30 N.J.L. 131 | N.J. | 1862
The question raised by this demurrer is, whether the defendant is absolutely bound by the bond which he executed as trustee to pay the amount mentioned in a bond and mortgage, assigned to him as such trustee, at all events, or only such moneys as he might receive and collect thereon without default on his part.
The condition of the bond recited that the defendant held a bond and mortgage, given by John A. Staats and Anne his
The declaration does not aver that he ever received or might have received the money on the bond and mortgage, or any part of it, and avers the death of Mary Staats soon after, before any part of the money had been appropriated for her, and the nonpayment of money to the assignee of James B. Staats.
The plea demurred to alleges the appropriation of the money, so far as was necessary, for Mary Staats; that after her death there was no residue of the money mentioned in the mortgage as remaining in the defendant’s hands, all that had been or could be collected-having been appropriated for Mary Staats’ use or her funeral expenses; and that the defendant had not, and never had any residue of the moneys secured by the bond remaining in his hands.
Upon the pleadings, it is admitted that all that had been or could be collected on the bond and mortgage had been appropriated to the support of Mary Staats and to the payment of her funeral expenses; and that the defendant had not, and never had any residue of the moneys secured by the bond in his hands.
The bond binds defendant, in substance and effect, to appropriate a bond and mortgage, held by him as trustee, to the support and funeral expenses of Mary Staats, and to pay the residue that might remain in his hands to James B. Staats, his heirs and assigns.
It is not a bond to appropriate the sum of $333.33 in consideration of his holding the bond and mortgage as trustee, but to appropriate the bond and mortgage: that could not be doné unless it was collected and received; -lie held the bond and mortgage as trustee, not the money. If the bond and
There is an implied covenant to collect the money, if possible, on the bond and mortgage, and apply it to the purposes «of the trust. That is implied by the word appropriate.
As it appears by the record that the money was never collected, and never could be, and that without any default of the trustee, there must be judgment for the defendant.
This was an action of debt.' The declaration alleges, that whereas the defendant, on the 31st of October, 1860, by a certain bond, did recite and witness that he held a bond and mortgage, given by John A. Staats, on a farm in Bridgewater, to secure the sum of $333.33, with interest thereon, as trustee, to be appropriated by the defendant to the support of one Mary Staats, so far as it might be necessary during her natural life, and to the payment of her funeral expenses, and that he, the defendant, by the said bond, promised to pay the residue that might remain in his •bauds to the plaintiff within one year after the decease of said Mary, and avers that Mary Staats died on 14th February, 1861, before the said defendant had expended any part of the $333.33 for the support of the said Mary.
To this the defendant has pleaded, in substance, that before this suit was brought the premises on which the mortgage was, had been sold by prior encumbrancers, and did not bring enough to pay them off, and that he has realized nothing, and can realize nothing from said bond and mortgage.
To this the plaintiff has demurred. Whenever there is a demurrer to a plea, we may inquire if the declaration discloses a legal cause of action. In this case I think it does not. It merely shows that the defendant held a bond and mortgage upon certain trusts. There is nothing to show that he intended to make himself personally liable for the amount of money secured by the mortgage, but only that he would perform the trusts; that he would appropriate so mud) of the mortgage as he should receive or realize — first,
The language of the bond is “ pay the residue that might remain in his hands to the plaintiff,” not pay the whole-money secured by the mortgage, but the residue that might remain in his hands. If none could be collected on the mortgage nothing remained. In order to have made the declaration good, it should have averred that the defendant had either collected the money on the bond and mortgage, or by due diligence might have collected the same.
But whether the declaration be good or not, the plea and the notice clearly raise a good defence. It is not the intention of the instrument that the defendant should be absolutely liable for the money secured by the bond and mortgage.
The demurrer should be overruled.
I do not think the plea demurred to in this case is double, within the legal meaning of that term,, to the extent of making it bad. The latter part of the plea, which is supposed to give it a double aspect, does not raise-any new matter, but is a kind of repetition of what is before stated. The plea is good, I think, without it, and it may be rejected as surplusage.
The plea avers that, before the commencement of the suit,, the defendant had appropriated all the money that had been, or that could have been, or that can be collected on the bond, and mortgage referred to, to the support of the said Mary Staats and to the payment of her funeral expenses. If he-did this, I think it should operate as a defence to this suit.
The defendant held these papers as a mere trustee, and the paper on Avhich the action is brought is but a declaration) of trust showing Iioav the moneys supposed to be secured by the bond and mortgage Avere to be used and paid by him • and although the language of the latter clause of that instrument is strong, binding himself by an express promise
I think, therefore, the plea is good, and the demurrer should, bo overruled.
J udgment for defendant.