Bacon v. Devinney

55 N.J. Eq. 449 | New York Court of Chancery | 1897

Grey, V. C.

This cause has been presented on final hearing on bill and answer. There is but little variance between the allegations of the bill and those of the answer, the only matter of substance being the statement in the bill that the decedent, Mrs. Devinney; paid the dues &c. for the shares of the stock pledged, up to the time of her death, from her own earnings. The husband defendant denies that she always paid these dues from her own separate funds, and says- they were for the most part paid by himself or with his earnings, up to the time of her death, and since that time he has paid them all, and also the insurance, taxes and repairs of the property. So far as the answer denies the allegations of the bill it must be taken at this hearing to be true. The defendant does not deny the statement in the bill that since his wife’s death he has had the use of the property without paying any rent.

. It nowhere appears in the bill or answer that the defendant supposed, believed or understood that Mrs. Devinney, in receiving title to the lands in her own name, was acting in bad faith toward him, or that he had any agreement with her, or that he had given any direction to her that she should hold this title for his use. He joined in the making of the bond and mortgage, and he must thereby have had actual knowledge that the title to the premises stood in Mrs. Devinney’s name and not in his. The law casts upon him knowledge of the fact that when the title stood in her name, and there were no children of the marriage, it would, upon her decease intestate, descend h> •her heirs-at-law, and nothing in the answer shows that he had any other expectation. What he seeks by his answer is not to have the title to the premises declared to have been mistakenly conveyed to his wife, or to have been conveyed to her in trust for him, but a decree that the stock which had been pledged by the assent of himself and of his wife in her lifetime to the asso*453ciation for the payment of a mortgage debt, may be permitted to be diverted, and by the plan set out in the bill, changed from the pledge made of it by the parties at the time of the original agreement. The substantial facts set forth in the bill are not disputed in the answer. The denial goes only to refute the statement that Mrs. Devinney paid for all the dues and interest out of her own separate estate, and to declare that the defendant, Hubert Devinney, in great part, paid for the dues and interest on the stock, but there is no denial that in making these payments the defendant, Hubert Devinney, knew that they were relieving the title standing in the name of his wife from the charge of the mortgage debt.

The admissions in the pleadings show that the husband and wife arranged that this title to the lands should stand in the name of the wife, and the funds of both were used indiscriminately to pay off the principal and interest of the mortgage debt, without any understanding or agreement that the payments of the husband should secure to him any rights in the property. The answer, in stating the disposition he made of his earnings, admits that he always gave all his earnings to his wife, to be applied to her housekeeping expenses and to be applied to the payment of the building association dues.” This is not the language which would be used if the statement was intended to indicate that the moneys were paid on an understanding or belief that a trust for his benefit was to arise from their payment. He knew this money would aid to relieve his wife’s land of the charge of the mortgage, and he gave it to her for that purpose.

Under these indefinite circumstances, when the husband made some payments out of his separate estate, and the wife some out of hers, and there is no evidence that the money was paid on any agreement or belief that the husband was to be benefited, no trust arose in his favor, nor could he rightfully claim to be entitled, either at law or in equity, to any interest in the property, the title to, which he knew stood in his wife’s name when he made the payments. In cases where the parties stand in such intimate relationship to each other, the presumption is that the payments were intended to be a gift until by satisfactory proof *454the contrary is established. If they had been strangers, the payments made by one and the title granted to another, with no explanatory circumstances attending the transaction, would raise a presumption of a resulting trust in favor of the person paying the consideration ; but where the relations of the parties are those of husband and wife, or parent and child, the presumption is that the payment was a gift until overcome by proof. The proof necessary to overcome this presumption must be as satisfactory and explicit as that required to establish a resulting trust. Peer v. Peer, 3 Stock. 432 ; Reed v. Huff, 13 Stew. Eq. 233.

