Wooden v. Wooden

3 N.J. Eq. 429
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJuly 15, 1836
StatusPublished

This text of 3 N.J. Eq. 429 (Wooden v. Wooden) 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
Wooden v. Wooden, 3 N.J. Eq. 429 (N.J. Ct. App. 1836).

Opinion

The Master.

The bill was filed on the sixth of April, eighteen hundred and thirty-five; and, among other things, sets forth, that Ezra Wooden died on the twenty-fifth of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-two, possessed of a considerable real [430]*430and personal estate; leaving eight children, among whom arose a controversy as to the distribution of his estate. That Ziba, Nathan and Peter Wooden, sons of the said deceased, insisted that the said Ezra Wooden had made a will, devising all his property, and the other children insisting that there was no will. That the complainant, being of opinion that there was no legal will, on the nineteenth of November, eighteen hundred and thirty-two, agreed with the defendants, with a view of compromising all differences of opinion in relation thereto, in manner following, viz.: — “Articles of agreement, made this nineteenth day of November, between Peter, Ziba and Nathan Wooden, of the township of Warren, county of Somerset, and state of New-Jersey, of the- first part, and Jeptha Wooden, of the same place, witnesseth ; that the said party of the first part, do upon certain conditions, agree to let the said Jeptha Wooden have the west rooms, together with five acres of land on the west end of the house, being a part of the homestead farm of Ezra Wooden, deceased, if provided the will of the said deceased sball be established, otherwise this writing to be void; and the said Jeptha doth hereby acknowledge himself fully contented and satisfied with said will in question. Witness our hands and seals, this nineteenth day of November, eighteen hundred and thirty-two.” That in part performance, the defendants put the complainant in possession of the two west rooms of the house in the said agreement mentioned, on or about the first of April, eighteen hundred and thirty-three, and he has continued in possession under said agreement ever since, and still continues in possession thereof. The bill then further states, that on the day following the date of the above agreement, another agreement was made, which is set forth, whereby the complainant and several children of the deceased therein named, were to release to the defendants the homestead farm; and the defendants were to release to the complainant and other children named, several lots also mentioned, with various provisions not deemed necessary now to be noticed. That in pursuance of the said last mentioned agreement, the defendants and their wives executed certain releases, [431]*431in the bilí mentioned, and the complainant and his wife and other persons in the said bill named, also executed a release to persons therein mentioned. That a deed of release for said homestead farm was made out from the complainant and others to the defendants, on the tenth of December, eighteen hundred and thirty-two, and was executed and acknowledged by the complainant and his wife, and the other parties thereto, except the acknowledgment of Elizabeth Freeman is disputed, and except also that Robert Morris and Sarah his wife refused to execute the same — the said Sarah Morris and Elizabeth Freeman being two of the daughters of the said Ezra Wooden, deceased-

The bill also sets forth a suit in this court by the defendants to carry the last mentioned agreement into effect, and the proceedings thereon; and that after the first mentioned agreement, about the first day of December following, the defendants agreed to pay the complainant three hundred dollars, by certain promissory notes, in lieu of the five acres therein mentioned, and since then Ziba, one of the defendants, has had possession thereof. That on the first of January, eighteen hundred and thirty-five, Ziba Wooden, one of the defendants, served a notice on the complainant to remove out of the said two rooms on the first of April following; and upon inquiry what was meant by serving said notice, the said Ziba replied, because the complainant’s wife quarrelled with the wife of another person occupying the middle part of said house, and threatened to turn the complainant out of the said two rooms, and in pursuance of such intention commenced an action of unlawful detainer before one of the justices of the peace of the county of Somerset, and sets forth the proceedings before said justice. That the said two rooms are part of the house which belonged to the complainant’s father, and that he does not unlawfully detain the same; and insists, tiiat if the pretended will of the deceased is established, he is entitled to hold the said two west rooms; and if not established, then he is entitled, as one of the children and heirs of the deceased, to an equal part of his real estate, and to- the possession of the said rooms and real estate as tenant in common. That the complainant [432]*432never entered into a lease to the said Ziba Wooden for the said two rooms,- or acknowledged him as his landlord, but entered in pursuance of said article above recited. The bill also sets forth certain pretences, which are alleged tobe untrue; and prays a specific performance of the agreement of the defendants, entered into with the complainant on the nineteenth of November, eighteen hundred and thirty-two, or that they may pay the three hundred dollars in lieu of the five acres of land in the said agreement mentioned, the complainant being willing to perform his part of said agreement; or that the second article of agreement, bearing date the twentieth of November, eighteen hundred and thirty-two, and the deed of release referred to, executed by the complainant and others in pursuance of said article, be declared null and void, and the defendants restrained from prosecuting the said unlawful detainer, and for further relief.

The bill was sworn to by the complainant on the sixth of April, eighteen hundred and thirty-five,- and on the same day an order was made by Samuel L. Southard, esquire, one of the masters of this court, designated for the purpose, that an injunction issue agreeable to the prayer of said bill, which was issued accordingly and served.

On the fifth of October, eighteen hundred and thirty-five, the defendants filed their answer, and gave notice of the application to dissolve the injunction in January term following. So much of the defendants’ answer will be taken notice of hereafter as may be applicable to the motion under consideration.

If the complainant’s right to the injunction was insisted on upon the ground that there was no will left by his father, and that he is one of the heirs at law of Ezra Wooden, deceased; the answer of the defendants sets forth a will sufficient to pass real estate, whereby, among other things, the said deceased devised the said dwelling-house and part of the homestead to the defendant, Ziba Wooden ; and further says, that the said will is not yet established. But in case there was no will, and he was au heir at law and tenant in common, injunctions are not frequent, and only granted on special circumstances ; Eden on Inj. 171, [433]*433And I do not perceive in the bill any equitable circumstance set forth why this court should interfere to protect the complainant’s right as heir, which is a legal right and may be properly tried at law. If the allegation that the complainant has a good legal title to the premises in controversy, was sufficient to obtain an injunction, it Would seem to follow as a necessary consequence that every defendant whose title was attacked at law, and would make the suggestion of having a good title, might draw the controversy in question in this court. Such a practice would justly be complained of by the courts of law, as depriving them of the exercise of their rightful jurisdiction.

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.J. Eq. 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wooden-v-wooden-njch-1836.