkelstein—that Einkelstein owed the amount of the mortgage to the lawful holders thereof. October 20th, 1900, the defendant Solomon J. Brumberg, by writing under his hand and seal bearing that date, assigned the mortgage for $9,000 to his daughters, the defendants Bstella and Grace Brumberg, which assignment was recorded on June 5th, 1901. December 1st, 1901, the defendant Iieilner and one Moses J. Wolf recovered a judgment in the supreme court of the State of Dew York against Solomon J. Brumberg, who then was and still is a resident of that state, for the sum of $6,418.74. December 19th, 1901, Moses J. Wolf was appointed trustee in bankruptcy in certain proceedings in the United States district court for the southern district of Dew York, in which Solomon J. Brumberg had been adjudged a bankrupt. Subsequently Moses J. Wolf, as trustee in bankruptcy, brought suit in the supreme court of the State of Dew York against Solomon J. Brumberg and his two daughters, Estella and Grace, to enjoin the transfer or collection of the mortgage for $9,000,, and to obtain a decree that the assignment of said mortgage by Brumberg to his daughters was fraudulent and void, and that the mortgage belonged to the trustee. On May 8th, 1902, in lieu of the appointment of a receiver, the bond and mortgage were, by stipulation of the respective parties, deposited with the Trust Company of America, a banking corporation of the State of Dew York, “to be held by it in like manner as if it were the receiver in such cause.”

July 9th, 1902, a final decree in the above-stated cause was rendered adjudging that the assignment from Brumberg to his daughters was made with intent to hinder, delay and defraud the assignor’s creditors, and that the same should be set aside and declared void against certain creditors, including Heilner and Wolf,-which decree was afterwards affirmed by the appellate division of the said supreme court.'

Dovember 10th, 1903, the bond and mortgage were sold at public auction pursuant to said decree, and were purchased by the defendant Heilner for $4,000, with full notice, however, of the rights and claims of the defendant Einkelstein.

The mortgage of the defendant Einkelstein dated September [672]*67226th, 1902, for $5,000, which he seeks to have made prior to his own mortgage for $9,000, was executed and delivered to him, according to the allegations of the cross-bill, under the following circumstances: At that time (September 26th, 1902) Einkelstein, as we have seen, was the sole owner of the premises which were subject to two mortgages, the second of which was his own mortgage for $9,000. This mortgage for $9,000, according to the record, was owned by the defendants Estella "and Grace Brumberg, and had been owned by them for nearly two years, the assignment to them having been on record over one year. The bond and mortgage, however, were not in the possession of the apparent owners thereof, according to the record, because they had been first impounded in New York and then had been transferred to "Wolf, as trustee in bankruptcy, by á decree in a cause which bound these defendants Estella and Grace Brumberg, such decree having been entered two months before the transaction with which we are now particularly concerned. In this situation of affairs the defendant Einkelstein, according to the allegations of the cross-bill, relying partly on the representations of Estella and Grace that they were owners and holders of the mortgage in question, and partly upon'the fact that the records of Passaic county showed no assignment of the mortgage, conveyed the mortgaged premises to Estella and Grace in satisfaction of his (Einkelstein’s) mortgage for $9,000 and took back the purchase-money mortgage for $5,000, which he now holds. The cross-bill alleges the absolute innocence of Einkelstein in this entire transaction and his entire want of notice of any of the proceedings in New York which resulted in the setting aside of the assignment from Solomon J. Brumberg to his daughters. The cross-bill alleges that Joe learned for the first time of these New York proceedings long after the consummation of his arrangements with Estella and Grace Brumberg above set forth. Whether the defendant received notice of the defect in the title of Estella and Grace Brumberg before they had put a fourth mortgage on the property to the defendant Isidor Bloch does not appear. The cross-bill, however, sets forth the belief of the defendant Einkelstein, founded on information which he received after his transaction with [673]*673Estella and Grace Brumberg, that these defendants obtained title to the premises from him and executed to him the mortgage for $5,000, which he holds “with the fraudulent intention of hindering, delaying and preventing the said Emmanuel Heilner and Moses J. Wolf from collecting their said judgment and for the further fraudulent purpose of evading the said decree of the Yew York supreme court,” but further affirms that he carried out the transaction “innocently and without any knowledge of such intention or purpose on the part of the said Estella Brumberg and Grace Brumberg,” and believing that Estella and Grace were as innocent as he was, and that he, the defendant Einkelstein, by the transaction obtained a mortgage second only to the mortgage of the complainant.

The notice of this motion does not specify any technical defects in the cross-bill as a pleading, or that the allegations of the cross-bill are inadequate to present the questions between these two defendants which have been argued. The notice claims that the cross-bill discloses no equity in favor of Einkelstein against Heilner, and does not show that there was a merger effected by the conveyance from Einkelstein to Estella and Grace Brumberg, and shows no facts under which Einkelstein’s mortgage should be made prior to Heilner’s mortgage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 A. 732, 69 N.J. Eq. 669, 3 Robb. 669, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weinberger-v-brumberg-njch-1905.