Campbell v. Hough

68 A. 759, 73 N.J. Eq. 601, 3 Buchanan 601, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 107
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJanuary 17, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 68 A. 759 (Campbell v. Hough) 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
Campbell v. Hough, 68 A. 759, 73 N.J. Eq. 601, 3 Buchanan 601, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 107 (N.J. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Walker, Y. C.

The bill in this cause was filed for the specific performance of an agreement for the sale of lands entered into by Willis P. Bainbridge, Esq., as agent and attorney in fact for the defendants, Horace G. Hough and Edith Hough, administratrix, with Alexander Campbell, the complainant. The agreement is in writing under date of October 5th, 1907, and recites that the sale is to be made in consideration of $6,000; part thereof, $600, being paid to Mr. Bainbridge upon its execution; $2,200 to be paid December 5th, 1907; and the balance, $3,200 to be satisfied by the assumption bjt Mr. Campbell of the mortgage on the premises for that amount; the deed to be one of general warranty, and the Houghs to pay all taxes due in December. This agreement contains an acknowledgment. The certificate reads that Mr. Bainbridge acknowledged that he signed, sealed and delivered the instrument as his voluntary act and deed. Incidentally, the bill prays an injunction against the defendants from selling to James M. Donald the lands mentioned in the agreement, who, the bill alleges, had entered into a contract with the defendant, directly, for the purchase of the same premises. Both Mr. Hough and Mrs. Hough deny that they authorized Mr. Bainbridge to bind them by writing at all, and Mr. Bainbridge only says that he told Mr. Hough that he would sign the agreement, and that he, Mr. Hough, said “all right.” Mr. Bainbridge does not say that Mrs. Hough authorized him to sign any agreement, only that she authorized him to sell. The sale, as before remarked, was to be for $6,000, and while the question of who was to pay commissions, the buyers or the sellers, is disputed, there is no dispute about this, namely, that Mr. Bainbridge had no authority to bind the Houghs to pay the taxes due in 1907, nor to make a deed of general warranty free from all encumbrances except the mortgage, which was to be assumed as part of the consideration.

Neither in the bill of complaint nor in the affidavit of Mr. [604]*604Bainbridge annexed - to it, is it averred that express authority was given Mr. Bainbridge to bind the defendants by writing to convey their lands. The bill alleges that the defendants, by their agent, entered into an agreement in writing, setting it out, and Mr. Bainbridge, the agent, in his affidavit, states that he was requested and authorized by the defendants to make sale of the lands mentioned and described in the bill. His assertion that he informed Mr. Hough that he would sign an agreement for him is to be found in his cross-examination, taken under rule 124a of this court.

A question concerning the use of this cross-examination was presented on the hearing of the order to show cause, and arose in this wise: Counsel for the defendants stated that there was no averment in the bill or affidavit that Mr. Bainbridge was authorized to enter into an agreement in writing to bind them. Counsel for the complainant asserted that Mr. Bainbridge, in his cross-examination, stated that he thought Mr. Hough said that when he was ready to have an agreement signed to let him, Mr. Hough, know, and he would sign the agreement, and that Mr. Bainbridge told him that he, Mr. Bainbridge, would sign the agreement, to which Mr. Hough said "all right.” Counsel for the defendants objected to the use of this cross-examination by the complainant, saying that it would not be offered or used on behalf of the defendants who procured it to be taken. The rule referred to provides that the chancellor or vice-chancellor before whom an order to show cause why an .injunction should not be granted, or a motion to dissolve an injunction already granted, comes on to be heard, may order that an affiant, whose affidavit is annexed to or accompanies the bill, or is presented on the part of the defendant, shall appear and submit to cross-examination in respect to the matter contained in. his affidavit, under such direction as to notice and time and officer examining, before whom such cross-examination shall be taken as may be prescribed in. the order. Pending,the hearing pn.the order to show cause counsel for the defendants applied to me for an order that Mr. Bainbridge submit to such cross-examination, and I advised an order for that purpose. The examination, taken under that order, in my judgment, is,evidence for either [605]*605party who chooses to offer it. A party to a suit can always go into the papers of his adversary and use them, or such parts of them as he is advised will help his cause. It is true that the Practice act (P. L. 1903 p. 575 § 140) provides that if an action is at issue in a common law court either party may serve on the adverse party written interrogatories on any matter material to the issue and require written answers to the same under oath, and that the answers shall be evidence in the action if offered by the party proposing the interrogatories, but not otherwise. Section 144 of the Practice act (P. L. 1903 p. 577) provides that any party to an action may by order of the court or a judge be examined as a witness at the instance of the adverse party, or of anyone of the several adverse parties after issue joined and before trial; and (P. L. 1903 p. 577 § 146) provides that the examination and cross-examination shall be reduced to writing and signed by the party so examined, and filed, and may be used by either party at the trial. I apprehend that without the direction that the examination may be used by either party, that that right would exist, and, likewise, I am of opinion that interrogatories answered under oath by a party to a common law suit would be evidence on the trial for the party answering the interrogatories, if the party propounding them did not offer them, save for the fact that the statute, in that case, expressly provides that the answers shall be evidence only if offered by the party proposing the interrogatories, but not otherwise. Now, this cross-examination of Mr. Bainbridge was taken by virtue of an order of this court for that purpose had and obtained, and was, in my judgment, equally available to either party, and if the party procuring and conducting the cross-examination saw fit not to use it, that party had not the right to withhold it from the files, which would be to suppress it, and if filed as testimony taken in the proceeding, it was, of course, available to the adverse party. I make these observations because the objection to the use of the cross-examination was solemnly made on behalf of the party making it,'and as the rule has not been construed in this regard, so far as I can find, I think it proper that a declaraiion should be made upon the subject.

On the filing of (he bill an order was made requiring the [606]*606defendants to show cause why they should not be enjoined according to its prayer, with an ad interim stay, and the complainant now moves to make the order to show cause absolute.

Counsel for the defendants contend that the acknowledgment to the agreement for sale was defective in that the agent who signed the instrument acknowledged that he signed, sealed and delivered it as his voluntary act and deed, instead of doing so in the name of, and as the voluntary act and deed of, his principals. This objection is valid, but as the agreement did not need an acknowledgment to give it efficacy, the objection is ineffective.

The first question presented for solution is, was Mr. Bainbridge authorized by the defendants to make the agreement in waiting which he signed on their behalf,'so as to charge them with the obligation of making the conveyance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 A. 759, 73 N.J. Eq. 601, 3 Buchanan 601, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-hough-njch-1908.