From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Loder v. Allen

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Dec 4, 1892
60 N.J. Eq. 631 (Ch. Div. 1892)

Opinion

12-04-1892

LODER v. ALLEN et ux.

Howard W. Hayes, for complainant. William B. Guild, for defendants.


(Syllabus by the Court.)

Bill by Alfred Loder against Frank B. Allen and Anna S. Allen, his wife, to foreclose a mortgage and enforce a trust. Bill dismissed.

The other facts fully appear in the following statement by Pitney, V. C.:

The bill is in the nature of a bill to foreclose. It sets out that on the 12th of December, 1890, John F. Coogan was indebted to one English in the sum of $532.50, for money loaned and advanced by English to Coogan for the purpose of paying for certain shares of stock bought for Coogan, and that Coogan, for the purpose of securing that debt, executed and delivered to Allen a deed of conveyance, whereby he conveyed to Allen a certain tract of land situate in Hudson county, describing it, and that Allen, on the same day, gave back to Coogan a paper writing in these words "Newark, N. J., December 12, 1890. 1 hereby agree to sell and convey to John F. Coogan, any time within six months from date, in consideration of the sum of $500, with interest to date, to be to me paid for such transfer, the premises heretofore conveyed by himself and wife to me, which premises lie on Everett street, village of Arlington, Hudson county, N. J. Frank B. Allen." The bill further sets out that on the 30th of January, 1891, Coogan conveyed all his right, title, and interest in the premises to the wife of Allen, and charges notice to Mrs. Allen of the previous con veyance to her husband. The bill further charges that on the 30th of January, 1892, English assigned and conveyed to the complainant the debt, due from Coogan to him, together with all his right, title, and interest in the before mentioned premises; alleges that Allen denies that he received the deed in trust for English, or that he holds the title in trust for the complainant; prays answer without oath, and that Anna S. Allen may be decreed to pay the amount of principal andInterest due the complainant, and that Frank B. Allen may be decreed to hold the premises in trust for the complainant, and be ordered to convey the same to the complainant and his heirs, and for other relief. Allen and wife answer jointly, and set up that on the 18th of October, 1890, a little less than two months before the conveyance, English asked Allen to indorse his note for $500, and stated to him that Coogan was indebted to him in that amount, and that, if he (Allen) would indorse English's note for his accommodation at four months for that amount, he would procure Coogan to con vey to Allen, as security therefor, the lots of land in question; and, in consideration of that promise, Allen indorsed the note of English, bearing date October 18, 1890, payable at four months, for $500; that English procured the note to be discounted for his (English's) accommodation; that at its maturity it was not paid by English, but was duly protested, and Allen was obliged to pay the same, and that the deed of conveyance from Coogan to Allen was made to him in pursuance of that promise, and thereupon Allen made and executed the defeasance before set forth; that the conveyance was acknowledged by Coogan and his wife before an officer not authorized by the law to take acknowledgments of deeds, but was duly recorded. The answer further sets out that in the month of January, 1891, Allen discovered the defect in the acknowledgment, and that English being at that time insolvent, and Allen knowing that he would be obliged to pay the note, applied to Coogan, and obtained from him an absolute conveyance of the land to his wife, paying him therefor $100 with his wife's money, and that Coogan conveyed the land to his wife. The answer further alleges that at the maturity of the note for $500, which he had indorsed for English, Allen paid it with the money of his wife. At the hearing, the proofs showed that Allen indorsed English's note as set forth in his answer; that English obtained the money on it, and that Allen was obliged to pay it, and did pay it, at maturity; that English was a stockbroker in the city of Newark, who dealt through a house in New York, and took orders from speculators in Newark for the purchase and sale of stocks on the New York stock board; that both Coogan and Allen were dealers with him; that Coogan, in the latter part of November, or the early part of December, was indebted to him in $275; that English pressed him for payment or security, and Coogan, at English's request, conveyed the premises in question to Allen for the expressed consideration of $500; took from Allen the contract to reconvey above set forth, with the understanding that the conveyance should stand as security, first, for the $275 he already owed English, and that he should have the further credit of $225 for further stock speculations. These speculations he made, and thereby lost the balance of the $500, and $32.50 in addition. English failed on the 5th of January, 1891, and was at that time indebted to Allen for balances due Allen on stock speculations, to the amount of about $4,500. Just how long that indebtedness had been accruing did not appear. With regard to the allegation of the answer that the conveyance by Coogan to Allen was made to secure the promissory note which he had indorsed for English, the evidence of Allen and English is directly in conflict, Allen swearing positively that the arrangement was as set up in his answer, English swearing that no such thing was mentioned between them at all, and stating that the conveyance was made to Allen at his request, with the object and purpose to put it, as he said, beyond his (English's) temptation to make any improper use of the land so conveyed. The deed from Coogan to Allen was acknowledged before a justice of the peace. In January, 1891, after English's failure, Allen discovered this, and procured a new deed from Coogan to Mrs. Allen, paying him therefor $100. This money, as well as the $500 paid for the note, seems to have been his own funds. A year after English's failure he made an assignment to the complainant of a long list of assets, consisting of debts due to him, amounting to many thousand dollars, among others the debt due against Coogan for $532.50, and in the assignment was inserted a short conveyance of his right, title, and interest in the premises above mentioned.

