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Winters v. Earl

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Dec 11, 1893
52 N.J. Eq. 52 (Ch. Div. 1893)

Opinion

12-11-1893

WINTERS v. EARL.

Francis J. Swayze, for complainant. Charles M. Woodruff, for defendant.


(Syllabus by the Court.)

Bill by Collins Winters against William H. Earl to have a deed absolute in form declared a mortgage. Heard on pleadings and proofs in open court. Decree for complainant.

Francis J. Swayze, for complainant.

Charles M. Woodruff, for defendant.

VAN FLEET, V. C. The object of this suit is to have a deed absolute on its face declared to be a mortgage. The principle is well established that if a debtor makes a conveyance, absolute on its face, to his creditor as a security for a debt, the deed will be considered in equity to be a mortgage, and the fact that it was executed as a security, and not as an unconditional conveyance, may be established by parol evidence. Phillips v. Hulsizer, 20 N.J.Eq. 308, and the cases there cited. Any legal means of proof may be used to establish the fact that the deed was executed as a security. In the absence of a written defeasance, the evidence in such cases usually consists of the declarations of the grantee; the relations subsisting between the parties at the time the deed was executed; the retention by the grantor, subsequent to the execution of the deed, of the possession of the land, and the exercise of dominion over it in making improvements and repairs, paying taxes, and the like; the value of the property compared with the consideration actually paid or allowed; an understanding that the consideration should be repaid; and the payment of interest on it subsequent to the date of the deed. Sweet v. Parker, 22 N.J.Eq. 453. The burden of proof is, of course, on the party claiming that the deed is not what it purports to be on its face, and, in order to prevail, his proof must outweigh that of his adversary.

The deed in question was made by the complainant to the defendant on the 8th day of June, 1889, and conveyed about eight acres of rough land, with a small house, the whole being then worth not much over $500. The complainant was a laborer, who occasionally drank to excess, and the defendant was the proprietor of a saloon and restaurant. When the deed was made, the land was in process of foreclosure. The person who was prosecuting the foreclosure suit had purchased the mortgage for the purpose of foreclosing it. He wanted to get rid of the complainant as a neighbor, and he foreclosed the mortgage in order that he might buy the land at the foreclosure sale, and then expel the complainant from it. The complainant knew that this was the purpose of the foreclosure, and, as was natural, desired, with strong desire, to defeat it. Through a third person he applied to the defendant for help. This person testifies that he asked the defendant, on behalf of the complainant, to furnish the money required to take up the mortgage, and that the defendant after two or three interviews, promised to furnish sufficient money to help the complainant "out of the scrape." The complainant says that, when the deed was made, it was distinctly understood between the defendant and himself that the deed was to stand as a security, the same as a mortgage, and that, when he repaid the defendant the money advanced to take up the mortgage, he was to have his property back, and that the defendant said all he wanted in the mean time was the interest on his money. The complainant further says that when he signed the deed the defendant promised to give him "articles" to show that he held the deed as a security, but that the defendant has never performed his promise. The defendant, on the contrary, denies that the deed was executed as a security, but he admits that he made a promise to reconvey. When first asked to state the bargain under which the deed was made, the defendant said: "There was no bargain, only that he didn't want Mr. French to have the property." (Mr. French was the complainant in the foreclosure suit.) Subsequently, the defendant said he told the complainant, when the deed was executed, that whenever he wanted to sell the property he would give him the first chance to buy, and that the complainant replied he would give as much as anybody. This is the position in which the evidence of the parties themselves puts the case. The evidence of the complainant shows that the deed was executed as a security, while the defendant says it was executed as an unconditional conveyance, and that the only right the complainant retained rested on a parol promise that he might repurchase the property, provided he would pay as much as any other person.

