41 N.J. Eq. 432 | New York Court of Chancery | 1886
This suit is brought to foreclose a mortgage made by John Laible, and Johanna, his wife, to William Ortland, bearing date July 2d, 1860. The mortgage embraces a tract of land situate in the city of Fewark, and was given to secure the payment of $3,500, with interest, at the end of a year from its date. The complainant obtained title to the mortgage, by assignment, on the 4th of March, 1881. He was at that time in possession of the mortgaged premises. John Laible, the mortgagor, died tes
The decree finally made in the suit adjudged the mortgaged premises now sought to be condemned to sale for the payment of the complainant’s mortgage, to be a part of the trade property, and directed that they should be sold for the payment of the trade debts. They were sold, under that decree, to the defendants on the 1st of March, 1881, and the defendants thus acquired an interest in the mortgaged premises which made them necessary parties to this suit.
The defendants have answered the complainant’s bill. They admit the due execution of the .mortgage on which the complainant’s bill is founded, and say that it may be true that he is now the owner of the mortgage, but require him to prove his title. They also say that they have never had possession of the mortgaged premises, but that the premises were in possession of the complainant at the time they acquired their title to them, and have remained in his possession ever since, and that if he is the owner of the mortgage in question, he is a mortgagee in possession of the mortgaged premises, and as such is bound to account for their rental value.
The defendants, by their cross-bill, make three distinct claims to relief: First, they say that the complainant, being a mortgagee in possession, must account for the rental value of the mortgaged premises. Second, they say that John Laible died possessed of a large personal estate, sufficient to pay all his debts, including that of the complainant, and also seized of several tracts of land, which he empowered his executors to sell, and some of which they still hold, unsold, and that inasmuch as there is a large balance still due to them on the decree which they obtained as creditors of the post mortem business, and that as the personal estate of a decedent is, by law, the primary fund for the payment of his debts, and that inasmuch, also, as their debt was contracted pursuant to the direction of John Laible, and to enable his executors to carry out his principal testamentary scheme, their position, in this litigation, is invested with such strong and extraordinary equities, that the court should, before condemning their property to sale for the payment of the complainant’s debt, exhaust all other possible means of satisfying that debt, even if it should be necessary to go to the extent of compelling the executors to make good any loss which John Laible’s estate has sustained in consequence of their wrongful acts or omissions. And, third, they say that the complainant, in December, 1874, procured a large amount of the personal property- embarked in the post mortem business, and which stood liable in equity for the payment of the trade debts, to be seized and sold under a judgment which he had previously recovered against Johanna Laible, who held possession of such property as one of the executors of John Laible, and also as one of the managers of the post mortem business, and at such sale purchased the property himself, and afterwards took possession of it and applied it to his own use; and thus, the defendants say, the complainant, without right or warrant of law, obtained over $9,000 worth of property, which should, in equity, have been applied to the payment of the trade debts. The defendants claim that
The defendants’ right to have the complainant to account for the rental value of the mortgaged premises, during the time he .has been in possession of them under his mortgage, is a pure matter of defence, and, like other pure defences, should be interposed by answer. They have set it up in their answer, and as they can have the full benefit of it under that pleading, a cross-bill is both useless and irregular.
The other claims to relief made by the cross-bill are, in my judgment, so entirely foreign to the cause of action upon which the complainant rests his right to relief, that the court must, both for considerations of justice and convenience, deny the defendants’ right to litigate them in this suit.
Whether a cross-bill is filed for the purpose of enabling a defendant to make a defence more complete and effectual than he would be permitted to make if he stood on an answer alone, or for the purpose of enabling the court to do more complete justice to all parties, in respect to the matter put in litigation by the ■original bill, the rule is imperative that the new facts sought to be introduced by it must be so directly and closely connected with the cause of action set up in the original bill as to render ■the cross-suit a mere auxiliary of the original suit, or a graft or dependency upon it. “ A cross-bill,” says Cooper, “ ex vi terminorum, implies a bill brought by a defendant in a suit against the ■plaintiff respecting the matter in question in that bill; and it is a weapon of defence in such case. But sometimes it is brought against the codefi-ndants in such depending suit, where they have
And Mitford says that where a cross-bill is not filed as a means of defence, it is “ a proceeding to procure a complete determination of a matter already in litigation.” Mitf. Eq. Pl. 76.
The new facts which it is proper for a defendant to introduce into a pending litigation, by means of a cross-bill, are such, and such only, as it is necessary for the court to have before it in deciding the questions raised in the original suit, to enable it to do-full and complete justice to all the parties before it in respect to the cause of action on which the complainant rests his right to-aid or relief. If a defendant, in filing a cross-bill, attempts to-go beyond this, and to introduce new and distinct matter, not essential to the proper determination of the matter put in litigation by the original bill, although he may show a perfect case against either the complainant, or one or more of his codefendants, his pleading will not be a cross-bill, but an original bill. Ayers v. Carver, 17 How. (U. S.) 591; Cross v. DeValle, 1 Wall. 1; Rubber Co. v. Goodyear, 9 Wall. 807; Galatian v. Erwin, Hopk. 48, 8 Cow. 361.
The chancellor, in Carpenter v. Gray, 10 Stew. Eq. 389, held that a cross-bill must be confined to the matter contained in the original bill, and that if a defendant attempts, by cross-bill, toengraft, on the litigation introduced by the complainant’s bill, questions not necessary to the proper determination of the complainant’s right to relief, his cross-bill must be dismissed.
It is obvious, I think, that, if we try the pleading under consideration by these rules, it must be held to have been improperly filed, and should therefore be dismissed.
But I think this pleading is subject to a more formidable objection than that urged against it by the counsel of the complainant. According to my view, it presents no ground upon which any relief whatever can be given to the defendants. The defendants are creditors of the post mortem business, and, as such, have a very limited remedy. They must look alone to the prop
It is undoubtedly true that the personal estate of a decedent is the primary fund for the payment of his debts, and that an ■heir-at-law, or devisee, or widow, has a right to call upon the .administrator or executor of the decedent to exonerate his land from a mortgage debt existing thereon, for which the d.ecedent- is personally liable, by paying the same out of the personal estate, but this right belongs alone to the three classes of persons just .mentioned. An alienee or mortgagee of' an heir or devisee has ,no such right. Keene v. Munn, 1 C. E. Gr. 398; 2 Washb. on Real Prop. 566.
It would seem, therefore, to be entirely clear that the defendants are without the least right in equity to have the complainant’s debt cast upon the testator’s general estate.
The defendants also say that the complainant, in 1874, over eleven years ago, wrongfully possessed himself oí' over $9,000 ■of the trade property, and thus converted to his own use assets
The cross-bill must be dismissed, with costs.