The complainant brings this suit to obtain relief from a fraudulent transaction, by which he was induced to accept from the •defendants Handvil and wife a conveyance of mortgaged premises in satisfaction of the mortgage, and to deliver up the mortgage to them. Between the time of conveyance and the time of executing the deeds in pursuance thereof, the Handvils put upon part of the premises a mortgage to the defendant Amanda Brennon for $4,500, of which the complainant had no knowledge or information, and the existence whereof the Handvils concealed from him. Had he been aware that that mortgage had been given, he would have refused to carry out the agreement.
On the 24th of November, 1876, the complainant conveyed his farm, in the township of Chester, in Morris county, to Mrs. Handvil, for the consideration of $7,000. She paid nothing, but gave him a mortgage for the purchase-money upon the
From August, 1879, to April, 1880, the house was rented for fifty cents a week, and the shop was unoccupied until February, 1880. From May, 1879, to June, 1884, the rents for both house and shop did not exceed $9 a month, and for 1880 and 1881 they were only $6 or $7 a month. In December, 1879, after he had discovered the existence of the $4,500 mortgage, the complainant Avrote to Handvil saying that if the latter would give him $1,000 he Avould giA^e him a deed for the property and give him the notes, and added, “ LaAVSuits cost money and I have no money to spend, but if you don’t do this I shall commence a suit against you.” Notwithstanding the testimony of the Handvils to the contrary, the proof is that the complainant has had possession of the property from the time of giving the
