Den ex dem. Hetfield v. Jaques
Den ex dem. Hetfield v. Jaques
Opinion of the Court
The premises which the plaintiff seeks to recover in this cause, are three undivided ninth parts of a farm of about eighty acres of land, in the county of Middle-sex, of which John O. Jaques was seized and possessed at the time of his decease intestate in the year 1816.
By virtue of this deed he seeks to recover, the three-ninth parts of the farm, the premises in controversy.
The defendant alleges that the plaintiff ought not to recover, because at the time of the sale by the sheriff, and of the judgments which are supposed to have authorised it, the title to the three undivided parts was incontrovertibly vested in him; and in the following manner : On the 8th of September, 1818, after by the decease of John O. Jaques» intestate, the inheritance descended to his heirs at law, one of them Thomas F. R. Jaques, in consideration of $825, conveyed one-ninth part, being his share to John D. Jaques. On the 8th of May, 1820, Samuel Jaques, another of the heirs, in consideration of $600 conveyed another ninth part to the said John D. Jaques. On the 9th of July, 1821, the said John D. Jaques mortgaged, the ninth part which came to him by descent, and the two ninth parts which he held by purchase to the defendant to secure the payment of a bond for $1000. In November term, 1822, judgment in this court was obtained by the executors of Joseph Shotwell against the said John D. Jaques, surviving administrator of John O. Jaques, on a devastavit, founded on the above mentioned judgment of February term, 1821. Execution of fieri facias de bonis et terns was issued, was levied on three undivided ninth parts of the above mentioned farm described as “ late the property of John O. Jaques, deceased,” and was returned to February term, 1823. On the 9th of June, 1823, a sale was made, and on the 27th of July, 1824, a deed was executed by the sheriff to the defendant for the three ninth parts among other lauds.
And thus, as the defendant insists,' a title is shewn in him, paramount to the title of the plaintiff.
According to the common law, if lands descended to an heir, were bona fide aliened by him before the commencement of an action against him for a debt of his ancestor, the lands were not liable to be taken in execution. Nor was the debt then recoverable at law against the heir himself-By such alienation both the heir and the lands were placed at law out of the reach of the creditor. If however the alienation was not bona fide, or was made after the commencement of the suit, or after the original purchased, as the older books express it, the lands were chargeable and might be taken in execution under the judgment against the heir. Co. Lit. 102, a; 3 Bac. Abr. tit.; Heir and Ancestor 26. This hardship on the creditor of the ancestor was remedied in England by the statute of 3d and 4th Wm. and Mary, C. 14. The heir was made liable, to the value of the lands descended, if he aliened them, even in good faith, before the commencement of the suit. The lands, as before, remained liable if aliened mala fide or after the writ was sued out against the heir. In the revision of our laws, by Judge Patterson, this statute of Wm. and Mary was adopted in very nearly the words of the original. The second section, Patt. 243, Rev. Laws 291, directs that "execution shall be taken out upon any judgment so obtained against such heir or heirs to the value of the said lands, tenements or hereditaments as if the same were his, her or their own proper debt; but the lands, tenements and hereditaments which were bona fide aliened, before the action brought, shall not be liable to such execution.”
From a view of this statute it is seen, then, that the question proposed will depend on the solution of another. Were the premises in question bona fide aliened by the heirs to whom- they descended, before the action by the executors of Shotwell was brought against them ?
From the view of the facts which I have presented, it will be noticed that at the commencement of the suit against John D. Jaques and others, as heirs, he held the three shares now in question, subject to the mortgage he had made to the defendant, one by descent from his father, the others by purchase from his co-heirs. For the sake of clearness and order, it will be proper to keep distinct the shares he held by purchase from that he took by descent.
And first, of the two shares he purchased from his brothers : It has been shewn that lands aliened bona fide, prior to the commencement of a suit, are not liable to the execution which may be obtained in such suit against the heirs. Now it is a point of no difference to whom the alienation, if bona fide, is made, whether to a stranger or to one of the heirs. The pivot is alienation in good faith. These two shares, subject to the mortgage made to the defendant were, at the commencement of the suit, held by John D. Jaques, not by descent or as heir of his father, but as alienee of his co-heirs. Was the alienation to him in good faith? I find, in the state of the case, no evidence to the contrary. The facts relied op are, that the property
On the 9th day of J uly, 1821, John I). Jaques, as is set forth in the state of the case, mortgaged to the defendant Moses Jaques, to secure .the payment of a bond of $1000 from the former to the latter, all his interest in the farm, being the two-ninths he held by purchase already considered, and the one-ninth ho held by descent. The latter remains to be examined.
