Adams v. Wells

53 A. 610, 64 N.J. Eq. 211, 19 Dickinson 211, 1902 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 21
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedNovember 22, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 53 A. 610 (Adams v. Wells) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Wells, 53 A. 610, 64 N.J. Eq. 211, 19 Dickinson 211, 1902 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 21 (N.J. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Obey, V. C.

(orally).

This is an interpleader suit, occasioned by the failure of a building contractor to fully perform his contract filed under the Mechanics5 Lien act, and contesting claims of the defendants upon the contract filed. The complainant has obtained a decree of interpleader, and the present phase of the cause is an inter-pleading between the respective defendants, who say that the fund is a deposit of the contract price paid in by the owner, who had duly filed his building contract, and the defendants each claim payment out of the fund, in priority to the others. The order of priority of these claims is therefore the substantial question to be determined.

The first claimant is Reuben G-. Scudder. This claim, it is not disputed, is a rightful claim for material furnished under the contract between Mr. Adams and Wells & Company, the contractor.

There is some dispute whether or not, at the time when Mr. Scudder alleges he made demand for final payment, he had actually fulfilled his contract by the delivery of the last goods. [213]*213He was somewhat uncertain as to the particular hour of the final delivery on the 2d day of January, 1902. He said he had so delivered the last of the goods, that he afterwards went over to Philadelphia, to Mr. Wells’ office, and made his demand for payment some time in the morning of the 2d day of January, and he could not, with precise definiteness, state at what hour he made the demand, but I think half-past twelve was the latest hour he named. Mr. Wells, on the other hand, testifies that the final deliveries were not completed until two o’clock of the afternoon of the same day, which, if true, would make it appear that Mr. Scudder had demanded payment,before he had made final delivery of the goods.

I do not think there is enough certainty about this point, either way, to decide the claim, although the burden is upon Mr. Scudder to establish every essential incident necessary to give him the preference which he asserts.

Mr. Scudder says that at some time during the latter part of the morning he went over to Mr. Wells’ office, in one of the office buildings in Philadelphia, and there, he says, he demanded a settlement. 'When asked, on cross-examination, whether he named, in dollars and cents, the amount due him, he was unable to say what sum of money he did árame, although he testifies he did name a sum, and that he named the sum that was due to him, and that the sum was computed on a little memorandum, which was taken over there for the purpose of keeping in memory the exact sum. He said he used that memorandum, but cannot now produce it, because it has been lost. Nor can he now’ recollect what was the amount of the sum he named to Mr. Wells.

The answer to Mr. Scudder’s statement is by Mr. Wells and by his typewriter. They both testify that Mr. Scudder never made any such demand for payment as he testified he-made upon Mr. Wells.

It is- essentially necessary to Mr. Scudder’s case that he should prove that he made a demand upon Mr- Wells for payment of his claim, and was refused payment, before he filed his stop notice. That is the requirement of the statute under which the stop-noticing party acquires his right. It is a purely statutory right, in derogation of the common law, giving to the person [214]*214who performs these conditions an especial privilege. The burden of proof, in order to claim this right, is necessarily imposed upon the party who asserts that he performed the conditions. Mr. Seudder, in giving his narration of the place and surroundings at which he made the demand, states that he saw Mr. Wells and his stenographer—a young woman whom he could describe in no other way than she had black hair. IIe says that he went there' on the 2d day of January, 1902. He does not say that he went there at any other time, nor does he leave the matter in any sort of doubt that he claims to have gone on that day, and on no other. His own testimony fixes the day with absolute certainty. If he did not go on that day and make the demand of Mr. Wells in the presence of his stenographer, who could probably have heard it, as he himself says, he evidently did not see them at all.

Mr. Scudder’s statement is contradicted by Mr. Wells, who says that he was not in his office at any time on tire 2d day of January, 1902. Mr. Wells’ story is supported by the stenographer, whose testimony is directly upon the point, because Mr. Seudder says that he made the demand in the presence of the stenographer, and the proof is that the young woman here brought is the only-stenographer that Mr. Wells has had in his employ for three or four months before the making of the demand and ever since. The young woman says that she was not in the office on that day. Mr. Seudder does not leave any room for believing that Mr. Wells could be mistaken as to the occasion, because Seudder himself declares that he made the demand, such as it was, of Wells in the presence of the stenographer, and that he had to pass by tire stenographer in order to converse with Wells.

I do- not see how it is possible to reconcile, in any way, these statements, and I am wholly unable to 'reconcile them. I notice that counsel, in order to test the testimony of Mr. Wells and the stenographer, cross-examined them as to why it was that they could remember events.which took place on a specifically named day. The reasons given by them why the events of the particular day could be stated in detail ¿eem to be entirely natural. The young woman had, for some little time before January 3d, [215]*2151902, been off on a holiday trip. On the night of January 1st, 1902, she had attended a masked ball. Those incidents were such as would have made a strong' impression of the period on her memory. She came back to Philadelphia on the evening of the 2d day of January, 1902. This is the day on the morning of which Mr. Scudder says he made demand upon Mr. Wells in the presence of the stenographer. The stenographer says that she came directly from her trip back to her home in the evening; that she was not at the office at all on the 2d of January. Mr. Wells also explains his testimony in fixing the events of the 2d day of January by stating the fact that on that day he had an arrangement for a settlement of an important character to be made with other people in Hew York; that he went to Hew York for that purpose on January 2d, early in the morning, and did not open his office at all on that day.

It is, however, not necessary that the testimony of these two witnesses should overweigh the testimony of Mr. Scudder on the point. It is enough if they equal it, and I am quite unable to say they do not equal Mr. Scudder’s testimony. The burden of proof is upon him. If he does not show, by a preponderance of proof, that he did perform this preliminary condition of making demand of payment, and that it -was refused, he does not show compliance with the statutory requirements necessary to> enable him to serve the statutory stop notice. He does not show himself to be within that class who have entitled themselves to the statutory preference.

I do not undertake to say that Mr. Scudder testified falsely; there is a wide opportunity for mistake. His confused statement as to the location of the office to which he went as Mr. Wells’ office on that day, suggests that, when he sought to make his demand, he might have gone into the wrong office. He does not seem to have had any extended business with Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 A. 610, 64 N.J. Eq. 211, 19 Dickinson 211, 1902 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-wells-njch-1902.