Williams v. Gilbert
This text of 37 N.J. Eq. 84 (Williams v. Gilbert) 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
This suit is brought to foreclose two mortgages on the same laud in Jersey City, given by William S. Gilbert and wife to the complainants, Eliza A. Williams and Thomas H. Williams, •one dated February 21st, 1874, and recorded on the 25th of the same month, the other dated February 2d, 1875, and recorded the next day. Both mortgages were made to secure •advances of money to be made by the mortgagees to the mortgagor on his promissory notes. The first-mentioned mortgage was to be security for such notes, not exceeding in the whole $2,000, as might be taken in one year from its date, and the other for further loans (for which the mortgagor was to give his notes to the mortgagees), not exceeding in the whole $1,000. Under the first-mentioned mortgage the complainants claim $2,000 and interest from February 2d, 1875, or thereabouts, on a note given by Gilbert to the complainants on the last-mentioned date, for $2,000, payable three months after date. On the other they claim the principal and interest due on a note for $786.69, given by Gilbert to them June 26th, 1876. The mortgaged premises were sold under executions at law September 21st, 1876, to James B. Colgate, one of the defendants, by the sheriff of Hudson county. Those executions were issued on seven judgments recovered against Gilbert, the earliest December 4th, 1874, and the latest September 13th, 1876, and levies were made under them on the mortgaged premises. There was another judgment recovered in Hudson Circuit Court, by Altanah S. Westcott against Gilbert, August 16th, 1872, for $1,025.09 •damages and costs, under which no levy was made on the mortgaged premises until March 28th, 1882, which was after the sale under the junior judgments. The property was sold under execution on that judgment by the sheriff of Hudson county to ■Colgate, July 6th, 1882. Colgate, who has answered, insists that the complainants’ mortgages are wholly invalid, because the [86]*86notes were given and advances made after the Westcott judgment was recovered, and the last advance (that made in 1876) was made after all of the junior judgments, except one, were recovered, and the first advance (made February 2d, 1875) after the first of the junior judgments was recovered.
The lien of the second mortgage was destroyed by the sale under the junior judgments; for one of those judgments was-prior to that mortgage. But it was not prior to the first mortgage. Although the advance made under the first mortgage was made after the recovery of that judgment, the complainants are nevertheless entitled to priority therefor under that mortgage over that judgment, for when the advance was made they had no actual notice of the recovery of that judgment.
Colgate insists that inasmuch as by virtue of his purchase of the property under the levies on the junior judgments he obtained a title clear of the Wescott judgment, under which no levy was made until after the sale under the junior judgments, he is entitled to a credit of the amount of that judgment on the complainants’ first mortgage. I do not see any ground whatever for this claim. Neither of the cases, Clement v. Kaighn, 2 McCart. 47, and Hoag v. Sayre, 6 Stew. Eq. 552, which were cited on the argument, supports it. Colgate, by the sale under the junior judgments, obtained by force of the statute a title to the property clear of the lien of the Westcott judgment. Rev. p. 1044. But the complainants’ first mortgage was prior in lien to those judgments. Having obtained the property by his purchase under those judgments clear of the Westcott judgment, Colgate now asks that the amount of that judgment be credited on the mortgage. The proposition cannot be maintained. The very point under consideration was • considered and decided in Clement v. Kaighn, and the recent case of Hoag v. Sayre in nowise overrules or conflicts with that decision.
The sale under the Westcott judgment was a nullity. The land had been sold under the junior judgments clear of that judgment before the levy was made under the latter, and when that levy was made Gilbert had no title to the land.
The complainants are entitled to a decree for the amount due on their first mortgage.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
37 N.J. Eq. 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-gilbert-njch-1883.