19 N.J. Eq. 549 | N.J. | 1868
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The respondent (the complainant below) filed her bill in the Court of Chancery, to obtain a conveyance to her by the defendant of three several lots of land, situate in the county
The facts Of the Case are briefly these: At the death of the said Hannah Tuttle, certain lands and real estate, whereof she died seized, descended to her children and heirs-at-law, Daniel t. Tüttle; Jane C. Anderson, wife of John 0. Anderson, and the complainant, who was then the wife of Adolphus Stewart. Aftet the death of Mrs. Tuttle, the estate of Daniel L. Tuttle* in the lands whereof his mother died seized, was Sold under aU execution on á judgment against him, and was purchased at sheriff’s sale by One John S. Smith, who, subsequently; made application to a justice of the Supreme Court for the appointment Of commissioners to make partition ; and such proceedings were thereupon had, that the 'commissioners Wehe directed to make sale of a portion of said lands.
At the sale, the three lots in question in this suit were struck off and sold to Cutler; the appellant.
The bill charges that the defendant, prior to the commencement of the proceedings for paftitidn, hud been the legal adviser of the complainant; and that he acted as her attorney in the said proceedings fdr partition; áhd that she confided her interests in the same to hi's care and management; and that the purchase of the three lots of land in question at the Commissioner’s sale, was made by the defehdaht for the complainant’s use and benefit; and that the consideration money paid by him to the commissioners for the conveyance, was paid with the moneys that belonged to the complainant, the deeds being made to the defendant, becaUse the complainant was then a married woman, upon the understanding that he should hold the same as trustee for the complainant, until she should be divorced from heh hüsbafld, and that he should then convey to her in fee simple.
. The defendant, in his answer, does not claim to hold the
Aside from the question of proper parties to this suit, the only question discussed by counsel was, whether the defendant holds the title in trust for the complainant and Daniel L. Tuttle jointly, or for the complainant alope.
The defence is in the patpre of an interpleader, and involves a questiop between persons, one of whom is not a party to this suit. That question is distinctly presented in the defendant’s apswer, and is the sole point to which the testimony in the cause was directed- It is also referred to in the complainapt’s bill as the questiqp upon the determination of which her right to relief would prqhably depend. In the decision of the question upon which this suit must hinge, Daniel L. Tuttle’s rights ape involved, and must be passed upon by the court. His interests, tp a certain extent, are also liable to be affected by the depree made in this suit. A decree of this court, directipg a conveyance by his trustee of the entire estate to his alleged po-cesfui que trust, leaving him only his remedy in personam agaipst the trustee, or by
It is not, however, an insuperable obstacle in the way of proceeding to a final decree, that all persons who should be parties to enable the court to adjust and determine all conflicting interests in the subject matter, have not been made parties to the suit. Where the defendant neglects to make the objection by plea, answer, or demurrer, of the want of parties who are only necessary to protect him from further litigation, the court, in its discretion, may refuse to sustain the objection at the hearing, or to require the complainant to add new parties in that stage of the suit. Dias v. Bouchaud, 10 Paige 447.
But the rule requiring the presence before the court of all parties interested, being essential to enable the court to make that complete and final disposition of the subject matter of the controversy, at which courts of equity always aim, will not be overlooked, if the objection is taken at any stage of the cause, unless for cogent reasons. Such reasons exist in this case. The objection to the non-joinder of Daniel L-
' Passing from the question of proper parties to the consideration of the merits of the case, it is a settled principle, that where one person purchases property for a stranger, and the purchase money is paid by the stranger, or out of his funds, although the title is taken in the name of the person making the purchase, a trust results, and the land is held in trust for the party whose money is paid. This trust arises without any declaration in writing, for it is expressly excepted by the statute of frauds from the operation of that statute, and the facts, necessary to constitute such trust, may be proved by parol evidence. Johnson v. Dougherty, 3 C. E. Green 406. A similar rule prevails in cases where the consideration proceeds from two or more persons jointly. A resulting trust will arise in proportion to the amount of the consideration which they may have respectively contributed. Hill on Trustees 92.
