Hoagland v. Hall

38 N.J.L. 350
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1876
StatusPublished

This text of 38 N.J.L. 350 (Hoagland v. Hall) 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
Hoagland v. Hall, 38 N.J.L. 350 (N.J. 1876).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Beasley, Chief Justice.

The defendant agreed to give $2000, in consideration of the assignment of a certain lease, and the sale and transfer to him of certain personal property. The check in suit was given in part payment of this consideration money.

Among the articles agreed to be thus sold and transferred was a license to keep an inn, granted under the laws of this [353]*353state, and the first question propounded, for the consideration of this court is, whether a recovery in this action is prevented, for the reason that the plaintiff was incapable of performing this part of his contract, inasmuch as this license was not assignable.

The point of the objection thus taken was, that although the plaintiff’ was willing and ready, at the time appointed, to make this assignment, that he could not do so, because such act would have been illegal.

This objection rests on the fallacy of assuming that the plaintiff agreed to transfer to the defendant a license, which, as such, would be operative in his hands. But this was not so; we are bound to consider that both of these contracting parties knew what the law was, and were aware that this paper would not be efficacious as a license after a transfer of it; and the consequence is, it stands as an incontestable fact that the defendant, when he stipulated for the license, did not expect to keep an inn by virtue of it. The transfer of it would have been a legal act; the use of it as a warrant to keep an inn would have been illegal. The language of the statute is: “ No license shall entitle any person to keep an inn and tavern in any other place than that in which it was first kept, by virtue of such license; and such license, with regard to all other places and persons, shall be void.” The court must charge the defendant with a knowledge of this law, and it thus becomes certain that what he sought was the acquisition of a paper which would be absolutely ineffectual as an authority to keep a tavern. He may have thought this in some way beneficial, as in a future application to have his house licensed as an inn; but whatever his motive, or want of motive, there was nothing illegal in the thing, and it will not, consequently, avoid the contract. “ Where a party obtains what he contracted for,” says the court, in the case of Fay’s Adm’rs v. Richards et al., 21 Wend. 626, he cannot annul his contract on the ground that what he received is valueless, unless he shows fraud or misapprehension in respect to the subject matter of the contract.”

[354]*354The authorities cited, iu behalf of the defence on this point, are not relevant. They are all cases in which the party seeking to enforce the agreement had not been able to do, on his part, that which he had undertaken to do.

The second question, an answer to which is asked of this court, is, whether the assignment tendered was such as by the agreement the plaintiff was bound to tender.

The case sent to this court shows that on the day fixed for performance, the plaintiff tendered an assignment of the lease in question, and that embodied in such assignment there was a stipulation that the defendant would pay the rent at the time the same should become due, and that he would keep and perform all the covenants and agreements to be kept and performed on the part of the lessee.

By his covenant to purchase this lease, the defendant had agreed to become the assignee of it — that is, to take upon himself all the rights and liabilities which appertained to that relation. What such liabilities were, was a matter of law; he was bound to assume them ; he was not bound to assume any thing more. But it is impossible to deny that the stipulations interpolated into this assignment does not impose a greater burthen than a naked assignment would have carried with it. As assignee he could not have been compelled to perform, speaking generally, the covenants of the lessee, nor to pay the rent under all circumstances. The law is clear upon this point, and the cases will be found referred to in Taylor’s Land. and Ten., § 449. By this disputed clause the defendant is made to bind himself to the performance of the lessee’s covenant, and to the payment of the rent to the full extent of the liability of such lessee. This was an enlargement of his responsibilities to which he had a right to object. The assignment tendered was not such a one as the plaintiff was bound to tender.

The last question propounded is, whether the right of the plaintiff to recover upon the check was affected by the lease or assignment to Van Fleet or Vroom.

[355]*355In considering this point, it is to be assumed that the plaintiff, as long as the contract was performing, was not in fault. In this connection he is to be treated as though he had tendered, at the appointed time, a proper assignment of the lease, and a legal bill of sale. The note, which is the subject of the suit, was given for the first payment which was due on the date of the agreement, but before the commencement of the action the plaintiff, considering the contract broken, and that he had made a tender on his part, transferred to a third party such an interest in the leased property as put it out of his power to give the interest in it to the defendant, which was his due, if the contract had been complied with on his side. The legal proposition, freed of surplusage, is this: Can a vendee, giving his check in part payment at the time of the agreement to purchase, and who subsequently, at the time for performance, fails to comply with the terms of sale, be sued on such check after the vendor has sold the subject of the sale ?

If a suit, under the conditions specified, will lie, then in this class of cases a measure of damages for breach of contract is prescribed very different from that which is usually applied in this department of the law. If an agreement be broken, the general rule is, that the innocent party shall be indemnified for his proximate loss; the contention here is, that he may recover all payments which fall due before the final breach, no matter what their amount, or how great their excess over the damage actually suffered. To state the case plainly — If A agrees to buy a house of B for $10,000, payment to be made in checks, in even amounts, ten days apart, the house to be delivered on the giving of the last check — in such case if the vendee refuses to comply by giving the last check, the vendor can sell the house, and then recover the amount of $9000 on the nine checks thus given. A result so glaringly unjust is of itself a demonstration that it is not the product of legal rules properly applied. I have seen no case which, correctly interpreted, lends any countenance to the doctrine claimed, on this head, by the plaintiff. The prece[356]*356dents do not throw much light, either directly or obliquely, upon this subject, for I have been able to find, after considerable research, but a single one which is in point. The true rule, I think, is, that in all cases where a vendor, after a breach on the other side, has parted with the subject of sale, and the vendee has abandoned the contract, the only remedy left to the vendor is an action for the non-performance by the vendee of the entire contract, and not for a non-performance of any of the particular stipulations of it.

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Related

Fay's Administrators v. Richards
21 Wend. 626 (New York Supreme Court, 1839)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 N.J.L. 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoagland-v-hall-nj-1876.