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Camden Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Warren

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Oct 14, 1936
187 A. 651 (Ch. Div. 1936)

Opinion

10-14-1936

CAMDEN SAFE DEPOSIT & TRUST CO. v. WARREN et al.

Norcross & Farr, of Camden, for complainant. Edward West, of Camden, for defendant Raymond L. Warren.


Syllabus by the Court.

1. Where a bill to foreclose joins as defendant a party to whom, subsequent to the date of the mortgage, the mortgaged premiseswere conveyed by deed containing an assumption of the mortgage debt, such defendant cannot disclaim and be dismissed, since complainant is entitled to retain him in the suit and have his liability, if any, adjudicated.

2. An answer and disclaimer (filed by a party charged in a bill to foreclose with assuming the mortgage debt) which neither admits nor denies the covenant of assumption, but which seeks to avoid the legal consequences thereof, is insufficient and will be stricken.

3. Reformation cannot be awarded on an answer alone; that issue must be tendered by original bill of complaint or by a counterclaim annexed to a proper answer.

Suit by the Camden Safe Deposit & Trust Company, successor by merger to the Security Trust Company, trustee under the will of Thomas S. Pancoast, deceased, against Raymond L. Warren and others. On motion to strike the named defendant's answer and disclaimer.

Motion granted.

Norcross & Farr, of Camden, for complainant.

Edward West, of Camden, for defendant Raymond L. Warren.

DAVIS, Vice Chancellor.

Complainant has filed a bill for foreclosure in the usual form, alleging among other things that, after the execution of its mortgage, the mortgaged premises were conveyed to Raymond L. Warren and Carrie S. Warren, his wife, as tenants by the entirety, by deed containing an assumption of the mortgage debt. Carrie S. Warren died (apparently intestate) after the latter conveyance, and letters of administration were granted to her husband, Raymond L. Warren.

Complainant joined as defendant herein the said Raymond L. Warren, administrator, etc., who filed an answer and disclaimer; so far as the latter pleading purports to be an answer, it states only that defendant's decedent "did not assume and agree to pay the principal sum of the bond mentioned and recited in paragraph one of said Bill of Complaint" and that said decedent "had no notice or knowledge of said assumption clause, nor any participation in said transaction whatever and is not therefore liable on said bond"; the balance of the pleading is a disclaimer of any right, title, or interest in the defendant administrator "in any of the matters in question in this suit."

A motion is now made to strike out the pleading.

The obvious purpose of joining this defendant as a party to the foreclosure is to establish against him the amount due on the mortgage. In that respect he is a proper party, and, if complainant is laying the foundation for a possible deficiency judgment on the bond which the mortgage secures, as is its right, then this defendant must be joined as a party to the foreclosure. Chapter 88, P.L.1935, p. 260 (N.J.St. Annual 1935, § 134—49 (1) et seq.). In these circumstances defendant cannot disclaim and thus be dismissed; complainant is entitled to retain him as a party and have his position adjudicated with respect to the matters raised in the bill.

Nor is the pleading sufficient as an answer. Nowhere does the defendant either admit or deny the deed, referred to in the bill of complaint, in which his decedent is alleged to be one of the grantees, nor does he either admit or deny the allegation that the deed contained a covenant of assumption. It is evident, however, that he seeks to avoid the legal consequences of such a covenant. It may not be inappropriate to here suggest that his remedy, if any he have, is reformation; but, of course, the latter form of relief cannot be awarded on an answer alone—that issue, contemplating as it does affirmative relief, must be tendered by an original bill or by a counterclaim annexed to a proper answer.

Accordingly the complainant's motion prevails. In Isham v. Miller, 44 N.J.Eq. 61, 14 A. 20, Vice Chancellor Van Fleet indicates the practice of removing a disclaimer from the files when a complainant is entitled to an answer; in the instant case, however, the disclaimer is embodied in an answer, though an insufficient one, so that the order will be to strike.


Summaries of

Camden Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Warren

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Oct 14, 1936
187 A. 651 (Ch. Div. 1936)
Case details for

Camden Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Warren

Case Details

Full title:CAMDEN SAFE DEPOSIT & TRUST CO. v. WARREN et al.

Court:COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY

Date published: Oct 14, 1936

Citations

187 A. 651 (Ch. Div. 1936)