Robertson v. Criterion Construction Co.

140 A. 574, 6 N.J. Misc. 91, 1928 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 149
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 10, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 140 A. 574 (Robertson v. Criterion Construction Co.) 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
Robertson v. Criterion Construction Co., 140 A. 574, 6 N.J. Misc. 91, 1928 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 149 (N.J. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Backes, V. C.

The bill is to rescind an executed contract to exchange properties — the complainant corporation’s cottages at Deal for the defendant corporation’s apartment house in East Orange. The trade was made by Sarah L. Robertson, owner of the complainant company, and she charges that she was induced to make it by false representations of the Lunsky brothers, owners of the defendant corporation, as to the value of the apartment house, its rental value and the manner .in which it was to be constructed; it was not then finished. The defendant Bowes, a broker, previously retained by both parties, brought about the deal. Each of the parties put a fancy trading price on his property; there was the usual dealer’s talk; each knew before the exchange was consummated what he was getting, and it is an open question which of the two got the short end. The complainant says she did; [92]*92that she was an inexperienced, confiding woman, and was duped in relying upon the representations of the two builders and the broker, who schemed to cheat her. The sympathetic ear of equity is always enlisted by the cry of the weak, and it is compassionately, extended to the weaker sex in their dilemmas, but measuring this woman’s business capacity by her conceit as a trader, there was no inequality. She is of the forward type, self-assured and sharp-witted, falling somewhat short of her own estimate, with no little experience in handling real estate, and her grievance must be judged as man to man. Confidence in her plea that she was wronged is, at the outset, shaken by the fact that after she says she knew the’ representations to be false, and after, as she said, she got a “rotten” deal, she traded the apartment house for another, and withdrew from that contract, by consent, because she again had been deceived, as she claims. And faith in her complaint is challenged by the fact that as it was originally presented she charged only fraudulent representations in respect of the value of the apartment house, and the rental value, and later, as if an afterthought, she amended her bill and added the charge of false representations concerning the construction of the apartment house as a completed structure. The bill was filed May 1st, 1925 — the amendment was made the following January at the hearing. In the meantime, on June 23 d, the bill was amended by adding the “(f)” false representation hereafter noted. These late additions of charges, which must have been known to the complainant when she first came to court, if they then grieved her, and her careless handling of the truth on the witness-stand, give the impression that she was not unwilling to resort to any expedient to win a decree.

Passing to the meritorious question. The misrepresentations alleged in the bill as originally drawn are — -(a) that the apartment house was worth $45,0'00 more than the property of complainant; (b) that the, apartment house could be sold for $154,000; (c) that the annual rent obtainable for the aparament houses was $16,800; (d) that each room of the apartment house would rent for $25 a month, and (e) that complainant would be able to pay $4,800 a year to reduce [93]*93a certain mortgage held by a building and loan association, and, in addition, would realize a profit of over $3,000, and that the apartment would be completed in October, 1924. By amendment of June 23d, 1925, this was added — (f) that similar apartment houses in the city of East Orange in the vicinity of said apartment house were, at the time of the transaction, renting for $25 per month per room. The representations are in a way substantiated by Mrs. Robertson and two of her friends, and in the sense in which they are related by them, they are denied by the Lunskys and the broker Bowes. The Lunskys put their property in at $150,000, subject to mortgages; Mrs. Robertson hers at $90,000, subject to mortgages. Each party knew that his own was not his cash sale price. Mrs. Robertson’s not by $15,000. Neither was deceived that the other’s was not a trade value, and each judged for himself after an inspection of the other’s property. Any one in his ordinary senses would have realized that the Lunskys, if they claimed, that their property was worth $150,000, or $45,000 more than Mrs. Robertson’s, were indulging in shop talk. Surely she could not have thought they were making a gift to her of that excess. And so with the claim that Bowes, her broker, told her that the apartments could be sold for $154,000, which he denies making. Now, as to the prospective rentals. The total amount of rentals at $25 per room per month would have yielded the sum of the alleged representation, and $25 per month per room was a fair estimate at that time of high rentals, and other apartments in the neighborhood were bringing that amount, and the prospects were, and the reasonable expectation at that time was, that the annual yield would be as represented, and Mrs. Robertson, realizing that the representations were not guarantees, satisfied herself by a personal investigation. The rental income was problematical, depending upon the real estate boom then on and the continuance of the demand for apartments, of which there had been a scarcity, and it was so understood. Each took the other’s property, trusting that he would not be disappointed in his own judgment. There was no misrepresentation in this respect of an existing fact or of facts [94]*94in the future. The principle of law on this subject, in its variety of application, is stated, and supported by authority in Wise v. Fuller, 29 N. J. Eq. 257: “It may be said, generally, an actionable misrepresentation consists in a false statement respecting a fact material to the contract, and which is influential in producing it. Statements of value made by a vendor during the negotiation between the parties, although known to be excessive, do not ordinarily constitute a warranty of a fraud. A mere expression of opinion as to value, although the amount stated is known to be excessive, is not a fraud, unless the person making it knew at the time that in consequence of the relations of trust and confidence existing between himself and the person to whom it was made, he would rely upon it and be controlled by it. A purchaser is not entitled to relief against a vendor for a false affirmation of value, it being deemed his only folly to credit a nude assertion of that nature. Besides, value consists in judgment and' estimation, in which men necessarily differ. But a remedy will be against a vendor for falsely affirming that a greater rent is paid for the estate than is actually received, for that is a fact within his own knowledge. And so a willful misrepresentation by a vendor affirming that the income from his public house has been greater than in truth it was, is an actionable fraud. The fact that a price in excess of its market value is paid for a thing, standing alone, is never evidence of fraud. Mere inadequacy of consideration will never substantiate a charge of fraud. In equity, inadequacy of value is, in general, of itself, no ground for impeaching a contract, but, with other circumstances of suspicion, it may constitute an element of proof in establishing fraud.”

Passing then to the representation alleged by the amendment to the bill to have been false, “that all materials being used in the construction of the apartment house were the best obtainable, that the work had been done, and was being done, in a workmanlike and first class manner and by competent mechanics, and in compliance with every requirement of the building code of the city of East Orange, and with every requirement of the tenement house laws of the State of New [95]

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Related

Kaufhold v. Cador Construction Co.
156 A. 125 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
140 A. 574, 6 N.J. Misc. 91, 1928 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-criterion-construction-co-njch-1928.