Peter W. Kero, Inc. v. Terminal Construction Corp.

78 A.2d 814, 6 N.J. 361, 1951 N.J. LEXIS 275
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 19, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 78 A.2d 814 (Peter W. Kero, Inc. v. Terminal Construction Corp.) 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
Peter W. Kero, Inc. v. Terminal Construction Corp., 78 A.2d 814, 6 N.J. 361, 1951 N.J. LEXIS 275 (N.J. 1951).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Ackerson, J.

The defendant, Terminal Construction Corporation, was under contract with the United States Government for certain construction work to be performed in the-building of the Veterans’ Administration Hospital at East Orange, and plaintiff, Peter W. Kero, • Inc., was its subcontractor for the purpose of removing a certain stock pile-of earth and rock from the hospital site. The agreement between plaintiff and defendant for the latter work is evidenced by two written contracts, both dated December 10,. 1948, both containing the same job designation (“Job No.C-112; P. O. No.-133”) and both drawn up on defendant’s- *365 purchase order forms. In each document appears identical language providing that the plaintiff will “furnish all labor, materials, and equipment necessary to remove” a certain stock pile of surplus earth and rock from the site in question. One ■of the contracts states that the consideration for these services “shall be paid at prevailing standard rates, the total of which shall not exceed the sum of $18,000.00 * * .the other ■specified “the total sum of $9,500.00” as the price for the ■same services. Both contracts are signed by Peter W. Kero, :as president of P. W. Kero, Inc., and Charles A. Cusiek, purchasing agent for the defendant. In the negotiation and execution of these contracts, as well as many prior agreements between the same parties, plaintiff was represented by one person alone; he was its president, Peter W. Kero, who seems to have had complete control of the corporation and all of its ■business transactions.

Plaintiff- rendered bills to the defendant, one dated December 31, 1948, for $5,000 and one dated January 8, 1949, for '$4,500, both of which referred to the job number involved and •defendant paid these bills by two checks, one for $5,000 dated February 25, 1949, and the other for $4,500 dated March 26, 1949. The second check, which was delivered by Richard FT. Dinallo, president of the defendant company, to Mr. Kero personally, contained a notation on its face, “PO-133-Pd-in-full Y. A.”

It also appears that when the second check was delivered, Mr. Kero, as president of the plaintiff corporation, executed two releases in favor of the defendant. Both of these releases are on printed general release forms and provide that P. W. Kero, Inc., for the consideration of $1.00 and other valuable consideration discharges the Terminal Construction Corporation from all claims and demands whatsoever, in the usual terminology of such instruments. However, in one of these releases, immediately following the printed words of general release, appears the following statement in typewriting:

“Whereas two contracts were entered into between the parties hereto for work on the Veterans Administration Hospital at East Orange, New Jersey, and one is in the sum of $9,500 and the other *366 for a sum not exceeding $18,000.00, the purpose of this release is to release the releasee from all claims of both contracts and of all claims for extras, it being agreed that payment heretofore made in the sum of $9,500.00 is in full and all differences between the parties concerning the contracts, the work, or the claims by one against the other are released.”

Both releases were concluded in the following manner:

“In Witness Whereof, the said party of the first part has caused these presents to be signed by its President and its corporate seal to be hereto affixed and attested by its Secretary the 4th day of June Nineteen Hundred and Forty-nine
Attest ’ By P. W. Kero
P. W. Kero President
Secretary”

Neither of the releases, however, was attested by the defendant’s secretary, nor did a corporate or any other seal appear thereon. While the releases are dated “the. 4th day of June Nineteen Hundred and Forty-nine” (the figure “4th”' is written in ink and the words “June” and “Forty-nine” are in typewriting), Mr. Kero testified that they were actually signed on March 26, 1949, when the second check ($4,500) was delivered to him, and when he signed them at that time they were both completely blank except for the printed matter usually contained in such forms and no typewritten material whatsoever appeared thereon.

Plaintiff instituted the present action on August 31, 1949, by a complaint, predicated upon the $18,000 contract, to recover an alleged unpaid balance thereunder of $8,500 (after crediting the two checks above mentioned, totaling $9,500) plus the reasonable value of extra work alleged to have been done at defendant’s request, amounting to $5,000, thus making the total claim $13,500 plus interest and costs. Defendant’s answer asserted that the other contract which set a flat price of $9,500 for the work in question embodied the true and final agreement between the parties and the price therein stipulated for had been paid. The answer further pleaded that any claim which plaintiff may have had under any agreement with respect to the aforementioned work was extin *367 guished by “general release.” Plaintiff replied that the releases thus referred to were procured through fraud in the particulars hereinafter specified.

The pretrial order stated the parties had agreed that the trial was to be based on the pleadings as-filed. However, at the inception of the trial, this order was amended to amplify the issues by the insertion of the following sentence: “Whether the plaintiff executed a general release, and whether it is barred from recovery by virtue of any release.”

At the close of the evidence defendant moved for a judgment in its favor on the ground that plaintiff had failed to establish any fraud to impugn the validity of the releases and therefore plaintiff’s claim was effectively barred thereby. The plaintiff also moved for judgment in its favor on several grounds, inter alia, that the releases in question are invalid and not binding on it as a matter of law because they (a) bear no seal, corporate or otherwise; (b) are not attested by its secretary;, (c) are not signed with the corporate name and only by “P. W. Kero, President”; (d)'are not shown to have been the authorized act of the plaintiff, and (e) being without seal, no consideration is shown to .have been given therefor. Both motions were denied and the cause was submitted to the jury resulting in a verdict for the plaintiff in the amount of $8,334.77 with interest and costs, and from the judgment entered thereon the defendant appealed to the Appellate Division of the Superior Court and we certified the cause here on our own motion.

The appeal challenges the trial court’s denial of defendant’s motion for the direction of a judgment in its favor and also the legal propriety of specified portions of the charge to the jury.

The sole basis of defendant’s motion for judgment was that the releases in question barred plaintiff’s claim because there was insufficient evidence of fraud in their procurement to warrant the submission of that question to the jury. We think the motion was rightly denied.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 A.2d 814, 6 N.J. 361, 1951 N.J. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peter-w-kero-inc-v-terminal-construction-corp-nj-1951.