Woodbury Heights Land Co. v. Loudenslager

45 A. 630, 60 N.J. Eq. 403, 1899 N.J. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 5, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 45 A. 630 (Woodbury Heights Land Co. v. Loudenslager) 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
Woodbury Heights Land Co. v. Loudenslager, 45 A. 630, 60 N.J. Eq. 403, 1899 N.J. LEXIS 177 (N.J. 1900).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Garrison, J.

This is a petition filed in the court of chancery by the defendant in a cause that had been decided by this court and remitted for correction and execution.

The history of the litigation may be gathered from the reported opinions: Woodbury Heights Land Co. v. Loudenslager, 10 Dick. Ch. Rep. 78; Loudenslager v. Woodbury Heights Land Co., 11 Dick. Ch. Rep. 411; Woodbury Heights Land Co. v. Loudenslager, 13 Dick. Ch. Rep. 556.

Briefly restated for present purposes, the case is that Henry C. Loudenslager, while an officer of the Woodbury Heights Land Compaq, sold to it for $81,493.86 a tract of land that had cost him $66,223. The difference, $15,270.86, represented the profit of the transaction, divided between Loudenslager and .another officer of the company. Hpon a bill filed against Loudenslager alone the company obtained a decree for half of said profit, to wit, $7,635.43, with interest, for which execution has been levied upon the property of the defendant.

In the present petition the defendant shows that the said sum of $81,493.86 that formed the basis of the decree against him was made up in part of a mortgage for $5,000 made by him upon a parcel of said land conveyed to the complainant company and, he says, assumed by the company as'part of its purchase-price of the property, but which, irrespective of its assumption, was indubitably included in the said sum of $81,493.86. The petition further shows that this mortgage has not been paid, but is in the hands of the petitioner by assignment, and that he has [406]*406brought a suit in the supreme court against the complainant corporation for its breach of the said covenant assuming said mortgage, and that the complainant is without property or assets with which to pay such judgment as will be rendered if the petitioner be successful in his said suit at law, and that the mortgage itself has become an inadequate security. The prayer of the petition is that the petitioner be allowed to set off the principal and interest due to him from the complainant upon said covenant against the principal and interest due to the complainant upon the said decree, and that in the meantime the complainant be restrained from advertising and selling the property of the petitioner under said decree or from assigning or transferring the same, and for further relief.

In its answer to this petition the complainant does not deny any of the facts stated, but alleges that the questions sought to be raised have been passed upon in the progress of the cause in chancery, and that the complainant has pleaded issuably to the action at law.

The learned vice-chancellor, to whom these matters were exhibited, dismissed the petition because a mere covenant could not be set off against a decree, and denied further relief because the merits of the petition, in his view, touched only the amount of the profits which had been settled' by the final decree. A bill of review to re-liquidate the amount of the decree was suggested, but not allowed.

None of these conclusions places the petitioner’s application in the light to which the equity of the present situation, as I understand it, entitled him.

As to the first point, while it is clear that the covenant cannot be set off as if it were already a debt of record, I think that the prayer for a stay of execution and for further relief should be so read, in view of the pending litigation at law, as to cover the time reasonably necessary for the termination of that suit. The uneontradicted state of facts is such as to incline a court of equity to hold its hand while the parties are litigating their differences in a court of law. This customary chancery practice would doubtless have obtained had not the vice-chancellor, who had had no personal acquaintance with the litigation in its [407]*407earlier stages, been impressed with the idea that the defendant’s strait arose from his neglect to press his present claim upon the atte'■* An of the court of chancery as part of his accounting, or else that it had been so pressed and decided against him. No account was taken in the court of chancery, although Vice-Chancellor Pitney tendered a reference which was not ordered, for the obvious reason that the bill and answer agreed upon the figures however much they differed about the facts. As to the former, the decree followed the bill. 1 Indeed the present proceeding might aptly be described as an application by a defendant to compel the enforcement of a decree by the complainant conformably to the equity of the bill upon which it was obtained.

The sole issue upon which the amount of the decree rested was the difference between the price the defendant paid for the land and that at which he conveyed it to the complainant. Testimony was taken with respect to the price paid by the defendant, but with respect to the price at which the property was conveyed to the complainant, which is the matter now stirred, there was no question between the parties and could not have been any upon the issue tendered by the bill of complaint. In the bill itself this price is charged as

“eighty thousand dollars in money, said premises being conveyed subject to mortgages amounting in the aggregate to $41,100.00, which mortgages are stated in said deed to be a part of the consideration money therein mentioned.”

The deed to which the bill of complaint thus refers contains this clause:

“The above premises are conveyed under and subject to the payment of the principal amounts of 'the several mortgages hereinafter mentioned and the interest on the same from the date hereof.”

Among the mortgages that follow is the one for $5,000 above referred to. The answer admitted this charge, and the vice-chancellor took the figures that measured the profits from the bill, and upon it founded a decree for the complainant. It may well be doubted whether he would- have listened to the defendant had he sought to argue that his illicit profit might in [408]*408the future be computed upon a more favorable basis if the complainant’s allegations as to its own promises were not made good. The defendant was in court to answer by admission or denial the facts stated in the bill, not to foresee equities that might arise if facts that he was compelled to admit were afterward varied by the complainant.'

Even now, when the complainant has not paid $5,000 of the consideration money, and is defending at law against its payment, it is not clear to me how the matter bears upon the issue raised by the bill and settled by the decree. If the decree were opened to-day the proof would, as I see the case, be inadmissible unless the complainant were compelled to amend its bill and withdraw its admission as to the consideration of the deed to it from the defendant — an unheard of proposition. The gravamen of the petition is not that the decree is not right or that it does not bind the defendant, but that it is right and that it binds the complainant. The argument of the petitioner runs somewhat like this: The decree against me is for $7,635.43. That sum is the profit of my sale to the complainant if the consideration of the conveyance to the complainant was $81,493.86. The consideration of the conveyance was $81,493.86, if it included the mortgages subject to which I sold the land, one of which was the $5,000 mortgage I had placed upon it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 A. 630, 60 N.J. Eq. 403, 1899 N.J. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodbury-heights-land-co-v-loudenslager-nj-1900.