Haberman v. Kaufer

47 A. 48, 60 N.J. Eq. 271, 15 Dickinson 271, 1900 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 72
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedAugust 8, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 47 A. 48 (Haberman v. Kaufer) 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
Haberman v. Kaufer, 47 A. 48, 60 N.J. Eq. 271, 15 Dickinson 271, 1900 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 72 (N.J. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Grey, V. C.

The complainant moves to strike out the parts of the answer above noted, because, he says, they are impertinent and immaterial. To succeed in this motion he must show that the matter criticised is so unrelated to the complainant’s claim as to be unworthy of any consideration as a defence. 2 Story Eq. Pl. § 267 (note S). On such a motion, if the part objected to should be found to be so connected with the subject-matter of the complainant’s suit that it may fairly be deemed to present some question of either law or fact which the court ought to hear and determine, then it cannot be stricken out as impertinent, but must be considered, and its sufficiency must be passed upon as a defence either of fact or of law to the action.

This characteristic of a motion to strike out 'for impertinence appears to have been overlooked by the counsel on both sides, as they have each argued the motion to strike out as if it presented the question of the sufficiency in law of the challenged facts set forth in the answer to constitute a'defence.

[275]*275The complainant claiuis that by á named contract he is entitled to have certain lands conveyed to him for services rendered, and asks that the contract be decreed to be specifically performed. The defendants contend that there never was any such contract, and allege certain facts which, if true, tend to support the contention. They also aver that these facts, if there were any such contract, show that the complainant has abandoned it by claiming satisfaction in money for the same services which are alleged in this suit to have been in consideration for the contract to convey, performance of which is here sought.

These incidents have' direct connection with the subject-matter of the complainant’s claim, and dispute its validity in fact and in law. When they are considered it may be found that they do not'constitute a defence which is sufficient to defeat the complainant’s right to a decree, but it cannot be said that' they axe so impertinent or immaterial to the controversy before the court that they are not worthy even to be admitted to consideration.

The position of the complainant on this motion to strike out is substantially that set up in Doane v. Essex Building Association, 45 Att. Rep. 537, and there overruled.

He seeks, under a motion to strike out, to demur to the defence set up in the answer. This practice is not allowed in this court, and is not within the spirit of rule 213 governing motions to strike out answers. A motion to strike out a defence in an answer, under that rule, takes the place of the more tedious procedure by exceptions. The rule does' not introduce a new practice whereby the legal sufficiency of a defence presented in an answer may be tested by moving to strike it out; that is, under the form of a motion to strike out, the complainant cannot,' in substance, demur to the answer. Leslie v. Leslie, 5 Dick. Ch. Rep. 155; Doane v. Essex Building Association, ubi supra; Brill v. Riddle Co. (May, 1900, in this court).

The further contention of the eomplainant is that the whole cross-bill of the defendants should be stricken out, because he insists that the matter there set up and the relief sought are foreign to the main suit, and not' the proper subject of a cross-bill.

[276]*276The single purpose of the cross-bill is to obtain the lands (which the complainant claims were agreed to be conveyed to him) to be sold under the order of this court. The pertinency of the cross-bill can best be determined by a consideration of the objects of .the complainant’s suit. He claims to be entitled, under a contract with one Michael Haberman, to a conveyance of lands of which the latter died seized. Michael ignored the contract, and devised the lands to Caroline. She also ignored the contract, and charged the lands with the payment of her debts and of certain legacies, and, subject to these charges, devised them to the complainant and made him executor of her will. The complainant proved this will and undertook its execution. He now files his bill, and makes the legatees of Caroline defendants, in order that the decree may cut off their charge upon the lands. They, by answer, deny the existence and also any performance of the contract, and, by cross-bill, ask that the lands admitted to have been devised to the complainant, and to be charged to pay their legacies, may, by the order of this court, be sold for that purpose.

The complainant insists that he has come into court only for the enforcement of his alleged contract, and that he is not a party in any other capacity; that the cross-bill seeks to have him respond as devisee of the title to the land and as sole executor of the will of Caroline, and this, he claims, is to bring in a new party by cross-bill, which, he contends, cannot be done, citing Richman, v. Donnell, 8 Dick. Ch. Rep. 35, where Vice-Chancellor Bird held that if the establishment of the defendant’s rights require him to raise issues not within the scope of the original bill, and to bring in new parties, he must file an original bill. This view has force only where new matter is set up in the cross-bill, which is foreign to the subject to which the original bill is addressed. It does not apply in cases like the present, where the relief sought by the cross-bill affects the same subject-matter dealt with in the original bill, and the denial of relief to the original complainant will, under the circumstances of the case, be substantially a declaration that the affirmative relief sought by the cross-bill should be adjudged. In such cases it might be that the whole of the matters in dispute between the [277]*277parties could be settled in one suit, if all the parties entitled to be heard could be brought in as defendants in the cross-bill. The defendants hold legacies which are admittedly charged on the lands, conveyance of which is sought to be enforced by the complainant as purchaser by contract. He makes these legatees defendants solely because they hold these charges on the lands in question. They dispute his claim, and ask that they may have affirmative relief against him, touching this charge on the lands, not, it is true, in his capacity as purchaser, but as executor of the will and devisee of the lands.

If it be admitted that the relief sought by the cross-bill requires that the complainant be defendant in a new - capacity, and that he is,.therefore, a new party, it is not an unwarranted practice, for the court of appeals has declared that where it is necessary to bring in new parties to a cross-bill in order to grant affirmative relief in aid of a defence, it may be done. Green v. Stone, 9 Dick. Ch. Rep. 401. The opinion in that case further gives a strong intimation that in this court in such cases that mode of procedure should be followed which will dispose of the entire litigation in one suit. Ibid.

The complainant contends that the relief sought by the cross-bill is wholly unrelated to the rights asserted by the original bill, and he asks: “If the cross-bill had been an original bill for the payment of these legacies, would Conrad Haberman (the complainant in the original bill) have been a necessary or proper party to it in the character in which he sues as complainant ?”

Conrad sues as complainant, claiming to be the equitable owner of the land in question.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 A. 48, 60 N.J. Eq. 271, 15 Dickinson 271, 1900 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haberman-v-kaufer-njch-1900.