At the time the stock was pledged, Mrs. Devinney was the holder not only of the title to the stock, but also of the title to the lands mortgaged. Her husband joined her in the bond and mortgage and obviously knew of the pledge of the stock. She had a right to dispose of this property in this way, and those who succeed to her rights in the stock and to the title to the lands receive what they get subject to such charge and disposition as she in her lifetime had made of them, respectively. The rights of her husband are to take the ownership of the stock subject to the pledge; the rights of her heirs-at-law are to take the ownership of the land subject to the mortgage and with the benefit of whatever contract touching the payment of the mortgage debt was outstanding and existent at the time of the death of the deceased. "What is claimed by the defendant is the right, by the plan indicated in the bill (the purpose to carry which into effect is substantially admitted in the answer), to take away from the complainants the benefit of the bargain made by the decedent in her lifetime, by which the stock stood primarily pledged for the payment of the mortgage debt.

The principle controlling this case has been established in New Jersey in the court of errors in the case of Herbert v. Mechanics’ Building and Loan Association, 2 C. E. Gr. 497, where a member of a building association had secured a loan by mortgage, and also by the assignment of ten shares of the stock, and subsequently conveyed the premises; judgments were afterwards recovered against the mortgagor, and the ten shares of stock-were levied on. The court held that the equity which the *455grantee of the mortgage had acquired as against the mortgagor and the association, to have the assets so marshaled that the debt due the association should be paid primarily out of the shares of stock, was not impaired or affected by the intervention of the judgment creditors; and it further held that the rights of the creditor who is entitled to have the assets of the debtor marshaled is absolute against the debtor himself, and cannot be taken away by the action of subsequent creditors. The superior equity supported in the case cited was that of a grantee to have a mortgage subject to which he bought first satisfied out of shares of stock pledged with the mortgage as collateral security for the mortgage debt. The right was sustained against creditors of the pledgor who had acquired a lien. In the case in hand the heirs-at-law insist upon their right as against the administrator or surviving husband of the intestate who made the pledge. In principle the equities in the case cited and that, under consideration are the same. The lien of the creditors' levy, in the case cited, gave them no more and no less rights than were outstanding in the pledgor, and the interest which the administrator took from his decedent pledgor, in the case now under consideration, was that which she held at the time of her death. The administrator or executor takes subject to charges created by the pledgor decedent in his lifetime (Glaholm v. Rowntree, 6 Ad. & E. *710), where the point was fully discussed in the king’s bench on the question of the liability of executors to account for assets pledged by the testator. In Phillipsburgh Building Association v. Hawh, 12 C. E. Gr. 355, stock pledged to secure a first mortgage was, as between the association and a second mortgage, applied to pay the first mortgage, before recourse was had to the land, and the levy of an execution against the pledgor’s interest did not bar this equity. So in Sherron v. Acton, Assignee, in this court — opinion filed January 6th, 1890, not reported — the same equity was supported in favor of a second mortgage, against an assignee for benefit of creditors.

But, accepting the right of the husband under an administration to take, Jure mariti, the personal estate of his deceased intestate wife, he must apply these assets to the satisfaction of his *456wife’s debts, and he can take only the surplusage. What he gets on her death intestate, leaving assets, is a right to take her personal estate with a liability to account only to creditors. Heard v. Stamford, 3 P. Wms. *410; Kent Com. *145.

Even if there were not special pledge of this stock to pay the building association debt, it must be applied as a part of the intestate’s personal property to pay her debts, of which the bond to the association is one. The personal estate of the decedent is the primary fund for the payment of debts. This is the common-law rule, and in our state it has been frequently enforced. The heir-at-law has enforced it against the executor. Keene v. Munn, 1 C. E. Gr. 398; Krueger v. Ferry, 14 Stew. Eq. 432.

The answer of the defendant admits that it is his purpose, and he claims his right, to procure the mortgage upon the complainant’s property to be so transferred that the stock pledged for the payment of the same debt may be released, and thus to defeat the pledge of the stock made by the decedent, and make the land, and not the personal property, the primary fund out of which the debt of the decedent must be paid.

I will advise that the defendants be enjoined from this course, in accordance with the prayer of the complainant’s bill.