Rorback v. Dorsheimer

25 N.J. Eq. 516
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 25 N.J. Eq. 516 (Rorback v. Dorsheimer) 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
Rorback v. Dorsheimer, 25 N.J. Eq. 516 (N.J. 1874).

Opinion

[517]*517The opinion of the court was delivered by

The Chief Justice.

The facts involved in this controversy will be found so fully stated in the opiniou of the Chancellor, read in the court below, that I feel it is quite unnecessary here to reproduce them in detail. They will, consequently, be referred to in a general way, and only so far as may be requisite to present the questions considered and decided.

Mary Dorsheimer, alleging herself to be an idiot, by her guardian, exhibited this bill. The purpose was to recover her distributive share in the estate of her grandfather. This ancestor died intestate, and his administrators made a final settlement of their accounts in the Orphans Court. It is shown that they duly paid over the residue of the moneys thus appearing to be in their hands, to the various descendants of the intestate, with the exception of the share now in dispute in this action. This last share was paid over by the administrators to one John Rorbaek, by virtue of an assignment thereof, alleged to have been made by the complainant to him. The first branch of this controversy relates to the validity of this instrument. The complainant insists that it was obtained from her by fraud, and that the money was paid under it by the connivance of the administrators. These administrators thus inculpated being dead, the suit is against their representatives. John Rorbaek is also a defendant. The bill, in this aspect of it, seeks to charge this money on both Rorbaek and the administrators now before the court. The decree of the Chancellor in this respect, was to the effect that this defendant, Rorbaek, was primarily responsible, and. that a secondary liability vested in these representatives.

The defence interposed to this part of the case, was two fold. Eirst, that no fraud in obtaining the assignment in question and in paying the money upon it, was shown. But I think these facts are very clearly established. The Chancellor has briefly stated a portion of the circumstances, and has, in a measure, discussed the evidence. I do not feel it incumbent on me to do so. It seems to me that the testimony cannot [518]*518leave any doubt on this subject in any unprejudiced mind. In this particular I fully assent to the views expressed by his Honor, the Chancellor.

But, in the second place, it was said that this charge of fraud in the procurement of this assignment, was not set out as a substantive part of the complainant’s case, but was inserted merely in the charging part of the bill, in anticipation of the defence of payment.

It must be admitted that this pleading is dangerously meager in point of substance, and is defective, in many respects, in point of form. On account of these defects, it is somewhat difficult to say where the stating part of the bill ends. It is not certain, therefore, that the charge of fraud in question, is not a part of the statement of the complainant’s case. And it is also to be remembered that the rule is not entirely inflexible, that all the grounds of suit must be embraced in the stating portion of the pleading. Indeed, so far is this from being the case, that in his discussion of this subject, Judge Story, in his treatise on Equity Pleading, (§ 32 a) says: “ But if the material facts are specifically averred, there does not seem to be any positive rule of law which requires that those facts should be averred in the stating part of the bill, and precede what is technically called the charging part of the bill. Regularly, however, all the material parts of the plaintiff’s case will certainly' find their more appropriate place in the narrative or stating part of the bill.”

It was also further urged, in reference to this same matter, that even if the charge of fraud was to be considered as a part of the narrative of the complainant’s case, still it was not charged with sufficient particularity. Many cases were cited by counsel to establish the doctrine that an averment of fraud in general terms was inadmissible. There can be no doubt as to the rule. In equity, as at law, every material fact must be stated with reasonable fullness and particularity. But this imperfection, if it is to be the subject of exception, must, in the main, be brought to the notice of the court by a demurrer. It is but seldom, and only when the statement is [519]*519so vague and loose as to be utterly inert and inefficient, that it can be objected to at the final hearing. The general rule is, that the court will not listen to such objections at the hearing of the case, if the matters stated are such that the court can properly proceed to a decree. In the present case, the charge of fraud in the bill, such as it is, has been put at issue by the answer, and has been amply elucidated by the evidence; obviously, therefore, both parties have understood the matter in dispute ; for the court then, at the last stage of the cause, to annul the whole proceeding, on the ground that a formula of pleading has not been complied with, would be inequitable, and not, it is believed, in accordance with a single precedent. But in addition to this obvious answer to the position, it is further to be noticed that the bill, defective as it is in numerous particulars, is not open to this specific objection. The fraud is not charged in general terms. It does not say merely, that the assignment was obtained by fraud, but it avers that the complainant was an idiot, and that the defendant procured the execution of the instrument by taking advantage of her infirmity. Such transactions are seldom circumstantial; there is no necessity for the use of device or artifice ; in such affairs the fraud generally consists in the simply asking the idiot to sign the instrument, and the facts of idiocy and of signing, are the only ingredients of it. It is therefore questionable with me whether, in this respect, this bill would have been assailable even by a demurrer; that it is so, on the final argument of the merits, I see no plausible reason to assert.

The foregoing are the grounds contained in the appeal of John Rorback, and for the reasons stated, I think the decree in these respects, should be in all things affirmed.

The other branch of the case arises on the cross-appeal of Mary Dorsheimer, the complainant in the court below. The part of the Chancellor’s decree thus objected to, appertains to the following facts :

It has been already stated that the bill is filed against the administrators of the deceased administrators. But it also makes defendants the sureties on the bond of such deceased [520]*520administrators, and it seeks a decree against them on account of the misappropriation of the moneys constituting the distributive share of the complainant. So far as the effort is to charge the representatives of the deceased administrators on account of such misapplication of the funds of the estate, it seems legitimate enough, as the statute makes the personal representatives of an administrator responsible for a devastavit committed by him. But the question now is, whether, in a bill in chancery against such representatives, grounded on such alleged devastavit, the sureties on the administrators’ bond can be joined, and the bond declared to be forfeited. The Chancellor denied the right of the court to make such decree, and the complainant below, on that head, has brought this cross-appeal.

This joint proceeding against the administrators or their representatives, and the sureties on the bond, has in its favor no English precedent.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

F.S.T. Corp. v. Onorato
50 A.2d 467 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1947)
Webb v. Updike-Kennedy Co., Inc.
173 A. 916 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 N.J. Eq. 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rorback-v-dorsheimer-nj-1874.