22 N.J. Eq. 471 | N.J. | 1871
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The cases cited in the opinion which the Chancellor read in this case, conclusively show that a mere defect of title is not a defence to a bill for a foreclosure of a mortgage given for the purchase money. This proposition has never, so far as I am aware, been judicially gainsayed, and, upon the argument before us, it was admitted to be the settled law.
The defence was rested on a different ground; the position being that the answer presented a fraud practiced on the defendant in the sale of this property, and that this circumstance varied this case from the class embraced within the general rule above denoted.
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I think there is no doubt that where a sale of real property is effected by deceit, and a mortgage given for the whole or a part of the - purchase money, relief in equity will be given to the party defrauded in a suit on the mortgage,
Thus far it does not appear to me that the questions involved in this case are open to any doubt.
But the really debatable point, and the one which was principally discussed on the argument, is, whether this defence of fraud can be set up in the answer, or must form the subject of a cross-bill. The defence was overruled upon exceptions to the answer, and it seems to me that this is the correct practice upon the assumption that the fraud cannot be taken advantage of by an answer, because, if as a defence it is altogether inefficacious, it is unmistakably impertinent. Everything is impertinent which can have no legal or equitable value or effect in the cause. If, then, the fraud in question could be presented on the record only in the form of a cross-bill, it was properly struck out from the answmr as being irrelevant. The question, therefore, recurs: how must the alleged fraud be pleaded? I am of the opinion that it cannot be set up as a pure defence, as has been attempted in the answer now under consideration. In proof of this view we have, I think, but to analyze this bill and answer: the bill claims the money secured by the mortgage • the answer declares that the defendant was deluded into taking an infirm title, and asks to be dismissed from the court without paying the money, or any part of it. How', it seems to me that if the effect of the fr aud would be to dispense with the payment of this money, then this pleading would be correct. But this result does not follow from the fact of fraud, and the consequence is, the defendant cannot stand on this ground. The defendant, as he is not in a situation to rescind the contract, must seek to have his damages assessed, and such other relief as the circumstances may require; and this would not be interposing a mere
This was the rule enforced in Miller v. Gregory, 1 C. E. Green 274, a case which, with respect to every essential, was similar to that now under review. It was a proceeding to foreclose a mortgage, and the defence was obtained by false and fraudulent representations whereby the defendant had been induced to purchase the mortgaged premises at a price greatly beyond their real value. This defence was overruled, Chancellor Green saying: “ It draws in question the fairness and validity of the sale made by the complainant to the defendant, and seeks to impeach the contract on which the title is founded. These matters, if available at all as a defence to this suit, can only be drawn in question by a cross-bill. The complainant is entitled to the benefit of his answer to these charges of fraud.” There can be no doubt that this case is so completely in point that it would have to be overruled if this court should adopt the doctrine that the present defence can be advanced -in the form of an answer. The decision is of the greatest weight, and if I had any doubt on the subject, I should yield implicitly to its authority. But, as I have already remarked, the rule of pleading seems to me to be unquestionably settled, and I have found no case in which fraud in a sale of land has been set up in an answer, the defendant being in the undisturbed possession of the property. Upon the argument counsel likened the case of fraud to that of an eviction where a warranty of title exists, and it was said that such eviction could be set up in the answer. But the two cases are not alike; for, on the occurrence of an eviction, the facts are of a simple character, and the right of the defendant is to have a return of the purchase money, or a deduction according to a fixed standard; but, on the contrary, fraud gives rise to a counter claim, the amount of damages being wholly unliquidated and dependent on the circumstances of the particular
The interlocutory decree appealed from should be affirmed.
Tho final decree appears, from inadvertence, to have boon irregularly entered. As tho whole of the answer was not embraced by the exceptions, it would sooni that the master’s report should not have been confirmed without a rule nisi, and that the case should also have been set down upon the argument list. And even if the answer is to he regarded as altogether suppressed, the decree was entered at too early a period, as the statute gives to tho defendant thirty days,
As the ease stands, the final decree must also be affirmed.
The affirmance in* this court of both the interlocutory and final decree, should be without prejudice to an application on the part of the appellant to the Chancellor to modify, open, or set aside either or both of said decroes, so as to reach the merits of the case.
The whole court concurred.