White v. Brown

29 N.J.L. 307
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 15, 1861
StatusPublished

This text of 29 N.J.L. 307 (White v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Brown, 29 N.J.L. 307 (N.J. 1861).

Opinion

Vredenburgh, J.

In January, 1847, the plaintiff recovered judgment in this court against William P. Robesons, John Moore White, and several others, in a plea of debt for $60,000.

In 1848, William P. Robeson paid Governor Vroom, the agent of plaintiff, $6000 on this judgment.

Mr. White now moves to have satisfaction entered, upon the allegation that the plaintiff received this $6000 in full.

It is not contended by Mr. White that any technical release was ever executed by the plaintiff. The papers between the parties are so neither in terms nor are they under seal. Rut it is contended that the plaintiff agreed to receive, and did receive, this $6000 as full payment of the judgment. Payment in full might have been made, either by the payment of the whole $60,000 in cash or by any lesser sum which the plaintiff might agree to so receive. If he agreed to receive five dollars in full satisfaction, and it was paid and received accordingly, it was as complete a payment and satisfaction of the judgment as if the whole $60,000 had been paid in cash.

The case presents for consideration two questions — 1st, did the plaintiff agree to receive, and did be in fact receive, this $6000 in full payment of the judgment; 2d, if he did, what are its legal effects.

First. Did the plaintiff agree to receive this $6000 in full as against Mr. Robeson ?

[309]*309The original agreement, signed by Mr. Vroom, the agent of the plaintiff, and Mr. Robeson,- is as follows: A memorandum made at Belvidere, September 1st, 1848. On a sale of property called the water power property, made this day by Henry McMullin, master, the same was purchased by Peter H. Vroom, for the sum of $18,000. The understanding is, that if the water power company, or any of its members, shall pay to said Peter D. Vroom, (for the benefit of those interested in the judgment against the property and against the members of the water power company personally,) the sum of $4000, on the 10th day of April next, and the further sum of two thousand dollars, on or before the 1st day of October next, then the property held under the judgment is to be released, and the company are to have until the 1st day of April next to redeem the mortgaged premises this day sold: on payment of the amount of the decree on the mortgage and interest, an agreement in due form is to bo executed after the master’s deed is given. In the meantime let the above memorandum stand as the understanding of the parties.”

On the 1st day of April, Governor Vroom gave Mr. Robeson an additional writing, of which the following is a copy:

“ In addition and explanation of the written memorandum it is hereby agreed, that on I he payment of the $6000 within stipulated, according to agreement, the judgment within referred to shall either be released or assigned to such person or persons as the said William P. Robeson may choose, and the release or assignment to be at the option of the said William P. Robeson, to be expressed in writing, and if assigned, to be for the benefit of those who have paid up their just proportions of the money heretofore paid on the original mortgage, and expended on the property, and which may be paid under this agreement.”

Can any one doubt, upon the face of these papers, that, as [310]*310between the plaintiff and Mr. Robeson, the $6000 was to be in full? This judgment was upon a bond secured by mortgage; the mortgage has been foreclosed, and upon a sale the property had been bought in by the plaintiff for $18,000. We can easily understand that' there might have been equitable and conscientious reasons why the plaintiff might have been willing to receive the $6000 in full — the bond and mortgage might have been for a balance of consideration money due on a' sale of the mortgaged property to the defendants; and after getting the original payments, as made at the time of the conveyance of the property back again under the foreclosure, and the $6000 besides, we can easily understand how the plaintiff might have agreed to receive the $6000 in full. Although the papers do not say so in terms, yet such is manifestly the intent of the parties, and, as appears to me, the legal effect of the instruments.

By the memorandum of the 1st September, 1848, the plaintiff gives the defendants the option of two things— they may redeem the mortgaged premises by paying the amount due, or, if the plaintiff retains the property under the master’s sale, upon receiving $6000 more, the other property of all of the defendants held under the judgment was to be released, showing that the plaintiff held the amount of the judgment equivalent to the property and $6000. If they redeemed the property, that would have been strict payment of the whole. The equivalent of that was the plaintiff holding the property and the $6000. The plaintiff evidently considered an agreement to release the property as of equal import with satisfying the judgment.

But if there could be any doubt about the meaning of the memorandum of 1st September, I apprehend there can be none about the one in addition and explanation of it, dated the 11th of April, 1849. This in terms provides that on the payment of the $6000 the judgment shall be either released or assigned to such person as the said [311]*311Robeson may choose for the benefit of those who have paid their proportion of the moneys theretofore paid on the mortgage or expended on the property or the $6000. Upon the payment of the $6000 the judgment was either to be released or assigned for the benefit of Mr. Robeson. Is not this equivalent to agreeing to receive the $6000 in full, so far as Mr. Robeson is concerned ? If the agreement is performed, what could the plaintiff do on the judgment towards collecting the balance, either after the release or after an assignment for Robeson’s benefit ?

If the $6000 was to be received on account, and not in full satisfaction, the plaintiff or his assignee would hold the judgment for the unpaid balance; but this would be expressly defeated if Mr. Robeson chose to release, which he had a right to do, or if assigned, it would be held not only for what bad been paid by the defendants before the assignment, but also for the balance unpaid at the date of the assignment. Here the agreement to assign was avowedly not for any unpaid balance claimed by the plaintiff, but to enable one of the defendants to re-collect what had already been paid by him from another of the defendants — in other words, to enable one defendant to collect by the lien of the judgment from the other defendants what he has paid over bis share — the agreement by the plaintiff to assign the judgment for such a purpose, to enable him to collect, not what is unpaid on the judgment, but what has been already paid, is equivalent to saying that, as between the plaintiff and Mr. Robeson, the $6000 is in full. Now if the thing had rested here simply in agreement it might have been a question whether the agreement, being executory, was not void for want of consideration, and the plaintiff, or his assignee, at liberty to repudiate it. But here the agreement has been executed, the $6000 was actually paid, and the plaintiff, or his assignee, is no longer at liberty to dispute it.

On the 11th of October, 1849, Governor Vroom gave [312]*312Mr. Robeson- a receipt, of which the following is a copy : “Rec’d of William P. Robeson the sum of $2000, being the balance to be paid by him on the judgment of Ab’r Brown v. Wm. P.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.J.L. 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-brown-nj-1861.