Tichenor v. Hayes

41 N.J.L. 193
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 41 N.J.L. 193 (Tichenor v. Hayes) 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
Tichenor v. Hayes, 41 N.J.L. 193 (N.J. 1879).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Beasley, Chief Justice.

This is a suit against an administratrix. Some of the counts in the declaration, which is demurred to, are founded on a breach of duty in the defendant’s intestate, as an attorney at law, in investigating the title and condition, with respect to encumbrances, of a certain property upon which the plaintiff was about to take a mortgage, and whereby the plaintiff lost the money invested by him. The other counts allege, as the gravamen of the action, certain false and fraudulent representations made by such intestate with respect to certain mortgages, in consequence 'of which the plaintiff put his money in them, and that siich securities proved worthless. .

The demurrer that has been put in to this declaration is intended to raise but a single question, which is, whether the causes of action thus stated will survive against the personal representative of the deceased wrongdoer.

The action as to form is in tort. I do not understand, from the brief of the counsel of the defendant, that it is contended that if the suit had been in the mode of an action ex contractu for the non-performance of the implied contract that the attorney would exercise due care and skill touching the business of his client, that such action would not have survived. Upon this point the law is settled by numerous decisions. In some of these the distinction, with respect to the capacity to survive, that exists between the forms of assumpsit and tort, is sharply [195]*195drawn. Such, in this particular, is the aspect of Knights v. Quarles, 2 Brod. & Bing. 102, which was a suit in assumpsit by an administrator, growing out of an undertaking by the defendant, who was an attorney, to investigate and see that a title about to be conveyed to the intestate was a good one, the breach being that the defendant failed to do so, and that the intestate, in'consequence, took an insufficient title, to the injury of his personal estate. On these facts, the judicial opinion was that such cause of action survived to the personal representative, such result being reached by the rules of the common law, irrespectively of any statutory modification. It was considered that the whole transaction rested on a contract, and that a right to sue, arising from a breach, passed to the administrator, and, in the course of the opinion read on that occasion, it was observed, by way of illustration, “ that if a man contracted for a safe conveyance by a coach, and sustained an injury by a fall, by which his means <ff improving his personal property were destroyed, and that property in consequence injured, though it was clear he in his lifetime might, at his election, sue the coach proprietor in contract or in tort, it could not be doubted that his executor might sue in assumpsit for the coach proprietor’s breach of contract.”

This same distinction, in this respect, between these two forms of action, is emphasized in several of the more recent decisions of the English courts. One of these is the case of Bradshaw and wife v. Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Co., L. R., 10 C. P. 189, which was a suit ex contractu by an executrix for injuries inflicted on the testator, in consequence of which, after an interval, he had died, the purpose of the suit being to recover for medical expenses, and the loss that had been occasioned by the inability of the testator to attend to his business. The ground that was expressed for sustaining this action, which was admitted to be a novelty, was that all that was claimed by the plaintiff was compensation for the loss that had fallen on the personal estate, and, in form, the suit was for breach of contract, and the doctrine, that there could be no recovery at common law in such a proceeding, by [196]*196. reason of the suffering and death of the person injured, was • distinctly stated. Potter v. Metropolitan District Railway Co., 30 L. J. (N. S.) 765, is a case of the same complexion. And the old authorities are to the same effect, as will conspicuously appear by a reference to the summary of them appended, by way of a note, to the case of Wheatley v. Lane, 1 Saund. 216, the two decisions from the Law Reports being specially instanced by me, not on account of any novelty in the grounds of judgment, but for the reason that they exemplify, with more than common distinctness, the limits to which an action on a contract will survive. For it will be observed that these two cases, both in form ex contractu, exclude from the recover- . able damages all such as do not fall under the denomination of losses to the personal estate. This rule of decision accords with the principle adopted by this court in the case of Hayden v. Vreeland, 8 Vroom 372, in which it was held that an action for a breach of a contract of marriage could not be maintained by or against the personal representative of either party to the contract.

Up to this point in my remarks on this subject, my object has been to show that although at common law a certain class of actions ex contractu are possessed of the capacity to survive to the personal representative, that nevertheless this transmissible remedy is not a complete one; the importance of this circumstance will heréafter appear.

As has been already stated, the present áction is in tort, in part for fraud, and in part for a breach of the duty of "an attorney at law in not exercising dpe care and skill in the business of his client; and it cannot, therefore, be doubted that, by the more authority of the common law, the proceeding cannot be vindicated. Consequently, the only debatable question arising in this connection is with respect to the proper construction of sections four and five of the act concerning executors. Rev., p. 396.

These provisions are not strange to this court. They were considered and, in one of their aspects, construed in the case of Ten Eyck v. Runk, 2 Vroom 428. That was an action for [197]*197•damages caused to the plaintiff’s land by water backed by the dam of the defendant, and the point decided was that such action was not abated by the death of the owner of the dam, but that it could be continued against his executor. It was admitted, in that case, that such cause of action would have been extinguished at the common law, by force of the ■rule actio personalis moritur cum persona, and its persistence after the death of the defendant was attributed altogether to ■the effect of the enactment just referred to. That enactment is in these words, viz.: “ Where any testator or intestate shall, in his or her lifetime, have taken or carried away, or converted to his or her use, the goods or chattels of any person or persons, or shall, in ■ his or her lifetime, have committed any trespass to the person or property, real or personal, of any person or persons, such person or persons, his or her executors or administrators, shall have and maintain the same action against the executors or administrators of such testator or intestate as he, she or they might have had or maintained against such testator or intestate.”

In the case of Ten Eyck v. Eunk, all that the court was called upon to decide was whether the term “trespass” in this clause signified those immediate wrongs that are remediable by the action of trespass vi et armis,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 N.J.L. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tichenor-v-hayes-nj-1879.