Fischetto Paper Mill Supply, Inc. v. Quigley Co., Inc.

69 A.2d 318, 3 N.J. 149, 1949 N.J. LEXIS 201
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 21, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 69 A.2d 318 (Fischetto Paper Mill Supply, Inc. v. Quigley Co., Inc.) 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
Fischetto Paper Mill Supply, Inc. v. Quigley Co., Inc., 69 A.2d 318, 3 N.J. 149, 1949 N.J. LEXIS 201 (N.J. 1949).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wachenfeld, J.

The appellant sued for the purchase price of certain merchandise delivered, to wit, waste paper. *151 Delivery was admitted but the respondent disputed the quantity received and the amount due. The issue so framed was decided by the jury and is not before us at this time.

The appeal concerns the issues arising out of a counterclaim filed by the respondent in which it alleges it purchased and paid for shipments of waste paper for a long time, from December, 1940, to July, 1945, and during this period was cheated and defrauded by the appellant because the weights of the shipments so made were overstated, resulting in payments over and above the reasonable value of the merchandise received to the extent of approximately $15,000. The jury returned a verdict of $9,449.62, for which judgment was accordingly entered and is presently under consideration.

The case involves a somewhat complicated state of facts in reference to the proof submitted by the respondent on its counterclaim endeavoring to show it had been defrauded by paying for merchandise never actualty received.

The counterclaim alleges there was a scarcity of the commodity at the time and the appellant refused to sell and deliver any waste paper unless the weighing thereof was waived and the appellant’s representation as to the true weight accepted and payment made at the prevailing market price. It further alleges that between December, 1940, and July, 1945, various quantities of waste paper were delivered to the Old Bridge plant which were represented by the appellant to weigh 4,774,724 pounds and the respondent, relying upon said representation, paid therefor, including the cost of truck-age, the sum of $38,555.07. It then charges that in truth only 2,589,791 pounds of waste paper were actually delivered and the appellant had thus cheated and defrauded the respondent to the extent of $15,365.25.

Eischetto Paper Mill Supply, Inc., is a closely held family corporation and has been supplying waste paper to the respondent for many years. Quigley Company has factories in South River and Old Bridge, Few Jersey. It manufactures, amongst other products, high temperature insulated fire brick, of which burnt waste paper is a component part. The paper is chopped up and added to other ingredients in precise pro *152 portions ascertained by weighing, after which the whole mixture is put in kilns where the paper and other inflammable materials are burned out, leaving a porous and insulated brick.

The war caused a scarcity of paper supply and the appellant suggested the weighing be discontinued and in lieu thereof it would furnish weighmaster’s certificates to certify the net weight of the deliveries.

Sometime in 1943 the respondent discovered at the Old Bridge plant a shortage in the book inventory of materials in relation to all of the products used in production. They were operating at full capacity but their auditors were unsuccessful in ascertaining the cause of the shortage. As a result of an anonymous telephone call in May, 1945, the respondent’s plant manager became suspicious of the correctness of the certificates showing the quantity of paper delivered. The next load was therefore weighed and was found to total only 28,195 pounds instead of 41,955 pounds, the amount stated in the receipt. On the following delivery the total load was found to weigh only 19,516 pounds instead of the 29,635 pounds represented.

A complete investigation and audit were made by the respondent. Adding together the quantity of paper on hand on December 31, 1942, as determined by an inventory made on that day, the amount allegedly delivered by appellant from January 1, 1943, to July 9, 1945, and the small amounts of paper obtained through other sources and subtracting the quantity then on hand plus the amount determined from its records to have been used in manufacturing operations, a shortage of 755 tons was shown over the entire period.

It is contended (1) there was error by the trial court in not directing a verdict against the respondent and in holding it had made out a case of fraud; (2) it was error to permit the action of fraud to go against the corporation alone; and (3) error in the charge of the court to the jury.

The rule as to fraud is clear and has been consistently followed in our courts.

“In Byard v. Holmes, 34 N‘. J. L. 296, the rule was laid down that to maintain an action on the case for deceit, the plaintiff must *153 allege with reasonable certainty, and be prepared to prove—1. That the defendant made some representation to the plaintiff, meaning that he should act upon it. 2. That such representation was false, and that the defendant, when he made it, knew it to be false; and 3, that the plaintiff, believing such representation to be true, acted upon it, and was thereby injured.” Kosobucki v. McGarry, 104 N. J. L. 65 (E. & A. 1927).

The appellant now argues, as nearly as we can ascertain from its brief, that one of the important elements in a charge of fraud is the intent with which the representation was made, and it is urged “throughout the transcript nowhere is there any proof of intent on the part of the plaintiff.” Likewise, it is asserted “there was no reliance on any representation and without it, no fraud” and “there just is no representation by the plaintiff to the defendant that can be found anywhere in this record.”

These contentions are hardly tenable in view of the record. Although it was partly conflicting, there nevertheless was ample testimony to indicate there had been a system of weighing and checking each load of paper which was discontinued upon the insistment of the appellant, the respondent being induced to agree to the suggestion because of the scarcity of the supply occasioned by war demands, plus the fact that it was to receive a weight certificate specifying the amount of merchandise delivered. Certainly, by inference at least, it was intended the purchaser should rely upon the certificates. Otherwise they would have no purpose or utility. In fact, the company’s treasurer testified he had “been taking the word of the Pischetto Company for the amount of paper that they had delivered.”

Although the respondent was aware of a marked shortage in material, it was unsuccessful in solving the problem until the receipt of the anonymous phone call, which caused the actual cheeking and weighing of the next two deliveries. This shed considerable light on what formerty had been a mystery.

The testimony to the effect that some of the weighmaster’s certificates were not authentic but were prepared by the appellant and the figures put on after the seal had been affixed was most significant. It is difficult to conceive this as an honest *154 transaction with such spurious documents as its foundation. They surely were not calculated to give a financial advantage to the respondent. The intent to defraud, we think, was amply proved and there was direct testimony as to the reliance upon the representations made.

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Bluebook (online)
69 A.2d 318, 3 N.J. 149, 1949 N.J. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fischetto-paper-mill-supply-inc-v-quigley-co-inc-nj-1949.