Ench v. Bluestein

145 A.2d 44, 52 N.J. Super. 169
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 6, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 145 A.2d 44 (Ench v. Bluestein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ench v. Bluestein, 145 A.2d 44, 52 N.J. Super. 169 (N.J. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

52 N.J. Super. 169 (1958)
145 A.2d 44

RICHARD A. ENCH, PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,
v.
A. LEONARD BLUESTEIN, DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued September 17, 1958.
Decided October 6, 1958.

*171 Before Judges CONFORD, FREUND and HANEMAN.

Mr. Joseph M. Jacobs argued the cause for defendant-appellant (Mr. Leonard A. Bluestein, attorney pro se).

Mr. Joseph N. Marotta, Jr., argued the cause for plaintiff-respondent (Messrs. Morrison, Lloyd & Griggs, attorneys; Mr. John W. Griggs on the brief).

The opinion of the court was delivered by FREUND, J.A.D.

The defendant appeals in this breach of contract action from a judgment entered pursuant to a unanimous jury verdict for the plaintiff in the Passaic County District Court.

Plaintiff Ench operates a construction business and in 1954 was at work on a project in Glenside, Pennsylvania. At that time he was represented by an attorney, the defendant. In February 1954 Ench had borrowed $1,000 from one Donohue to defray expenses on the Glenside project and had given Donohue a check post-dated to March 17, 1954. The loan not having been repaid, Donohue's representative wrote to Ench on May 10, 1954 that he was "not going to sit still on that check." On the same date, plaintiff responded by letter that the failure of the township (apparently *172 Glenside) to pay moneys owed him had held up payment of his bills, that his bonding company had unjustifiably refused to pay the Donohue and other claims, but that he had instructed his attorney to institute action against the bonding company to recover such claims.

Ench testified that on May 12, 1954, at his office in Paterson, he handed a $1,000 check, made payable to himself, to Bluestein, with instructions to "put this check in the trust account and pay the money to James Donohue." His grievance in this action is that Bluestein never paid Donohue, with the result that an assignee of Donohue's estate brought suit against plaintiff in 1956 on the unpaid debt and recovered $1,000 plus costs of $41.84. His effort to implead Bluestein as a third-party defendant in that action having failed on motion of the plaintiff therein, Ench paid that judgment himself. He now contends that such payment represents his damages consequent upon defendant's breach of agency.

Defendant Bluestein denied ever having received instructions from Ench to pay off Donohue with the $1,000 check. He testified:

"Well, he came in the next morning after he had gotten a check and gave it to me and told me he needed five hundred dollars that day for the payroll and there was a payment due on his second mortgage on Water Street which Jack Abramowitz was attorney for and he was in the midst of foreclosing that and it was under sheriff's sale, that had to be met. He said apply this to that and that was it."

Bluestein claimed, then, that after May 12 he had given $500 in cash to plaintiff or his sister to meet Ench's payroll and had used the other $500 to reimburse himself for a $500 check given on May 13 to the attorney representing the second mortgagee. This issue of the money having been spent for plaintiff's other debts was raised by the defendant in his answer.

Corroborative of the defense that no specific instructions to pay Donohue had been given by Ench was the testimony of attorneys Rowitz and Weisser. Rowitz, representing *173 Donohue in collecting the debt from Ench, testified that when he had seen Ench, in July 1956, to make arrangements with him to pay off the debt, Ench never mentioned that Bluestein was connected with the Donohue transaction. And Weisser, who had heard most of the conversations between Rowitz and Ench with respect to the Donohue debt, testified that he "never heard Mr. Bluestein's name mentioned."

Ench denied that Bluestein spent this particular $1,000 for his, Ench's, benefit. He denied having received $500 from Bluestein for his payroll. And he testified that, while $500 toward the second mortgage had indeed been paid by Bluestein, that payment was part of a course of dealing between these two parties and had been made not from the $1,000 in question, but from a $6,850 fund entrusted by plaintiff to defendant on April 29, 1954.

At the end of the plaintiff's case defendant moved for dismissal on the ground that plaintiff had not established his damages. This was denied. There was no motion for dismissal at the end of the entire case.

Without objection by defendant's counsel, the trial judge charged the jury: "If you find in favor of the plaintiff, your verdict will be for the sum of $1,041.84." Significantly, the verdict did not state a finding on damages; it was merely "in favor of the plaintiff." The court then announced the verdict as "for the plaintiff in the sum of $1,041.84."

Bluestein appeals from the judgment below on the following grounds: (1) since he disbursed the money for Ench's benefit, Ench has suffered no actual damages; therefore, to allow the judgment to stand will result in Ench's being unjustly enriched to the extent of $1,000; (2) the verdict was contrary to the weight of the evidence; and (3) an exhibit which had never been received into evidence was allowed to go to the jury room.

It is an accepted principle of law that in all litigation, of whatever kind, the law seeks to compensate for the wrongs complained of, so as to restore the injured party to his former status. Except where punitive damages are *174 permitted, there is no allowance of more than nominal damages in a case where no actual damages are proven. 15 Am. Jur., Damages, § 3, pp. 3, 4; 25 C.J.S. Damages § 3, p. 461; Skillen v. Eagle Motor Co., 107 N.J.L. 211, 213 (Sup. Ct. 1930); Weiss v. Revenue Building & Loan Ass'n, 116 N.J.L. 208 (E. & A. 1935); Borbonus v. Daoud, 34 N.J. Super. 54, 60, 61 (Ch. Div. 1955).

The paramount object of litigation is to accomplish justice as between the parties. In the present case, even if it were assumed that plaintiff instructed defendant to use the $1,000 check to discharge the Donohue debt and defendant failed to do so, but applied the money in part to provide plaintiff with $500 for his payroll and in part to meet plaintiff's admitted pressing obligation on a mortgage, as testified by defendant, it would obviously be unjust now to permit recovery of a $1,000 judgment by plaintiff to stand against the defendant. The injustice of the result can be seen from either of two approaches, and it does not matter which is deemed more appropriate in principle.

(a) The funds having been used to pay other acknowledged and immediate obligations of plaintiff (as we are assuming is the fact), plaintiff was not damaged by the defendant's assumed violation of his principal's instructions. 2 Am. Jur., Agency, § 278, p. 222; 3 C.J.S. Agency § 147, p. 29; cf. Porter v. Woodruff, 36 N.J. Eq. 174, 186 (Ch. 1882); Bourquin v. Atlanta State Bank, 107 Neb. 811, 186 N.W. 986 (Sup. Ct. 1922).

(b) If plaintiff is regarded as having been technically damnified by defendant's failure to use the $1,000 as instructed, defendant's application of the funds to other obligations of plaintiff should give defendant a quasi-contractual offset in respect to the latter to avoid the unjust enrichment which otherwise would fall to the plaintiff at the expense of the defendant. Cf.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 A.2d 44, 52 N.J. Super. 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ench-v-bluestein-njsuperctappdiv-1958.