State v. Cass

18 A. 972, 52 N.J.L. 77, 23 Vroom 77, 1889 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 17
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 18 A. 972 (State v. Cass) 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
State v. Cass, 18 A. 972, 52 N.J.L. 77, 23 Vroom 77, 1889 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 17 (N.J. 1889).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Reed, J.

Catharine E. Cass brought an action against Samuel Cummings, Jr., in the Second District. Court of Newark, for the recovery of the sum of $125, the price which she had paid for a horse purchased by her of Cummings.

The gravamen of the demand of the plaintiff was, that such sale was brought about by the fraudulent representation of [78]*78the defendant, which fraudulent conduct conferred upon her the right of rescission, and that in the exercise of such right she tendered back the animal and demanded a return of the consideration paid, and that the defendant refused to comply with such demand. The case was tried- before a jury, and, under the law as charged by the court, tlie jury found the facts to be such as to entitle the plaintiff to a verdict for the full amount paid.

The judgment entered upon this verdict was taken to the Essex County Common Pleas and there affirmed.

That judgment is brought up by the present writ.

The representations, the falsity of which constituted the ground of the verdict against the defendant, appear by the state of the case agreed upon by the attorneys to have been made as follows: One Van Buskirk, as the agent of the plaintiff, inquired of defendant about a certain brown horse owned by defendant. Van Buskirk asked if the brown horse could travel seven or eight miles an hour, and stated that a horse that could do that was required. The defendant said that the brown horse was too slow for that purpose, but pointed Van Buskirk to á gray horse, stating that he could easily go seven or eight miles an hour, as it had formerly been a very fast horse and attached to the salvage corps wagon, but that meeting with an accident one day, while going to a fire, it had injured one leg a little, making it unfit for the work required of it by the salvage corps. On another occasion, Mr. Cass, in the presence of his wife, the plaintiff, stated to defendant that they desired a horse that could make the distance between Rockland aud Orange Valley, between seven and eight miles, in one hour or one and a half hours, and stated that if the horse could not do that they didn’t want to buy him, to which defendant replied that the horse could easily do that.

Plaintiff sought to try the horse by driving him one evening, but the defendant refused to allow said trial, stating that the horse had already on that day been to Harlem and Orange, which statement was true. The next morning plaintiff pur[79]*79chased the horse for $125, paid $50 in cash and gave a promissory note of four months endorsed by Mr. Van Buslcirk. There was evidence that the horse was not able to •travel seven or eight miles in one hour or in one hour and a half, and was not fit for the purpose for which he had been bought. It appeared on the cross-examination of the plaintiff that at the time of the sale a written warranty of the horse had been given in the following form: Newark, April 6th, • 1887. To one gray horse Charley, which I warrant to be sound and kind with the exception of straining of muscle of left hind leg.” The counsel for defendant thereupon moved that all evidence as to representations made by the defendant, other than those contained in the written warranty, be stricken out, on the ground that the agreement of the parties having been reduced to writing such writing could not be varied or enlarged by parol evidence. The court denied the motion and allowed an exception.

"When the plaintiff rested his case the counsel for defendant •moved for a non-suit, upon the ground that a written warranty having been proved to have been given on the sale of the horse, and there being no evidence that the horse did not correspond with this warranty, the plaintiff had not made out any case for damages. This motion was denied and an exception was allowed.

At the close of the summing up of counsel, the counsel for the defendant requested the court to charge the jury, that there being a warranty the jury cannot consider any testimony as to any representation not contained therein. This request was refused and an exception allowed.

The court charged the jury, that if they believed that the representations alleged to have been made in relation to the speed of the horse were made, and that the plaintiff relying upon them purchased the horse, and that such representations were in fact not true, and the horse was, therefore, unfit for the purpose for which it was bought, that plaintiff could recover the purchase money, she having offered to return the horse, on the ground of fraud or deceit which was independent [80]*80and irrespective of the so-called warranty. To this portion of the charge an exception was allowed.

The counsel for the defendant also requested the court to charge, that if the jury should find for the plaintiff that the measure of damages must be the difference in value between what the horse was actually worth in the condition he was at the time of the sale and what he would have been worth if the representations made by the defendant had been true, which request the court refused to charge, and allowed an exception.

The court, to the contrary, charged the jury, that if they found for the plaintiff they must find in the sum of $125, that being the price she had paid for the horse. An exception was allowed to this part of the charge. Reasons covering the above exceptions were assigned for the reversal of the judgment below.

The primary question raised by the exceptions and argued with elaborate care, is one of evidence. It involves the correctness of the judicial ruling, by which the testimony in respect to certain representations made by the vendor previous to and at the time of the sale, were admitted in evidence. These representations, as already appears, were made in respect to the traveling qualities of the animal sold. It also appears that there was a written warranty in respect to the quality of soundness and quietness. It is insisted by the counsel for the defendant below, that the admission of the verbal representations enlarged and varied the written contract. He therefore invokes the inexorable rule of evidence, that when parties have put their contract into writing oral testimony cannot be substituted for or added to the written evidence of the agreement. 1 Greenl. Evid., § 88.

This principle has, from the earliest period of jurisprudence, been recognized as a wholesome and necessary rule of public policy. 1 Greenl. Evid., § 275 ; Wright v. Remington, 12 Vroom 48 ; S. C., 14 Id. 451; Naumberg v. Young, 15 Id. 331.

[81]*81But this rule of evidence is not infringed by the admission of parol testimony which is not intended as a substitution for or an addition to a written contract, but which goes to show that the instrument is void or voidable, and that it never had any legal existence or binding force either by reason of fraud, or for want of due execution and delivery, or for the illegality of the subject matter of the contract. 1 Greenl. Evid., § 284.

Nor is the admission of parol evidence, for the purpose of avoiding a written contract on the ground of fraud, confined to such testimony as goes to show that a party was lured to make a contract other than that intended, as by the substitution of one contract for another by trickery, or by misreading a contract to an illiterate person.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 A. 972, 52 N.J.L. 77, 23 Vroom 77, 1889 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cass-nj-1889.