Gordon v. Schellhorn

123 A. 549, 95 N.J. Eq. 563, 10 Stock. 563, 1924 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 265
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJanuary 29, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 123 A. 549 (Gordon v. Schellhorn) 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
Gordon v. Schellhorn, 123 A. 549, 95 N.J. Eq. 563, 10 Stock. 563, 1924 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 265 (N.J. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Bentley, V. C.

This is a bill to rescind a contract for the sale of machinery and cancellation of a chattel mortgage and series of notes given in payment therefor.

The complainant is engaged in the embroidery business. The defendant and his brother, Fred Schellhorn, are engaged in the real estate and insurance business, and they are, for the purposes of this suit, one and the same individual. By that I mean that while the legal title to the machinery in[565]*565volved in. this case was in the defendant, his brother, Fred, as his attorney in fact, carried on all of the negotiations, the defendant, I think, doing nothing more than to execute the bill of sale, to be mentioned hereafter, and also affix his name to an important letter of March 19th, 1923, so that I shall, for the sake of convenience, refer to both of these brothers as “the defendant,” it being elementary that, in equity, the defendant is bound by the acts of his agent even to the extent of charging the former with fraud perpetrated by the latter. Nicholson v. Janeway, 16 N. J. Eq. 285.

Prior to the dealings of the parties that led to this suit, the defendant caused an advertisement to be published, which came to the attention of the complainant, holding out for sale, with a lease, the chattels which the latter subsequently bought. The complainant also came into possession of a circular letter, typed upon the stationery of Sehellhorn Brothers, an artificial person composed of the defendant and his brother. That letter reads as follows:

“Weehawken, N. J., November 23d, 1922.
Dear Sirs:
I offer for sale a complete embroidery plant, consisting of the following:
Three 15-yard automatic embroidery machines, Sauer system;
One punching machine;
Six sewing and mending- machines;
Two bobbin machines;
With motors, tables, shafting, belting, &c., in perfect condition, will be sold at a sacrifice, on easy terms, together or separately, with lease of light factory and living apartment.
For further particulars apply Fred. It. Sehellhorn, No. 107 Shippen street, Weehawken Heights, N. J. Phone 249 Union.
Yours very truly,
Feed. K. Scheilhobn.”

(The italics are mine.) The parties subsequently met and discussed the purchase of the property just enumerated and, as a result of their conferences, the defendant was beaten down from the sum of $18,000, which he originally asked, to the sum of $10,500, which price was agreed upon. Thereupon, they met at the office of a lawyer mutually agreed upon and with whom each of the parties had previously had [566]*566relations as a client. There, on the 10th day of March, 1923, an agreement was made wherein it was alleged that the defendant was the owner of the chattels to be sold, and agreed that the complainant should buy the same from the defendant for the sum of $10,500, $200 whereof was paid upon the signing of the contract, $1,900 to be paid on the delivery of the bill of sale, and the balance of $8,400 to be taken care of by a series of notes, each in the sum of $400, the first one becoming due May 15th, 1923, and the others falling due one each month thereafter, with certain inconsequential notations. It was also set out that the contract was to be consummated on or before March 17th, 1923, with possession in the vendee immediately, and a provision that if the contract should not be carried out the purchaser was to redeliver the property and secure back his deposit of $200 without further claim by either party against the other. On the following Friday, March 16th, the time fixed for the passing of title, a delay was caused by reason of a claim made by a family named Neir, who were in possession of the living apartment referred to in the circular letter copied above. This matter was satisfactorily adjusted between the Neirs and the defendant, and the matter of passing title went over to the following day, March 17th. At that time the complainant, who has been a member of the bar of some other jurisdiction, refused to accept a bill of sale signed only by the defendant’s brother as attorney in fact, and insisted upon the signature of the defendant in whom the title stood as well. That evening, namely, Saturday, the defendant or his brother tendered the bill of sale with the defendant’s signature thereon, but the complainant, for some reason or no reason, refused to do business at that time and the matter again went over until Monday morning, March 19th. On the last-mentioned date the defendant again attended at the office of the aforesaid lawyer, but the complainant was late and there appears to have been considerable effort to reach him by telephone and some anxiety about his absence, until he eventually also came to the office where the contract was to be consummated. Up to this point, and with the exception [567]*567of one exceedingly important matter to be subsequently explained, there appears to be no serious difference as to what had transpired. After meeting on the morning of the 19th, delivery was made of the bill of sale by the defendant and delivery by the complainant of the series of notes mentioned, secured by a chattel mortgage, but before the separation of the parties—and it is impossible for me to say whether it was before or after these deliveries were negotiated—the complainant raised the question of his securing a lease upon the freehold where the chattels purchased by him were situated. The negotiations and representations made by the defendant as to this lease are the important feature which I have just mentioned.

It will be recalled that the defendant, both in his advertisement in some magazine and also a circular letter herein-above copied, had advertised that there should go with the chattels a lease of the premise's where they were situated. At the inception of the dealings with the parties one with another, the complainant had taken this matter up and was not only promised a lease, but was shown a draft thereof ready for execution but not executed, for a term of three years, with an option to purchase, for the benefit of the proposed lessee, and it was thereupon represented by the defendant that he would execute an assignment of that lease covering the premises mentioned. The complainant thereupon telephoned to Mr. Hollander, who purported to be the owner and in whom the legal title resided, and asked him if he could have a lease of the premises if he should purchase the fixtures, whereupon he was informed by Mr. Hollander that he could not, that the said Hollander’s business was with the defendant, and that he would not make a lease to the complainant; although, in answer to the complainant’s question, he said that he had no objection to the latter as a subtenant. Now, it appears that previously these premises had been rented by Hollander to a firm named Squire & Tobias, which had been declared a bankrupt and against which there was a claim by the landlord for arrears of rent. In the fall preceding the negotiations I have men[568]*568tionecl, the Schellhorns had foreclosed a chattel mortgage upon the machinery described above, and it was at their sale that the defendant secured title thereto. At the sale under the chattel mortgage Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
123 A. 549, 95 N.J. Eq. 563, 10 Stock. 563, 1924 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-schellhorn-njch-1924.