85 N.J. Eq. 153 | N.J. | 1915
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The important question in the case is whether the conveyance by VanBuskirk to the complainant conveyed a good title to the whole tract, including the seventeen undivided one-hundredths (17/100) conveyed by various grantors to Plass in 1891, and by Plass to Packard in 1913. The complainant at different stages in the case has relied on three inconsistent theories to sustain VanBuskirk’s title—(1) that the title acquired from his ancestor never passed out of him; (2) that he acquired title after 1881 by adverse possession; (3) that he had a perfect title as mortgagee in possession by lapse of time.
1. The replication sets up that the deed from Edward VanBuskirk to his numerous grantees, who may be called the liquor dealers, was fictitious, and that John VanBuskirk continued in possession as owner and mortgagee. If, in fact, the deed from Edward to the liquor dealers was fictitious, that could not affect the validity of the deed from' John to Edward, and as Edward never reconveyed to John, the advisory master could not be jus
2. He fails to establish either that he had possession or that it was adverse. Ordinarily, the legal title draws to it the possession, and the burden is upon him who asserts an actual possession against the legal title to prove it. The tract in question was two acres of salt meadow. ' The possession relied on was the occasional cutting of salt hay. John himself testified and reiterated that the cutting was between Avenue H and Avenue I, in Bayonne. The tract in question lies between Avenue G and Avenue H. His counsel, after the testimony above mentioned, put this question: “Is it not a fact that it was between G and H, as those avenues are laid down on the map,” and he answered, “I think you are right about that. I have not looked at the map for a good while.” Aside from the impropriety of so leading a question upon a vital point, the answer is of no value; looking at the map could not help him in recollecting where the actual cutting was.
The witness Levine did not help. He said he had been cutting some “until the time the Standard took it” (evidently meaning the Standard Oil Company); what the Standard Oil Company took was not the liquor dealers’ lot, but VanBuskirk’s homestead. He also said that the liquor dealers’ plot was far away from Packard’s Digging, while, in fact, Packard’s Digging was in part on the tract. Banbury did testify to some cutting of grass, but he was very indefinite both as to the place and the time. He seems to have thought that he cut all over VanBuskirk’s land
If, however, possession, in fact, bj John YanBuskirk, had been proved, the complainant would be met by a legal difficulty. The contention throughout was, as the master found the fact to he, that John continued to retain the possession and to occupy the land as he had always occupied it. He was, then, after the deed to Edward and before default in the mortgage, a grantor in possession. Under our law, the mortgage was a mere security until default. Sanderson v. Price, 21 N. J. Law 646, note. This has long been regarded as settled law. Shields v. Lozear, 34 N. J. Law 496, 501; Woodside v. Adams, 40 N. J. Law 417, 422. There was no default in the mortgage for at least six months; the complainant himself avers in his replication that the interest payment became due six months after the date of the mortgage and was paid by Edward, the mortgagor; that no interest has been paid since and that the mortgage is due. Until default whatever possession John held could not have been in his own right. If lie held at all he held in trust for his grantee, Edward, or for Edward’s grantees. He was estopped to deny his own deed, and his possession was the grantee’s possession. Van Keuren v. Central Railroad Co., 38 N. J. Law 165; Bingham v. Kirkland, 34 N. J. Eq. 229 (at p. 236); Rankin v. Coar, 46 N. J. Eq. 566 (at p. 571). Since such possession as he held was in trust for his grantee, and he was estopped by his deed, his possession could not become adverse to the grantee’s cestids que trust, unless John repudiated the trust and assumed an adverse position with notice to the grantees. Such is the well-settled rule as between parties and cestui que trust. Perry Trusts § 863; 1 Lew. Trusts 285. The rule has been applied to cases where the grantor remains in possession of land. Buckholder v. Sigler, 7 Watts & S. 154; Olwine v. Holman, 23 Pa. St. 279; Ingles v. Ingles, 24 Atl. Rep. 677; Schwalbach v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co., 40 N. W. Rep. 579; Riha v. Pelnar, 57 N. W. Rep. 51.
3. The third tlieoiy of the complainant’s case is that John VanBuskirk was a mortgagee in possession for so long a time that the equity of redemption is barred by the statute of limitations. Section 18 (Comp. Stat. p. 3170) enacts that if a mortgagee and those under him be in possession of the lands, tenements and hereditaments contained in the mortgage, or any part thereof, for twenty years after default in pajcment by the mortgagor, then the right of equity of redemption therein shall be forever barred. We see no reason to doubt the construction heretofore put upon, this section in the court of chancery. Chapin v. Wright, 41 N. J. Eq. 438. Under that construction, if the mortgagee has possession for twenty years, his title becomes absolute. The question for us is whether the case shows such possession. If we look at it purely as a question of qvidence, it is clear that John VanBuskirk himself never treated his claim under the mortgage as a title that had become absolute by the barring of the mortgagor’s equity of redemption. A mortgage is a deed with a defeasance clause, and unless the terms of the defeasance were strictly performed, the estate of the mortgagee would be-' come absolute upon default but for the relief afforded by equity under the name of “equity of redemption.” When the equity of redemption is once barred, the title under the mortgage deed becomes absolute, and like the title under any other deed. That title is inconsistent with the continued existence of the mortgage as a mere security. John VanBuskirk, however, was so far from treating his title under the mortgage as absolute that he was studious, almost meticulous, to keep the mortgage alive as a subsisting lien. He conveyed to the complainant subject to the mortgage; he assigned the mortgage as a subsisting security,
The necessary result is that the decree adjudging the title to the whole of the land to be in the complainant must be reversed. It does not follow that the title to the undivided seven
The result is that as the complainant has established no title, and the title of the defendants may possibly still be subject to the mortgage, the present bill should be dismissed, with costs.