Kuntz v. Tonnele

84 A. 624, 80 N.J. Eq. 373, 1912 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 24
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedSeptember 13, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 84 A. 624 (Kuntz v. Tonnele) 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
Kuntz v. Tonnele, 84 A. 624, 80 N.J. Eq. 373, 1912 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 24 (N.J. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Garrison, V. C.

It "will be necessary to make a recital of the salient facts upon which the decision rests. Briefly stated, they are as follows:

Tonnele was the owner of a piece of property at Metuchen, New Jersey. (Incidentally, he had parted with the legal title to a man named Albanesius, who held the same to secure a loan of some $7,000.) At one time Kuntz had negotiated with Tonnele for the purchase and sale of this property, but failed to reach a bargain. Subsequently, Shenckman, who is a brother-in-law of Kuntz, and who occupied a suite of offices in New York City with Kuntz, took up negotiations with Tonnele. Shenckman informed Kuntz that he was associated in some banking enterprise with Tonnele, and thought he could get the property for Kuntz cheaper than Kuntz could get it if he conducted the negotiations himself. When Shenckman got together with Tonnele, Tonnele agreed to sell the property for $14,000, and Shenckman demanded a commission of $700 from Tonnele, which Tonnele agreed to pay him.

Shenckman told Kuntz that the price was $15,000, and Kuntz prepared a contract between a man named Senft, who was his dummy, and Tonnele, by which Tonnele was to sell the property to Senft for $15,000.

On the 6th of August, 1909, Tonnele, Herrmann, Tonnele’s lawyer, and Shenckman met at Shenckman’s office, which, as above stated, was also Kuntz’s office, but Kuntz was not present at the time. Before this time this contract had been submitted to Herrmann, acting for Tonnele, and he had made certain' changes therein. On the 6th of August -aforesaid, Tonnele spoke of the increase in the price as evidenced by the written contract, and expressed his gratification that he fvas to secure $1,000 more than he and Shenckman had agreed upon in their previous negotiation.. Shenckman then informed Tonnele that this extra $1,-000 was not to go to Tonnele, but to him, Shenckman. To this Tonnele demurred. Finally, he agreed, and a paper was drawn up and signed, by which Tonnele authorized Shenckman to sell the property for him at $15,000, for doing which Shenckman was to receive $1,750 as commission. (The additional $50 is not explained by anybody.) Thereupon Tonnelp signed the con[375]*375tract between himself and Senft for the sale to Senft at $15,000 —Senft having already signed the same.

Either contemporaneously therewith (or theretofore) Senft had assigned the contract between himself and Tonnele to Kuntz. •The $1,750, which the contract provides to be forthwith paid, was paid by Kuntz; and $1,300 was forthwith paid by Tonnele to Shenckman.

Subsequently, and within a few days after the 6th of August, 1909, Kuntz paid the additional $250 required by the contract. On the 4th of October, desiring to secure an adjournment, he paid $500 more on account of the contract, and secured an adjournment to November 11th or 12th. On this last-mentioned day he desired to secure another adjournment, and paid $500 piore on account of the contract, and secured an adjournment to November 26th, 1909. At the time of securing this last adjournment—that is, either the 11th or 12th of November, 1909—• he learned from Herrmann, who was acting for Tonnele, and who granted the adjournment, and received the $500 then paid, that his agent, Shenckman, in the negotiations had secured $1,-700 or $1,750 commission for himself. Shortly after learning this from Herrmann, Kuntz met Tonnele on a railroad train and told Tonnele what he had learned and got a fuller statement of the facts from Tonnele. Between this time and the 26th day of November, 1909, and on the 26th day of November, 1909, there were various interviews between the parties. Taking Kuntz’s own version as true; it appears that he took the position that he should get the property upon paying $13,300, and no more, and that he would pay this and take the title; and they took the position that he must pay the full $15,000. He finally, on the 26th of November, 1909, according to his own version, offered either to pajr $13,300 and take the title, or to pa3r $15,000 and take the title provided they gave him a bond conditioned to repay to him the $1,700 as commissions allowed Shenckman if he proved that Shenckman was not entitled to the same: This they declined to do, insisting that he must pay the $15,000. Their version is that at the time that he made the offer to pay the $15,000, it was not upon any condition of the sort that he now states, but that his offer was to give them checks dated ahead, they to deposit a deed [376]*376with Mr. Herrmann in escrow, who was to deliver the deed to him when the cheeks were cashed.

Subsequently, and on tire 7th day of December, 1909, Kuntz filed liis bill in this suit against Tonnele, Ryer and Shenekman. He included Ryer because he alleged that Ryer had made some agreement with Shenekman to obtain from Shenekman some portion of the money which Shenekman was obtaining out of the transaction. (Ryer was eliminated from the suit.) Briefly stated, his bill, afier reciting tire contract between Senft and Tonnele and the assignment thereof to him, Kuntz, referred to the previous negotiations between himself and Tonnele which fell through; stated the intervention of Shenekman in tire matter; the authority by him to Shenekman to negotiate for him; the ascertainment by him from Herrmann of the facts concerning ■ the agreement to pay commissions to Shenekman; alleged that, in reality, the contract between Tonnele and Shenekman was that the purchase price was to be $14,000 instead of $15,000, and that of said $14,000, $700 was to be paid to Shenekman; charged that Tonnele and Shenekman had agreed that the contract price should be represented to Kuntz as $15,000, and that the $1,700 in excess of the amount that Tonnele was to receive was to be equally divided between Tonneic, Ryer and Shenekman; that the whole transaction was a scheme to defraud Ivuntz out of $1,700 and compel him to pay for .the property the sum of $15,000, whereas the true amount which Tonnele was to receive was the srurr of $13,300.

After a prayer for discoveiy he prays that

“the said parties may be decreed to have conspired together to defraud your orator out of the sum of seventeen hundred dollars, and further decreed to surrender and deliver up to your orator the said sum of seventeen hundred dollars; and that the said Tonnele * _ “ * may be decreed to convey and transfer to (yotir orator) the said property a- # * upon the payment by (Kuntz) to. them the sum of thirteen (housand throe hundred dollars, less the amount already paid.”

Subsequently, there was an amended hill Hied which, so far as I can see, does not differ from the original bill, excepting that it includes Albanesius as one against whom he prays relief, and only against him because he held the legal title.

[377]*377The defendants Tonnele (I have not mentioned the wife throughout these proceedings because it was unnecessary to do so) filed an answer and a cross-hill. The answer practically consists of denials of the allegations of the bill; and the cross-hill prays that the complainant be required to specifically perform the contract and pay the balance of the $15,000 purchase price mentioned therein.

Shenekman, though a party to the bill, has not been served mor brought into the sriit in any other manner.

The proofs entirely fail to sustain the charges of the bill that Tonnele agreed with Shenekman that he, Tonnele, should have a portion of the commissions allowed to Shenekman.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 A. 624, 80 N.J. Eq. 373, 1912 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuntz-v-tonnele-njch-1912.