In the term of November, 1822, judgment was obtained in this court by the executors of Shotwell against John D. Jaques. On the 9th of J une, 1823, a sale was made by the sheriff under an execution issued on that judgment; and on the 27th July, 1824, a deed was executed by the sheriff to the present defendant. By this sale and conveyance, the equity of redemption of John D. Jaques, in the throe-ninth parts, became vested in the defendant, subject, however, to such right, if any, as the commencement previous to the sale of the action against the heirs, might have created in the one-ninth part which John D. Jaques then held by descent ; for in the language of Chancellor Williamson, the lien of the creditors attached upon the lands descended by the institution of the action against the heirs.
But as the mortgage from John D. Jaques to the defendant, was made long prior to the commencement of the action against the heirs, if that was an alienation in good faith, within the meaning of the act of the legislature heretofore mentioned, it will afford a legal protection to the defendant, from any recovery in the present action. First, then, to examine the question of good faith. The bond from John D. Jaques to the defendant, exhibiting a debt duo from the former to the latter, is a part of the state of the case, and
By means of the sheriff’s deed, so far forth as it may extend, and by means -of the mortgage, the defendant has shewn a valid, legal, and effectual defence against the present action.
But it is farther insisted, that as the defendant in June, 1823, pending the action against the heirs became by purchase the real owner of the demand against them, and after-wards judgment being obtained, caused, for his benefit, the sale to be made, under which the lessor of the plaintiff claims, he cannot be permitted to say that by the sale no title was obtained to the three-ninth parts which are in controversy. It is not, however, proved, nor even alleged, that the defendant used any fraudulent suppression or conceal-
Drake, J. The history of the claim of Moses Jaques, the defendant, is briefly this, that in 1820, about four years after the death of John O. Jaques, from whom the premises in question descended, John D. Jaques, one of the heirs at law, and then owner of three shares of these premises, executed to the said Moses Jaques a mortgage thereon, to secure the payment of one thousand dollars. After which, finding the executors of Shotwell prosecuting for a debt due to them by the deceased, he purchased that debt and pursued the legal remedies for the recovery of it; first stripping John D. Jaques of all his remaining interest in the said lands, and then pursuing the residue of the estate in the hands of the heirs at law, until finally, at the sheriff’s sale when the lessor of the plaintiff became the purchaser, he obtained his money.
There is no pretence that the mortgage was not for a full consideration, or that the claim of the executors of Shot-well was not just. And if they were not objectionable, I cannot discover any fraud in the conduct of Moses Jaques, or that he was so circumstanced as to be prevented from pursuing the legal remedies for the recovery of his claims. The mortgage and the judgment against John D. Jaques, and sale of his interest, were matters of public record. Zophar Hetfield purchased with full knowledge of all the
Upon this question there has been much doubt, and it is singular that it has not before this been presented for the determination of this court, in as much as it is liable to arise upon almost every death of a person seized of real estate.
By the common law, if the heir aliened before action brought, the creditor had no remedy. This, however, was corrected by the statute 3d and 4th William and Mary, Ch. 14. In New Jersey, says Ohief Justice Kinsey, Coxe’s reports 133, “ it has long been settled that lands are assets, in the hands of an executor or administrator for the payment of debts, and that upon an action brought against either, the real estates of the testator or intestate are chattels, may be taken in execution, and sold for the payment of debts, and this without making the heir a party to the suit.” But although this may have been the law in 1792, the legislature thought proper to alter it in 1797, and by the act, Rev. Laws, p. 291, authorized an action to be commenced against the heirs, or against the heirs and devisees where there was a will; and providing that if they had aliened or made over the lands descended, or devised, before action brought, such heir or devisee should be liable to the value of the lands; and that execution should go against such heir or devisee accordingly. “But the lands, tenements and hereditaments which were tona fide aliened before the action brought, shall not be liable to such execution.” And if not liable to such execution, in what manner should they be made liable ? It is under such execution that the plaintiff in this case claims; and the statute
The plaintiff in this case can derive no benefit from the act of 1799, making lands liable to be sold for the payment of debts; Rev. Laws, p, 430. He does not claim the benefit of any proceeding by the executor or administrator to sell the lands to pay debts after the personal assets proved deficient. There has been no application to the Orphans’ Court, or order for sale. And if there had been, it has been decided by the chancellor in the case of Parret v. Van Winkle and Van Riper, that under that statute the lands are bound only from the time of obtaining the order for sale.
The legislature of New Jersey have lately passed a law upon this subject. By the act of December 12th, 1825, they have not merely limited the continuance of the lien upon lands for the debts of the ancestor, but they have expressly created that lieu for the term of one year: thus giving a legislative exposition of the previous statutes. Upon the whole, I am of opinion that the plaintiffs should not recover the mortgaged premises.
Let there be judgment for the defendant.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.