Howard W. Hayes, for complainant.

William B. Guild, for defendants.

PITNEY, V. C (after stating the tacts.)

If Mr. English's account of the transactions is the true one. and there was no understanding that Allen was to hold the conveyance to secure him for' indorsing English's note, or for what he owed Allen, then the effect of the transaction was, of course, to make Allen a trustee for English,—a trust resulted in English's favor, without any declaration in writing. The present action is one with a double aspect: In the first place, to enforce the trust against Allen; and, in the second place, to foreclose the mortgage. This double aspect must be borne in mind in considering the equities of the parties. There is no allegation that Coogan has any defense to the action, and no defense is made on that score. The defense actually made is aimed at the enforcement of the trust against Allen, and it is twofold: First, that, while this transaction was in tieri, English became indebted to Allen in a sum much larger than that secured by the conveyance in question, and which indebtedness still remains, and hence it would be inequitable for him (English) to enforce that trust; and, second, that there was an agreement between English and Allen that this Coogan conveyance should he applied towards that indebtedness. At the argument it was admitted that complainant took his assignment subject to any equity which existed against it in the hands of English; so that, if English could not enforce the trust, the complainant could not. The rule on that subject is settled beyond question. Woodruff v. Institution, 34 N. J. Eq. 174, at page 178, where the authorities in this state are collected; 2 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 704. Professor Pomeroy includestrusts in the same category as debts; and it would seem plain enough that, if the cestui que trust has in any manner discharged his trustee, such discharge cannot he avoided by an assignment of his rights by the cestui que trust, but that, in the absence of any counter equity, such discharge will avail the trustee against the assignee. Against the right of Allen, the trustee, here to set up English's indebtedness to him, is invoked what is claimed and appears to be the settled rule in New Jersey, that on the foreclosure of a mortgage the owner of the equity cannot set up in defense a counter indebtedness against the holder of the mortgage; in other words, that the mortgagor and obligor cannot offset against his bond and mortgage in the hands of the obligee and mortgagee a debt due to him from the latter This rule seems to be settled in this state by the decision of the court of appeals in Hartt v. Parker, 32 N. J. Eq. 844, affirming the decree of this court made on the advice of Vice Chancellor Van Fleet, as reported in 32 N. J. Eq. 225. This rule is peculiar to this state, and had its origin in a mere dictum of Chancellor Vroom, unsupported by citation of authority, in White v. Williams, 3 N. J. Eq. 383, which was reiterated by Chancellor Gheen, in Dolman v. Cook, 14 N. J. Eq. 57. It is to be observed, however, that neither of those cases arose between mortgagor and mortgagee, but between mortgagee and the grantee of the mortgagor, by conveyance subject to the mortgage; and in the latter of the cases the complainant agreed to allow the set-off upon terms that it be applied to a certain one of the two mortgages sought to be foreclosed, and it was so done. The rule, however, was applied between mortgagor and mortgagee in Dudley v. Bergen, 23 N. J. Eq. 397, by Chancellor Runyon, and again in Hartt v. Parker, as above stated. It is remarkable, as pointed out by counsel for defendants, that an examination of the authorities cited by Chancellor Green in Dolman v. Cook, 14 N. J. Eq. at page 68, in support of the rule laid down by Chancellor Vroom In White v. Williams, shows that they utterly fail in that respect. See Pettat v. Ellis, 9 Ves. 563, cited in 2 Pow. Mortg. 945; Troup v. Haight, Hopk. Ch. 239, at page 272; Rosevelt v. Bank, Hopk. Ch. 579; on appeal, 9 Cow. 409; Chapman v. Robertson, 6 Paige, 627, at page 629; Holden v. Gilbert, 7 Paige, 208; Barb. Setoff, p. 189; Wat. Set-Off, § 390. The rule is one not readily learned by the ordinary business man, and is seldom borne in mind by mortgagor and mortgagee in their dealings with each other, with the result, as I think the experience of many counsel will bear witness, that injustice sometimes results from its application. This consideration constrains me to decline to apply it except to cases clearly within its terms. But the present is not a case of set-off between mortgagor and mortgagee or the assignee of either. It is a question between a trustee and a cestui que trust, and it is this: Will the cestui que trust, who is indebted to his trustee, be permitted to call that trustee to account, as such, in this court, and compel him to execute a trust the result of which will be that the trustee must either pay his rest hi que trust a supra of money, or have a lien for the amount fastened upon his property, and that property sold to pay it, without allowing his trustee for what he owes him? That is the question. It seems to me that he cannot. The complainant's claim is one resting entirely in equity. He has no legal right. He comes into a court of equity to enforce it, and at once subjects himself to the equitable maxim that he who asks equity must do equity. His suit is, in effect, one to recover money. He asks defendant to acknowledge that he is mortgagee of the lands in question to the extent of $500, for the benefit of the complainant, and that such mortgage be enforced for his benefit. As defendant is also the equitable owner of the equity of redemption, it is tantamount to demanding the money of the defendant.

