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Kuntzman v. Smith

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Mar 22, 1910
77 N.J. Eq. 30 (Ch. Div. 1910)

Opinion

03-22-1910

KUNTZMAN v. SMITH et al.

W. E. Kaighn, for demurrant. Eli H. Chandler, opposed.


Suit by George Kuntzman against Harper B. Smith and others, in which a crossbill was filed. On demurrer to cross-bill. Sustained.

W. E. Kaighn, for demurrant.

Eli H. Chandler, opposed.

STEVENS, V. C. This is a demurrer to a cross-bill. The original bill seeks to foreclose a mortgage made by Townsend Herbert to complainant in 1897. It is not pretended that this mortgage was not made as alleged, or that it has heen paid. The defense by way of cross-bill is that complainant, Kuntzman, on August 31, 1897, was the owner of the property; that he on that day conveyed it to Townsend Herbert; that Herbert executed a purchase-money mortgage to Kuntzman for part of the price, and that at the time of the conveyance Kuntzman's title was defective in two particulars: First, in that there existed against it inchoate rights of dower; second, in that there was outstanding a mortgage for $845 not foreclosed in the suit in which Kuntzman acquired title, and in whose owner (Ringe) there existed therefore a right of redemption. If the date of this lastmentioned mortgage is correctly given (1893), what Ringe really has, however, if his mortgage be unpaid, is a right to foreclose and not a right to redeem, for the cross-bill alleges that the mortgage through which Kuntzman derived title was made in 1895, while Ringe's was made two years before. The cross-bill further alleges that Kuntzman, having such defective title, conveyed to Herbert "by deed," so the allegation is, "containing the usual full covenants of warranty and seisin in fee simple." There is then the further allegation that Townsend "likewise" (whatever that word may imply) conveyed to Julia Herbert (without saying by what sort of a deed), and that Julia Herbert "likewise" conveyed to Wahl, and that Wahl "likewise" conveyed to Smith, the complainant in the cross-bill.

On this somewhat slender foundation the cross-bill insists that by reason of the covenants contained in the complainant's, Kuntzman's, deed, complainant "is liable to these answering defendants (the complainants in the cross-bill) to pay off, settle, or otherwise procure an extinguishment of said liens and claims," and that they are ready to pay complainant any and all sums found to be due "as soon as the liens and claims herein set forth are extinguished and canceled." Apparently the pleader's idea is, not that the court should ascertain the damages arising out of any breaches of covenant contained in the Kuntzman deed and offset them against the amount due on the mortgage, but that it should order a stay until complainant has procured releases that would give a perfect title. It is needless to say that no such relief can be given. The covenant of seisin is broken, if at all, as soon as made. Chapman v. Holmes, 10 N.J.Law, 20; Carter v. Denman's Ex'rs, 23 N.J.Law, 260. If there is any right of action, it is in Herbert, not in defendant. Besides, "it is well settled," says Rawle in his book on Covenants, p. 63, "that the covenant for seisin is not broken by the existence of easements or incumbrances which do not strike at the technical seisin of the purchaser. * * * So with respect to a judgment, a mortgage, or the expectant right of the wife to dower, however much these may operate as a breach of the covenant against incumbrances, they do not affect the covenant for seisin, since a judgment or right of dower do not operate to divest the technical title or seisin of the grantor, and a mortgage, although in strictness it purports to pass the legal title, yet is almost universally regarded at the present day as a mere security for the payment of the debt."

As to the covenant of warranty, which runs with the land, it is not alleged that there has been either eviction by title paramount or action brought; consequently no breach of covenant has been shown. Carter v. Denman, supra; Kuhnen v. Parker, 56 N.J.Eq. 286, 38 Atl. 641.

I think the demurrer to the cross-bill should be sustained.


Summaries of

Kuntzman v. Smith

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Mar 22, 1910
77 N.J. Eq. 30 (Ch. Div. 1910)
Case details for

Kuntzman v. Smith

Case Details

Full title:KUNTZMAN v. SMITH et al.

Court:COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY

Date published: Mar 22, 1910

Citations

77 N.J. Eq. 30 (Ch. Div. 1910)
77 N.J. Eq. 30

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