West Jersey Title & Guaranty Co. v. Barber

49 N.J. Eq. 474
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 49 N.J. Eq. 474 (West Jersey Title & Guaranty Co. v. Barber) 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
West Jersey Title & Guaranty Co. v. Barber, 49 N.J. Eq. 474 (N.J. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

The complainant is a corporation organized under the tenth* section of the act concerning corporations, as amended by act of February 29th, 1888 (P. L. of 1888 p. 112). Its object is intimated by its title, and is set forth in the certificate of incorporation as follows:

The examination, insurance and guaranty of the title to lands and estates- or interests in lands in the several counties of the State of New Jersey and' issuing of certificates, policies, contracts and undertakings therefor upon such-terms and conditions, restrictions and limitations as may be determined by said company, and to acquire title to and to sell any lands or interest therein in. respect to which said company has made any contracts of guaranty; the guaranty of bonds, mortgages and other securities, to act as agent to negotiate,, purchase and sell bonds, mortgages and other securities, or, in its own behalf,' to purchase and to sell the-same, and as agent to buy, sell, exchange, let, lease- and manage real estate and collect the rents, issues and profits arising therefrom; and, also, as agent to effect and maintain insurances against loss or damage by fire or other casualties to buildings or other properties.”

Its place of business is in the city of Camden.

The defendant is the clerk of the county of Camden, and the-object of the bill is to enjoin the clerk from preventing the-employes of the complainant from having access to the public-records and papers in his office when they have occasion to* examine the same for the purposes of the business of the corporation.

The bill and affidavit shows that the company was organized in 1888, and has been in active business ever since; that at the-beginning of the present year they- had issued one thousand seven hundred and fifty contracts of insurance guarantying titles-of land and fourteen certificates of the examination of the title* to land; and it alleges that in order to carry' on its business it is-necessary for it to enter into contracts with relation to the status of the titles of land, in Camden and other counties, and in order to do so with safety it is necessary for it, by its agents, to have,, during every business day, access to the records of the office of the clerk of the county for the purpose of looking for judgments, mechanics’ liens, attachments, recognizances, docketed judgments, sheriffs’ bonds and other public records affecting the [476]*476title to lands or forming encumbrances or liens upon lands, and it asserts that it has the right, as a citizen of the state, to have such access for the purpose of examination and inspection at all proper times of every business day, subject to such proper and reasonable rules and regulations of the clerk having the custody of such records as are necessary for their protection and preservation ; and it alleges that in exercising its privilege of examining the records in the defendant’s office it has, in all respects, conformed to the rules and regulations of the office, and that it has not, at any time, or in any way, interfered with its use by 'the defendant or others interested therein.

The bill further sets out that objections had been made by the defendant from time to time, within about eight months previous to the filing of the bill, to the use of the records in his office by the searcher employed by the complainant, and that finally, on the 7th of March, 1892, said defendant refused to permit complainant’s searcher to make any search or examination of the books and papers in his office unless he would first specify what particular books, and against what particularnames, he wished- to search; and that on the 8th of March said searcher went, by order of the complainant, to the clerk’s office for the purpose of making an examination of records and files of the office for the purpose of its business, and on that occasion gave to the defendant the names of the persons he wished to search against, and a list of the books he wished to examine, and the clerk replied to the said searcher that as a representative of the complainant he refused him access to the records; and that the complainant is absolutely prevented from obtaining access to the books and records and files in the office of the clerk in the custody of the defendant, and is thereby unable to carry on its business.

The defendant, by his answer, admits the organization of the •company, and that it is doing the business set forth in its bill, and makes this denial:

“And he denies that the said company has conformed to all. the rules and regulations of his said office in its use of the same and the records thereof; and he denies that the said company has not, in any way or at any time, interfered with the use by this defendant, or others interested therein, of the said public records, as alleged in paragraph 4 of said bill,”

[477]*477which is in precisely the same language used in the allegation in-that behalf in the bill, and does not set out what particular rule or rules of the office the complainant has failed to conform to, or in what particulars, or in what way, he has at any time interfered with the defendant or other persons in the use of the records. Such denial is of no value.

The real defence set up in the answer is as follows,, viz.: That an important part of the business of the complainant consists in making and giving, for a consideration, certificates of searches to its customers in respect to titles of land and liens thereon such as the defendant has been, and is accustomed to give, upon payment of the fees prescribed by law, and that, to a very great extent,, the business of the company is one of the same character and in-opposition and rivalry to that done by the defendant in his-official capacity, and that, in the conduct of such rival business, it has been the custom of the said company to send, its clerks andi agents to the office of the defendant continuously, at almost all-hours of the day, from the time his office is open in- the morning-until it is closed in the afternoon, and that it practically makes-the defendant’s official office the office and place of business of’ the said company from which to do a rival business with the-defendant, to his great injury and detriment, by the diminution, of the official patronage naturally and properly belonging to the-office; and he denies the right and power of the company to do-so ; and for the purposes of protecting himself against the great-inconvenience caused to him in the conduct of the official business, and the duties of his office, by the continual presence and labor of the clerk and agents of the company, in the conduct of its business, in and about the defendant’s office, and the loss of patronage caused him thereby, he has denied the representatives of the company the right to so use his said office and the records thereof by way of opposition to him as aforesaid, but not otherwise ; and he insists, as a matter of law and equity, that the said company has no such unlimited and unrestricted right to the use of his said office and the records thereof, to his inconvenience,, detriment and damage aforesaid; and he further submits that the-complainant has no equity, and that his remedy, if anyj is at law..

[478]*478The answer is sworn to in these words: “ Robert L. Barber, 'being duly sworn, on his oath says that the matters and facts set forth in the above answer are true.”

This defence is substantially two-fold

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Bluebook (online)
49 N.J. Eq. 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-jersey-title-guaranty-co-v-barber-njch-1892.