Ball v. Ward

74 A. 158, 76 N.J. Eq. 8, 6 Buchanan 8, 1909 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 34
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 13, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 74 A. 158 (Ball v. Ward) 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
Ball v. Ward, 74 A. 158, 76 N.J. Eq. 8, 6 Buchanan 8, 1909 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 34 (N.J. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Emery, Y. 0.

The bill is filed by John B. Ball and wife, to set aside two conveyances of land made by them to Sidney S. Ward, on November 29th, 1905, on the ground that they were executed under duress or threats. The duress alleged in their bill is that of threats of the immediate arrest and imprisonment of their son, Arthur D. Ball, for obtaining money of Mr. Ward under false representations. Complainants claim that under the pressure and. influence of these threats, made to them on the Sunday preceding (November 26th, 1905), and, believing the threats would be carried [10]*10out, they agreed on that day to make the conveyances, without any opportunity for obtaining counsel or advice, and did after-wards make them while under such influence and pressure. Mr. Sidney S. Ward and his wife, Mary Ward, were the original defendants to the bill, filed March 31st, 1906, and their answer under oath (Mrs. Ward answering on information and belief) denies the duress or threats charged in the bill, and as to the circumstances of the execution of the deed, the answer avers that Arthur D. Ball, who was the son-in-law of Ward and had married his daughter and only child in January, 1902, had borrowed from Ward between October, 1903, and April 28th, 1905, $23,500, besides procuring Ward’s endorsement on March 21st, 1904, of Arthur Ball’s note at three months for $15,000, which note was renewed from time to time, and was outstanding at the time of the conveyances. All these advances and the endorser ments are averred to have been procured by Arthur Ball on his statement to Mr. Ward that they were to be used by Arthur as his contribution to a joint 'venture or speculation in which he was engaged as one of a syndicate, and which promised to be very profitable. After endorsing the note, and on April 28th, 1905, Mr. Ward, as his answer avers, made another loan to Arthur Ball of $3,800, to enable the latter to purchase a gas plant at Boonton. As to this advance there is no allegation in the answer that it was to be for Arthur’s share or part in any joint venture or syndicate operation. The advances remaining unpaid and the note being twice renewed, Mr. Ward, having his suspicions ■ aroused as to Arthur Ball’s representations, made inquiries of the person whom Arthur Ball had represented to have charge of the joint venture, and, in the language of the answer,

“was informed by him that there was no such joint venture or speculation, and that at the times when the said Sidney S. Ward had loaned to the said Arthur D. Ball the various sums of money above mentioned, the said Arthur D. Ball had not paid said money to any syndicate in which the said Arthur D. Ball was interested with said person.”

“Whereupon,” the answer continues, “the defendant Sidney S. Ward became satisfied that the said sums of money had been secured from him by misrepresentations and fraud.”

[11]*11The answer avers that subsequent to this information Ward caused an examination of the records to be made, and ascertained that on April 13th, 1898, Arthur D. Ball, for the expressed consideration of one dollar, had conveyed to his father, John B. Ball, property on Johnson avenue, in Newark, and that on January 8th, 1902, the day of his marriage to defendant’s daughter, Arthur D. Ball had by a like deed conveyed to his father a house and tract of land at Deal, Monmouth county. The Johnson avenue house was the home of complainants, and up to the time of his marriage their son had resided there with them. The Deal place was a summer home in which, as is claimed by the answer, Arthur and his wife resided in the summer, and to the maintenance of which he contributed largely. Having ascertained these facts relating to the representations of Arthur Ball, and the conveyances of the property, the answer of Ward as to the circumstances of executing the deeds, says that on Sunday, November 26th, 1905, he called on complainants at their residence (the Johnson avenue property), told them that Arthur had obtained a large sum of money by these representations, that he had ascertained the representations were false and fraudulent, that Arthur was a bankrupt, and that inasmuch as the properties on Johnson avenue and at Deal had been conveyed to John B. Ball for one dollar, they, having received these properties by gift without consideration, should be willing to turn them over to the said Sidney S. Ward in part payment of the indebtedness of their son Arthur to him, and that thereupon the complainants expressed their sympathy for him, and regretted he had been wronged and offered to convey the properties. The use of any threats of the arrest or imprisonment of Arthur Ball at this interview or at subsequent interviews is also explicitly denied in the answer.

The bill charges a repetition of these threats of arrest at two subsequent interviews with Ward at his home on the same Sunday, one in the morning between Mr. Ward and John B. Ball, who had gone there to see his son, but did not see him, and another in the afternoon, in the bedroom occupied by Arthur, and at which Mr. and Mrs. Ward, Mr. and Mrs. John B. Ball and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur D. Ball were present. And it is [12]*12further charged that at the latter interview there was made a threat of immediate direction, by telephone, of the arrest, if the complainants did not at once agree to transfer the properties, and that under pressure of these threats they then made the promises.

All of these allegations of threats and pressure are specifically denied by the answer under oath, and it is averred that at all of the interviews at defendant’s house the complainants were not only willing, but appeared to be anxious to turn over their properties to Ward.

Subsequent to the filing of the answer Mr. Sidney Ward died, and later, and before the hearing, Mrs. Ward also died. The suit was revived against the devisees and executors of Mr. Ward’s will, of whom Mrs. Arthur D. Ball is one, and is now defendant, both individually and as executor and trustee.

At the hearing the direct evidence on the part of complainants as to the circumstances under which the agreement to execute the deeds was made, was that of the two complainants and their son, Arthur Ball. The evidence of the complainants was at first objected to as not admissible against the defendant executrix and devisee, but the objection was afterwards formally withdrawn. On the part of the defendants the direct evidence is that of the answers under oath, and of Mrs. Arthur D. Ball. There are circumstances appearing in connection with the evidence of all the witnesses called at the hearing, which to some extent affect their credibility as to details of the interviews, as given at the hearing, but the case is certainly one where the decision on the substantial question of fact in dispute depends on the credit given to the witnesses. This question is whether the conveyances were the result of such pressure by threats of Arthur Ball’s immediate arrest on a criminal charge as to overcome the free will of the grantors in giving their consent to make the deeds and afterwards executing them. If the account of complainants and of Arthur Ball is true, then they were so procured, and on the other hand, if the answers and the account of Mrs. Arthur Ball are true, the deeds were not executed under any pressure, but were the voluntary acts of complainants for the purpose of repairing to some extent a wrong done by their son to Mr. Ward, and cannot now be rescinded.

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Related

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183 A.2d 89 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1962)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 A. 158, 76 N.J. Eq. 8, 6 Buchanan 8, 1909 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-ward-njch-1909.