Now, the right or set-off is a favorite in equity, and is one source of its jurisdiction which Mr. Spence says (1 Spence, Eq. Jur. 651) was assumed on principles of natural equity. If two parties have independent money demands against each other, natural justice and equity demand that they should be set off against each other, and I think that equity exists here. The complainant, standing in English's shoes, comes into this court asking it to enforce an equity which English once had against the defendant. Fundamental principles of equity compel him to do equity. No authority is necessary for this proposition, if we look at this as a case of set-off merely. But the maxim covers the other view of this case, and it was applied to a case much like the present in Dacres v. Crompe, by Lord Keeper Bridgman, as stated by Lord Chancellor Nottinguam, and reported in 2 Ch. Cas. 87, sub nom. Bradburne v. Amand. Lord Dacres employed Crompe to purchase land for him, and to borrow money with which to pay for it, which Crompe did, taking the title in his own name, and also borrowed other moneys for Lord Dacres. On a bill by Lord Dacres against Crompe asking for the conveyance to him of the lands so purchased by Crompe, upon payment only of the amount borrowed to pay for them, it was held that he must, as a condition, pay all the moneys that Crompe had borrowed and advanced for and to him. Here there was no connection between the purchase of the lands and the loaning of the moneys other than those used to pay for them. The principle of this case is thus expressed in Story, Eq. Jur. § 64e: "Where a party seeks the benefit of a purchase made for him in the name of a trustee, who has paid the purchase money, but to whom he is indebted for other advances, he shall not be relieved but upon payment of all the money due to the trustee;" citing Com. Dig. tit. "Chancery," 3 F. 3, which is based upon Dacres v Crompe. So in Baxter v. Manning, 1 Vern. 244, and again in Shuttleworth v. Laycock, Id. 245, it was held that if one mortgage his land to secure a loan, and afterwards the mortgagee loans other money to the mortgagor upon hisbond, without any agreement that his mortgage shall stand security therefor, neither the mortgagor nor his heir will be permitted to redeem the land without paying the debt, secured by bond, as well as that secured by the mortgage, though it would be otherwise if a second mortgagee were asking to redeem. I think, therefore, that the defendant is entitled to succeed on his first ground.

