Boorstein v. Boorstein

50 A.2d 847, 139 N.J. Eq. 274, 1947 N.J. LEXIS 450
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 17, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 50 A.2d 847 (Boorstein v. Boorstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boorstein v. Boorstein, 50 A.2d 847, 139 N.J. Eq. 274, 1947 N.J. LEXIS 450 (N.J. 1947).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Case, Chief-Justice.

The appeal is from a decree in Chancery (opinion reported in 138 N. J. Eq. 265) which permanently enjoins the defendants from enforcing a judgment for possession obtained by the defendant Rose Boorstein in the District Court of the City of Bayonne and from taking any steps whatever with respect thereto.

Rose Boorstein is the owner of the premises. She is the wife of Harris Boorstein and the mother of William Boor-stein. Complainant, Ruth Boorstein, is the wife of William and was recently granted a maintenance decree against him. (Cf. Boorstein v. Boorstein, 138 N. J. Eq. 143.) Rose began the dispossess action in the District Court by filing an affidavit which named William and Ruth as co-tenants. When the matter came on for trial she discontinued against Ruth who was present and who, by her attorney, and for reasons hereinafter stated, objected to the discontinuance. Judgment of possession was rendered against William. Thereupon Ruth went into the Court of Chancery with her present bill of complaint charging that there had been an oral gift of the premises to her and her husband and that the judgment in the District Court had been obtained through fraud in that the defendants “fraudulently colluded with each other in obtaining said judgment * * * for the purpose of denying to complainant her constitutional right to have a hearing before a court of competent jurisdiction to pass upon her asserted right to continue in possession of said premises,” and praying that an injunction issue to restrain the defendants from enforcing the District Court judgment.

Respondent does not hold title to the property and has no right upon which a claim to title may be established. By *276 her own testimony and by the admissions in her brief she was not and is not a tenant. Without vestige of title and with none of the rights of a tenant she presents herself as a mere invitee and as such seeks to restrain the operation of the District Court judgment upon the charge that the judgment was obtained by fraud.

What was the fraud? The allegation is that the owner conspired with the owner’s husband and son to present a sham case of tenancy on the son’s part and to exclude respondent from defending at the trial. Let us consider the proofs.

The proof chiefly relied upon to sustain the charge of fraud is the allegation in the affidavit by which Rose instituted the dispossess action. That affidavit gave in one instance the name of the “defendant” as “Ruth Boorstein and William Boorstein.” Except for the mention of two names all references were to the “defendant,” in the singular, and where a pronoun of gender was used in referring to the defendant the pronoun was “he.” Ruth and William having, as stated, been named were both served with the summons. When the cause came on for trial the landlord moved and was ultimately granted, by court order, a discontinuance against Ruth. The District Court was a court of competent jurisdiction both as to the subject-matter and parties. As appears by an exhibit hereinafter mentioned, it heard Ruth’s attorney, at length, in opposition to the motion for discontinuance and decided against her. Counsel for Ruth did not suggest to the District Court that she claimed a gift of the property made either orally or otherwise, or that she rested possession upon an entry so obtained. He suggested that such a procedure as discontinuing could be done collusively, but made no charge of fraud or collusion in the instant case; this, although it was then assumed, on the record, by court and counsel, that William would not defend the suit. Counsel’s argument was that the filed affidavit of the landlord was jurisdictional and that the landlord could not, as a matter of law, effect a discontinuance as to Ruth without discontinuing also as to William, that there could be a discontinuance against both upon such terms as the court might fix and a *277 new action against William alone, but that the court lacked jurisdiction to order a discontinuance as to Ruth only. After extended argument counsel for both sides agreed, with court assent, that the case against William should go to trial forthwith and the determination thereof be held in abeyance pending an adjourned day when counsel for Ruth, not at the time fully prepared, would further argue the motion for discontinuance; the case against Ruth and the full determination to be disposed of in accordance with the decision then reached. That arrangement came to naught because when the case against William was moved Ruth’s attorney insisted upon the right of cross-examination throughout, whereupon the court concluded that an impasse had been reached and granted the discontinuance.

If Ruth was sound in her contention that the court ruling against her was without jurisdiction she had means of redress in the law courts. Moreover, complainant charged in her bill in Chancery, and charges now, that “the jurisdictional affidavit filed by Rose Boorstein was made fraudulently for the purpose of attempting to give the Bayonne District Court jurisdiction to dispossess William Boorstein, a person not in possession who was colluding with Rose Boorstein, his mother, the plaintiff in said dispossession proceedings, all of which was done as part of a fraudulent scheme to evict complainant without a hearing.” Those were matters which purport to have antedated the judgment, and it seems that they, with their implications of fraud, should have been presented, not in Chancery, but in an appropriate application to the court wherein the judgment was rendered. Schierstead v. Somers, 115 N. J. Eq. 140. But we rest our determination upon broader grounds and pass this phase of the argument with the observation that a charge of fraud against a judgment entered under those circumstances should be supported by clear and convincing proof.

Ruth’s testimony in the Court of Chancery was that she and her husband moved into the house following oral statements by Rose and Harris that the property was a gift to William and Ruth. It was there held that because of the statute of frauds no title passed to either Ruth or William; *278 and that holding is not now in dispute. Ruth further testified:

"Q. Did you ever agree to pay any rent to Rose Boorstein or the defendant Harris Boorstein? A. No, we did not. I did not. Q. You never did? A. That’s right.”

We understand the final answer to be a correction from "We did not” to "I did not.” At the same court session at which Ruth so testified the testimony taken at the dispossess proceeding — at which Ruth and her attorney were both present although not participating — was put in proof.

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Related

In Re Estate of Neuwirth
382 A.2d 972 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1978)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 A.2d 847, 139 N.J. Eq. 274, 1947 N.J. LEXIS 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boorstein-v-boorstein-nj-1947.