42 N.J. Eq. 348 | N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. | 1886
The Ordinary.
Letters of administration upon the estate of Zachariah Z. Smith, deceased, were issued, on the 14th of October, 1884, by the surrogate of Morris county, to Richard H. Stephens and Stephen Babbitt. An order requiring creditors to bring in their claims within nine months was made on the same day. On the 9th of January, 1885, and within the time so limited, Lemuel E. Crater, Jr., duly presented his claim against the estate upon oath. The claim was based upon a bond made and given by the intestate to him. To secure the payment of the bond, the intestate gave him a mortgage, dated April 11th, 1882, made by the former upon real estate of his, which mortgage the appellant held when he so presented his claim. On the 3d of August, 1885, an order barring creditors was made. On January 25th, 1886, notice was given by the administrators that the report of claims and of the amount of the personal and real estate would be made on the 5th of April then next, and that an application would be then made to declare the estate insolvent. The report of claims was made, and exception was taken, March 30th, 1886, by the respondent, a creditor, to the claim of the appellant, upon the ground that the mortgage had been foreclosed since the death of the intestate, and the premises sold, upon the 22d of August, 1885, for $3,500, and that no suit was brought upon the bond to recover the deficiency within six months from that time, nor at any other time, so that (it was insisted) thus the equity of redemption in the mortgaged premises was extinguished, and the appellant had accepted the property in satisfaction of the debt. The orphans court, by their order, sustained the exception and disallowed the claim. From that order the appeal was taken.
The exception was based upon the provisions of the act of 1881, “ to amend an act entitled ‘An act concerning proceedings on bonds and mortgages given for the same indebtedness, and the foreclosure and sale of mortgaged premises thereunder,' ap
The object of the act was to compel the creditor holding a bond secured by mortgage, to look first to the mortgaged premises for payment, and to limit his time for suing upon the bond for deficiency to six months from the time of the sale, and to give to the bond debtor a right to redeem the property in case the creditor should recover judgment for the deficiency. The appellant had a right to present his claim under the order limiting creditors. Had he not done so, he would have been barred from recovering it against the administrators, and he could not have brought suit against the administrators upon it. The act of 1881, while it prohibited him from bringing suit upon the bond until sale under foreclosure of the mortgage should have taken place, did not prohibit him from presenting his claim