I also think that he must succeed on his second ground, viz., that there was an agreement that the defendant was to hold the land as security for what English owed him. The parties are in direct conflict in their evidence on this part of the case, but I do not find it necessary to decide between them, since I think that both are, in part, at fault in their recollection of the transaction. I find it difficult to adopt Mr. Allen's account, since at the time he indorsed the note, October 18, 1890, Coogan does not appear to have been indebted to English in any particular sum of money, and no mention appears to have been made between Coogan and English at that time or for some weeks after of any conveyance or mortgage. On the other hand, the reason given by English in his evidence for desiring Coogan to make the conveyance to Allen, instead of himself, is quite unsatisfactory. I think there was some other reason than that stated by English for making the conveyance to Allen. It seems quite probable that, at the date when the deed was first asked for, English was largely indebted to Allen on his books, as the result of the stock operations on his account, for on January 5th, four weeks later, he owed him about $4,500; and I think it probable that English felt he was in a critical pecuniary situation, and unable to pay Allen if called upon to do so, and that the conveyance was made to Allen to secure him, so far as it would go, not only for the note he had previously indorsed, but for the general account. A piece of evidence was discovered at the hearing which seems to set this matter entirely at rest. One White was the confidential and managing clerk of English, and kept his accounts. He absconded a few days after English failed. Before leaving, he placed in Allen's hands, for safe-keeping, some books of account and a roll of manuscript. Allen does not appear to have had any knowledge of their contents, or to have opened them. The books and roll of manuscript were produced at the hearing, at there-quest of complainant, and opened for inspection by English during the giving of his testimony. This roll of manuscript proved to be divers statements of accounts of dealers with English, made up in White's handwriting, and among them was one with "E. M. Bell," in whose name Allen requested his account to be made out. This statement showed English to be indebted to Allen in $4,500, and then credits him with $500 for this conveyance from Coogan to Allen. Allen swore that he had no knowledge of the paper, or that any credit was given for the $500 until it was discovered among the papers produced. He denies that he made any suggestion to Mr. White to give him such credit, and there is nothing in the case to contradict him. The paper seems to be conclusive as to what Mr. White's understanding of the affair was. The proof shows that English, at his failure, contemplated the making of a general assignment for the benefit of his creditors, and these statements, or some of them, were made up for the purpose of showing who his debtors and creditors were, with the amount due to and from each, and it is impossible to conceive that Mr. White should have given the credit of $500 to E. M. Bell without the direction of somebody in authority in Mr. English's office. I think this is conclusive, and will advise that the complainant's bill be dismissed, with costs.


Summaries of

Loder v. Allen

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Dec 4, 1892
60 N.J. Eq. 631 (Ch. Div. 1892)
Case details for

Loder v. Allen

Case Details

Full title:LODER v. ALLEN et ux.

Court:COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY

Date published: Dec 4, 1892

Citations

60 N.J. Eq. 631 (Ch. Div. 1892)
60 N.J. Eq. 631

Citing Cases

Scarano v. Scarano

Adm'rs of White v. Williams et al., 3 N.J.Eq. 376; Bird v. Davis, 14 N.J.Eq. 467; Dolman v. Cook, 14 N.J.Eq.…

Scarano v. Scarano

Nevertheless, it was for many years the established rule in this court that, in a suit to foreclose a…