Zinkas v. Patrick

12 A.2d 161, 127 N.J. Eq. 178, 1940 N.J. LEXIS 598
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 29, 1940
StatusPublished

This text of 12 A.2d 161 (Zinkas v. Patrick) 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
Zinkas v. Patrick, 12 A.2d 161, 127 N.J. Eq. 178, 1940 N.J. LEXIS 598 (N.J. 1940).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Case, J.

The bill sought a reconveyance of lands to complainant and an accounting of certain funds alleged to have been received by defendant Theresa Patrick with relation thereto. It alleged that the property had been purchased at a cost of $14,250, of which $7,250 was paid from complainant’s separate funds and subsequently $7,000 from the joint earnings of complainant and John Zimitat; that complainant was informed and always believed that the title was to be placed, and was placed, in her name absolutely, whereas in fact the conveyance was to her and John Zimitat as grantees; that in *179 1931 Zimitat, now deceased, and his daughter, Theresa Patrick, fraudulently induced complainant to join with Zimitat in conveying the property to Mrs. Patrick upon the false representation that it was a conveyance to the State of New Jersey of lands for a state highway, and that Mrs. Patrick later conveyed a portion thereof to the State of New Jersey for the consideration of $2,500 and still later collected $1,025 insurance money for a fire loss on the premises. The bill prayed that the conveyance to Mrs. Patrick and the one from her to the state be declared null and void; that the respective rights of the parties in the premises be determined and reconveyance be directed to the parties so found to be entitled, and that there be an accounting. The parties defendant named in the bill were Mr. and Mrs. Patrick, the mentally incompetent wife of John Zimitat and the State of New Jersey. Por reasons that will subsequently appear, chief of which is complainant’s withdrawal from the full extent of the relief prayed in the bill, there is no need for an extended study of the rights of the state or of Mrs. Zimitat’s dower. Neither of the last mentioned defendants appears before us on this appeal.

The Court of Chancery found that the charges of fraud had not been sustained; that the relief sought should be denied in all respects; and that any other relief, as by reformation of the deed to Patrick, should be denied because it. was not asked for, was inconsistent with the complainant’s proofs and, most important, complainant had fraudulently conceived her suit and had .come into court with unclean hands. The bill was dismissed. Our investigation and analysis of the evidence (Cartan v. Phelps, 91 N. J. Eq. 312; Naame v. Doughty, 109 N. J. Eq. 535; Real Estate-Land, &c., Co. v. Stout, 117 N. J. Eq. 37) brings us to a factual conclusion different from that reached by the learned vice-chancellor; and because the granting of relief depends so largely upon the ascertained facts we deem it advisable to state in some detail our view of the proofs.

John Zimitat was intelligent, had some education, spoke English and Lithuanian very well, could read and write in both languages and was cautious in and familiar-with busi *180 ness transactions. He held himself out as a widower. The fact was, however, that he was the husband of Mary Zimitat, who, to his knowledge, was not dead but was an inmate of one of the state institutions for the mentally affected whither she was taken by Zimitat on February 10th, 1903, and where she still is. Theresa Zimitat Patrick, the main contesting defendant in the trial below and respondent here, is the daughter of John and Mary Zimitat. She was born October 15th, 1898, and says that she was told by her father, and believed from earliest childhood until after her father’s death on June 8th, 1935 (at the age of sixty-seven years), that her mother, Mary Zimitat, was dead. She completed the first year in high school and has a fair education. She resided with her father until, on her marriage to Manning Patrick December 1st, 1919, she left to set up her own home. Zimitat and a fellow worker, William Mikulanis, were then living on and operating a rented farm. Zimitat, aside from a bank account which he had opened at the First Rational Bank of Perth Amboy two or three months earlier, then owned no considerable property. However, he was accumulating live stock and farm equipment.

About thirty years ago complainant, Eva Zinkas (the name is given various phonetic spellings), and shortly thereafter her sister Annie, Lithuanians, came from overseas tad obtained employment at a cigar factory. They became expert operators, were paid high wages and saved, partly in bank, partly in cash, the major portion of their earnings. They were unable to read or write and came to Zimitat to have their letters from home read and for the writing of replies. Soon after Theresa’s marriage, Zimitat proposed to complainant that she give up her job and come to live with him and that later the two would be married. Complainant, believing Zimitat’s assurance that he was a widower, accepted the proposal, taking her sister with her. There never was a marriage ceremony. Complainant, from time to time, asked for it, and Zimitat always agreed but procrastinated. There can, however, be no reasonable doubt that the two lived as man and wife. Complainant says they did. Zimitat introduced her publicly as his wife. An option for the sale of real estate *181 was drawn in the names of John Zimitat and Eva Zimitat and was signed in those respective names, John Zimitat by his own hand and Eva Zimitat by mark. A small tract of land was acquired in their names as vendees — Eva Zimitat and John Zimitat, her husband. At Zimitat’s suggestion, the two made reciprocal wills on February 18th, 1925, wherein complainant cut off her brother and sister with a bequest to each of $10 and gave the residue of her entire estate to Zimitat, naming him as sole executor, and Zimitat limited his daughter, Theresa, to a like amount of $10, gave all the rest and residue to complainant and named her as sole executrix. These wills remained unrevoked, and Zimitat’s instrument is now under probate as his last will and testament. Zimitat’s reason for persistently evading the marriage ceremony is now obvious in the fact of a living wife. The prior continuing marriage, although unknown to complainant, of course made impossible a valid marriage, common law or ceremonial, between her and Zimitat. Nevertheless, the woman served him faithfully until his death. Even Theresa says, “I looked at Eva [complainant] like a mother,” “I thought the world of her;” and Theresa urged her father, so she says, to marry complainant.

So much for the personal relations. We pass to the conditions under which the lands in question were purchased and the sources from which the purchase money came. During the period of about two years after complainant went with Zimitat the operations on the rented farm little more than carried themselves, with negligible cash surplus. Then Zimitat persuaded complainant to put her life savings into the purchase of the new farm, containing about forty-six acres of land. The title passed February 5th, 1923. Complainant believed, according to her evidence, and continued to believe until Zimitat’s death, that the entire title was to be put, and was put, in her name. The deed actually ran 'to John Zimitat and Eva Zinkas. The price was $14,250, of which $7,250' was paid in cash drawn from complainant’s bank account and $7,000 by mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
12 A.2d 161, 127 N.J. Eq. 178, 1940 N.J. LEXIS 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zinkas-v-patrick-nj-1940.