But there is other evidence tending to show the real character of the deed. Two different persons applied to the defendant, about a year after the execution of the deed, to purchase the land. To the first he said that he could not sell then, because the complainant had a right to redeem the land, but he wouldlet the applicant know when the complainant's right to redeem had expired. On cross-examination this witness somewhat changed his evidence. On being asked whether the defendant did not say that the reason he could not sell was because he had promised to convey to the complainant, and that he had the preference, he replied that the defendant did say so; but he subsequently testified that, while he could not repeat the words used by the defendant, the fact they conveyed to his mind was that the complainant had a right to have his property on repaying, within a time limited, the money which the defendant had advanced. The other applicant made an offer of $500 for the property. The defendant had paid $366. He declined this offer, saying that he had promised to hold the property for the complainant, and he was going to do it At the time the deed was made, a tenant was in possession of the land under a letting for three years, at an annual rent of $48. After the delivery of the deed the complainant remained on the land with the tenant, and collected the rent, up to spring of 1892. He also paid the taxes on the property, and paid to the defendant the interest of $366, in annual payments, for three years. The first payment was made June 9, 1890, (the deed was delivered, it will be remembered, June 8, 1889,) the second payment was made June 19, 1891, and the third, June 7, 1892. For the first payment the defendant gave the complainant a receipt in which he stated that he had received from the complainant $21.96, "in full for one year's interest." The complainant also, during the three years succeeding the delivery of the deed, made permanent improvements on the property. He had a well dug; also, a ditch made, at a cost of $15 besides his own labor. He put windows in the house, and also new boards on one of its sides. He removed rocks and stones from the garden, and built a stone fence, which added, as seems to be undisputed, at least, $50 to the value of the property. He also planted currant bushes and fruit trees. These improvements added, as the proofs show, at least $100 to the value of the property.

These facts corroborate the truth of the complainant's evidence, and go very far to prove that the defendant's story cannot be true. They show that the defendant for three years recognized the $366, which he had advanced to take up the mortgage, as a debt which the complainant owed him, by receiving interest on it from the complainant, and that for the same period he allowed the complainant to deal with him as though his rights in the land were merely those of mortgagee, and to exercise a dominion over the land which indicated that he was its owner. But the defendant insists that while the course of dealing between the complainant and himself may, in some of its aspects, justify the belief that the relation existing between them, in respect to the land, was that of creditor and debtor, yet such, in truth, was not the fact, but that the complainant's annual payments to him were not made in discharge of interest, but as payments in the nature of rent. He says the way these payments happened to be made was this: That when the deed was made he did not know the tenant in possession of the land, nor whether he was good or not, but he knew that the complainant boarded with him. He therefore arranged with the complainant that he should collect the rent of the tenant, and out of it pay the taxes, and the interest on the $366 which he had advanced to take up the mortgage, and the balance the complainant might take for keeping the property in repair, and for his services in taking care of it The complainant denies that any such arrangement was made or suggested. His denial is supported by the probabilities of the case. It is manifest that the natural effect of such an arrangement would have been to induce the complainant, if it was true that his only right in respect to the property was the bare right to repurchase it on paying as large a price as any other person might offer, to refrain from making either repairs or improvements. Every addition he made to the value of the property was so much money thrown away. Nay, worse than that, for every dollar he added to the value of the property lessened his chance of his being able to get it back. By increasing the value of the property he necessarily increased the price which he must pay on its repurchase. The fact that the complainant increased the value of the property by permanent improvements, to the extent of at least $100, shows almost conclusively that he did not understand that any such arrangement existed as that set up by the defendant The defendant's conduct shows also, I think, quite strongly, that no such arrangement existed. He was offered, about a year after the deed was made, $500 for the property. This was $134 more than he had paid,—an advance on his investment of $366 quite sufficient as it seems to me, to satisfy the greed of even an avaricious person. The person who made the offer was eager to purchase, and able to pay at once. Now, in this situation of affairs, it is somewhat difficult to understand why, if the defendant regarded himself as the absolute owner, and subject to no duty to the complainant except to reconvey, he did not require the complainant soon after this offer was received, either to enter Into a contract of purchase, or to increase his annual payment from $21.96 to $30. But he did neither; on the contrary, for two years subsequent to the offer, he continued to receive from the complainant merely the interest on the sum which he had advanced to take up the mortgage. This course of conduct was perfectly consistent with the complainant's claim that the deed was executed as a security, but utterly inconsistent with the defendant's claim that it was executed as an unconditional conveyance.

In my opinion, the decided weight of the evidence on the point in dispute is with the complainant. All the material undisputed facts of the case lead to the conclusion that the deed was executed as a security, and it must consequently be declared to be a mortgage. Costs will be allowed to neither party against the other. On a bill to redeem, the mortgagor is, as a general rule, required to pay costs, but this rule, I think, should be dispensed with in this case. The defendant's conduct in resisting redemption has been oppressive. He has resisted the complainant in a case where, as I think, it is manifest from his own conduct that he knew the complainant was asking for nothing which he was not justly entitled to. As I look at the case, it would be more consonant with justice to award costs against the defendant than in his favor.


Summaries of

Winters v. Earl

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Dec 11, 1893
52 N.J. Eq. 52 (Ch. Div. 1893)
Case details for

Winters v. Earl

Case Details

Full title:WINTERS v. EARL.

Court:COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY

Date published: Dec 11, 1893

Citations

52 N.J. Eq. 52 (Ch. Div. 1893)
52 N.J. Eq. 52

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