The right of the complainant to the relief she obtained in the Court of Chancery, will depend upon whether the consideration money of the conveyance to the defendant, by the commissioners, was her money, or in part the money of Daniel L. Tuttle. The sale was made on the 20th of March, 1863. Pending the proceedings for partition, and before the day of sale, Mrs. Anderson, by two deeds of conveyance, which bear date in the month of February, 1863, granted and conveyed all her right, title, and interest in the several lots whereof partition was applied for, together with four
The aggregate amounts of the sums for which the three lots in question were sold to the defendant at the commissioners’ sale, was $2491. It was paid by him, by the delivery to the commissioners of the receipts and releases to them of the complainant and of Mrs. Anderson for their respective distributive shares of the proceeds of the sales, amounting together to the sum of $2305.82; and the balance of $185.18, was paid by the defendant out of his own funds. For so much of the sum advanced by the defendant as remains unpaid, he has a lien upon the premises, and cannot be made to convey them until he is satisfied and paid the amount still due to him with interest thereon. To the extent of the amount represented by the complainant’s own receipts to the commissioners, the defendant admits he holds the lands in trust for her benefit. By the production of the deeds of conveyance from Mrs. Anderson to her — the execution and validity of which are not disputed — the complainant establishes her right to the share of Mrs. Anderson in the proceeds of the sales, sufficient to raise a resulting trust for her benefit, to the extent of so much of the consideration as is represented by that receipt. The defendant insists that these deeds, though absolute on their faces, were in reality made to the complainant for the benefit of Daniel L. Tuttle. No declaration of trust in favor of her brother was made in writing. If he is entitled to claim the benefit of the conveyances, he must have acquired that right by reason of his having paid
There is no doubt that payment of part of the purchase money will create a resulting trust to the extent of that payment, but the amounts paid by the different parties must be shown with certainty, and a resulting trust will not be held to arise upon payments made in common, by one asserting his claim, and the grantee in the deed, when the consideration is set forth in the deed as moving solely from the latter, unless satisfactory evidence is offered, exhibiting the portion which was really the property of each, and establish
In this case, the testimony relied on is unsatisfactory as to the question, whether any, and if, so, what portion of the consideration money of the conveyance by Mrs. Anderson, was the property of Daniel IT Tuttle; and is too unreliable to justify the court in divesting a title, evidenced by a deed of conveyance, in favor of a person whose claim is rested on the uncertain foundation of parol proof.
The evidence touching the payment by Daniel L. Tuttle, of the mortgage and note given by the complainant, is equally uncertain and unreliable. It is not necessary to consider that question. Where there is a resulting trust, it must arise at the time of the execution of the deed; it cannot be raised from subsequent matter arising ex post facto. ILill on Trustees, 97; Rogers v. Murray, 3 Paige 390; Botsford v. Burr, 2 Johns. Ch. R. 405; Steere v. Steere, 5 Johns. Ch. R. 1.
The reasons assigned, on behalf of Daniel L. Tuttle, for putting the title in the complainant instead of taking the title in his own .name is, that he was then embarrassed in his circumstances and harassed.hy his creditors. If the motives which induced the conveyance to Mrs. Stewart was to cover up his property from creditors, to hinder and defeat them ip their demands, that object would deprive him of all right to haye the conveyance declared a resulting trust for his benefit. No principle of law is better settled in this state than that a conveyance, designed in fraud of creditors, is good inter paries. In this court, in Baldwin v. Campfield, 4 Halst. C. R. 891, it was held, that the implication of law, that the grantee takes a conveyance in trust for a person who furnishes the purchase money, may be rebutted by proof that the title was put in the grantee for the purpose of protecting the property from creditors of him who furnished the purchase money.