60 N.J. Eq. 474 | N.J. | 1900
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Prom the pleadings and proofs may be gathered the following facts: Joshua Norton devised his homestead farm in Monmouth- county to his son John and his daughter Mary Ann, who married Charles I. Wyckoff. In 1882, soon after the father’s death, Mrs. Wyckoff, with her husband, conveyed to John Norton her interest in the farm,'and, for part of the purchase-money, accepted his bond, secured by mortgage on the farm which was thereafter his homestead. John Norton never mar
On December 30th, 1899, Mrs. Wyckoff exhibited her bill against Lindsay and Frank Norton and their wives wherein she sets up the existence and origin of her bond and mortgage, and then avers as follows:
“6. That said John Norton was an unmarried man, and died on or about the thirteenth day of December, in the year eighteen hundred and ninety-six, having first made, published and declared, in due form of law, his last will and testament, bearing date the tenth day of December, in the year eighteen hundred and ninety-six, which will, after his decease, was duly admitted to probate by the Surrogate of the County of Monmouth, and duly recorded in his office; that at the time of the execution of his will John Norton was sick and confined to his house; that he was a single man and that your oratrix had for many years then last past been his housekeeper; that a few days prior to the date when he executed his last will, your oratrix being unable to give the exact time, the said John Norton informed your oratrix that he was contemplating the making of a will, and asked your oratrix whether she would consent to the cancellation of the mortgage which she then held upon his farm, and which is herein-above described, and accept in lieu thereof the promissory note of the said John Norton, and that your oratrix, knowing that the estate of the said John Norton was abundantly sufficient to pay all his obligations, and being unwilling on account of his severe and critical sickness to discuss the matter with him, assented to his proposition, and agreed to accept his promissory note for the sum of four thousand dollars in lieu of the said bond and mortgage and to surrender the said bond and mortgage, to the end that the said mortgage might be canceled of record; that on the date of the execution of said will, to wit, on the tenth day of December, in the year eighteen hundred and ninety-six, one Samuel M. Schenck, a practicing lawyer of the borough of Hightstown, in the county of Mercer, and State of New Jersey, visited the house of the said John Norton and engaged himself, at the request of said John Norton, in drafting his will, which after being drafted, was executed by said John Norton; that immediately after the execution of said will, and while the said Samuel M. Schenck was still in the house of said John. Norton, the said John Norton requested your oratrix, in the presence of said Samuel M. Schenck, to get the bond and mortgage which your oratrix then held, being the same bond and mortgage in this bill of complaint above described, and deliver them*481 to the said Samuel- M. Schenck, that he might have the said mortgage canceled of record; that your oratrix thereupon immediately complied with said request, and that said John Norton again promised your oratrix that he would give her his promissory note for the bond and mortgage so surrendered, but that the said John Norton was then so weak and exhausted from the work and excitement incident to the making and execution of his will that your oratrix did not then request the execution of said promissory note, and that, before the execution of said promissory note, the said John Norton died.
“7. That neither the principal of said bond and mortgage nor any part of said principal was ever paid to your oratrix by the said John Norton, or by anyone for him during his lifetime, nor by his representatives since his death, and that there is due to your oratrix the full amount of the said principal sum of four thousand dollars, together with interest thereon from the said tenth day of December, in the year eighteen hundred and ninety-six, being the date when the said bond and mortgage were surrendered by your oratrix as aforesaid.”
The hill then sets forth the tenor of John Norton’s will as to the devise of the homestead farm, and prays that the complainant’s mortgage may be decreed to be a valid and subsisting lien upon the lands therein described, and that the cancellation of the record thereof may be annulled and made void; or that she may be decreed to have a vendor’s lien on the said lands for $4,000, and interest from December 10th, 1896, and that such lands may be ordered sold to satisfy the sum due, with costs, and for other relief. To this bill Lindsay (by the name of Lindsay D.) Norton alone answers. He denies the alleged promise to give a note .and asserts that the mortgage was paid and satisfied by John Norton.
Samuel M. Schanck died in January, 1899. Mr. Niverson knows nothing of the transaction in question and the only proof of a promise by John Norton to give his note to complainant was by her own testimony.
Erom a decree in complainant’s favor Lindsay D. Norton has appealed.
The suggestion of a vendor’s lien was very properly disregarded by the learned vice-chancellor. The acceptance of John Norton’s bond and his mortgage on the whole estate irrevocably merged the lien that might have been asserted on the interest conveyed. Brown v. Gilman, 4 Wheat. 255; Dudley v. Dickson, 1 McCart. 252.
But waiving all this and assuming that the finding of the vice-chancellor, that the alleged promise of John Norton to give to complainant his note was in fact made, is sufficiently supported by the complainant’s testimony, the decree advised by him was nevertheless unwarranted. The complainant voluntarily surrendered her lien and agreed to rely solely on her brother’s personal engagement. To restore the lien would disarrange the brother’s testamentary scheme with which she was acquainted. The will is even more favorable to her than were his declarations to her as she gave them in her testimony. There was no fraud or mistake in the cancellation of the mortgage. Death overtook John Norton before he could keep the promise, on the faith of
The decree should be reversed and the bill be dismissed, with costs.
For reversal — The Chancellor, Chiee-Justioe, Van Syokel, Dixon, Collins, Adams, Voorhees — -7.
For affirmance — Lippincott, Gummere, Ludlow, Bogert, Hendrickson, Vredenburgh — 6.