Court Opinion

ID: 7292039
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-25 20:35:17.085599+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:19:23.088199
License: Public Domain

Garrison, V. C.
The bill in this case is filed to foreclose a mortgage given by Mrs. Stevenson and her husband to the complainant upon the undivided one-sixth interest of Mrs. Stevenson in property owned in common with the complainant.
To this bill of foreclosure a plea is interposed by the defendants setting up1 the pendency of another action.
To this plea a replication was filed and proofs were taken by the defendants to sustain the allegations of the plea.
By joining issue on a plea a complainant admits the sufficiency of the facts stated as a defence if they are proven to he true. Hunt v. West Jersey Traction Co., 62. N. J. Eq. (17 Dick.) 225 (Vice-Chancellor Grey, 1901).
*491If their truth be established by the evidence, the complainant’s bill must be dismissed as to the defendant who files the plea. Hunt v. West Jersey Traction Co., supra.
Where the proceedings in the former suit are exhibited before the chancellor, either by the averments of the plea or otherwise, he may determine the matter without tire delay of a reference to a master. Griffing v. Griffing Iron Co., 61 N. J. Eq. (16 Dick.) 269 (Chancellor Magic, 1901).
The proceedings in the former suit were exhibited to the court in the suit at bar.
The former suit, the pendency of which is alleged by the defendants to be a bar to the present suit, was a partition suit instituted by Mrs. Stevenson some six years ago.
A prior application to stay the proceedings in the foreclosure suit (that is, the suit at bar) was made by the defendants upon the same grounds relied upon to sustain the plea filed in this suit, namely, the pendency of the partition suit.
That application to stay came on before Vice-Chancellor Stevens, and his conclusions, which were filed on the 19th day of July, 1904, so clearly state the facts and the principles of .law applicable thereto that it is unnecessary that they should be here repeated.
While he found, as a matter of practice, that the objection of the pendency of the other suit should generally be made by plea and not by motion, he nevertheless decided that even if it might be raised by motion, the motion in this suit could not prevail.
The same reasons which induced him to overrule the motion are potent in respect to the plea.
I can perceive no change in the situation from that which was presented to Vice-Chancellor Stevens on the motion, and since his conclusions overruling the motion are grounded upon the same reasons as, lead me to find against the defendants upon the plea, I refer to the opinion of Vice-Chancellor Stevens as giving my reasons for my conclusions in the determination of this issue.
The result is that the plea must be overruled, and I will so advise.