Wallace, Muller & Co. v. Leber

47 A. 430, 65 N.J.L. 195, 36 Vroom 195, 1900 N.J. LEXIS 165
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 19, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 47 A. 430 (Wallace, Muller & Co. v. Leber) 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
Wallace, Muller & Co. v. Leber, 47 A. 430, 65 N.J.L. 195, 36 Vroom 195, 1900 N.J. LEXIS 165 (N.J. 1900).

Opinion

[198]*198The opinion of the court was delivered by

Magie, Chancellor.

On behalf of defendants it is first contended that there was an entire failure to prove any consideration for the contract sued on.

An examination of the conclusions of the trial judge seems to indicate that this point was not presented to him, for no mention of it is made by him. Hone of the exceptions allowed by him are pointed at this supposed defect of proof. An exception, however, was allowed to the finding that plaintiffs were entitled to recover $1,545.46, with interest, from defendants, on the ground that there was no evidence to warrant it.

If the issues had been tried with a jury, an exception that the verdict was not sustainable because there was no evidence to warrant it, would have been unavailable on error. To • raise such a question on error, the trial judge must have been requested to nonsuit, or to direct a verdict for defendant, because of the lack of some specified proof essential to recovery. The precise point relied on must have been presented to the mind of the trial judge, and ruled on by him. This doctrine, and the reasons for it, are stated in this court in Trade Insurance Co. v. Barracliff, 16 Vroom 543. It has been applied for like reasons by the Supreme Court in the review of verdicts upon rules to show cause. Jackson, Administrator, v. Consolidated Traction Co., 30 Id. 25.

It is entirely settled that, upon error, the finding of the trial judge trying the issue without a jury is as unassailable as the verdict of a jury would be, and the judgment founded thereon cannot be reversed if there was evidence capable of supporting the finding. Weger v. Delran, 32 Vroom 224, and eases cited. It would seem to follow by analogy from the rule applied in jury eases, and for the same reasons that produced that rule, that an exception like that under consideration, which does not point out and specify the particular omission of proof relied on, is ineffectual to raise the objection in a court of error. Proper practice would seem to require that counsel for defendant desiring to raise such an objection should, at the close of plaintiff’s testimony, or%at the close of [199]*199.the whole case, formally request the trial judge to find for the defendant, because of the omission of the particular proof then specified and claimed to be essential to plaintiff’s recovery.

But I think the practice in this respect has not been uniform, nor can I discover that it has been settled by any adjudication of a court of review. hTo objection to the consideration of the point so presented was interposed in the argument. Eor these reasons, and because the case leaves it uncertain whether or not the objection now made was in the mind of the trial judge, I have deemed it proper to consider it.

The objection is that there was no proof of the consideration of the contract sued on.

It will be observed that the promise of the contract is to “guarantee” to refund to plaintiffs any excess of duty above a specified amount which plaintiffs might be called, on to pay upon the sugar bought of Bunge & Company, of whom defendants were agents.

This contract has been treated in the trial court and in the arguments of counsel here as a contract of guarantee.

Since a contract of guarantee is a contract by which the guarantor becomes responsible for the debt, default or mis.carriage of another person, who, as to the guarantor, is a principal (Brandt S. <&• G., §§ 1, 2), it is obvious that the promise in the contract under consideration is not a technical guarantee, because there was no principal bound to plaintiffs to refund the excess duties in question. It is equally obvious that the contract is not a collateral, but an original contract, binding the promisors to refund to the promisees any excess of customs duty upon certain importations above a specified amount, upon the call of the government.

Such a contract is upon a contingency, and not being commercial paper, nor under seal, does not import a consideration. In an action thereon, a consideration must be asserted -and proved. Conover v. Stillwell, 5 Vroom 54; Phillips v. Pullen 21 Id. 439.

The question thus assumed to be presented is whether there appears in’ the evidence ,any proof of a consideration for the contract in question.

[200]*200An examination of the evidence returned with the bill of exceptions renders it evident that the contract in question was contemporaneous with the contract for the sale and delivery by Bunge & Company of certain sugar to defendants. A draft of a previous undertaking or promise by defendants had been rejected by the purchaser as unsatisfactory, and the contract in question was accepted and delivered simultaneously with the contract of sale and purchase. It became a part of ■the transaction because, from the evidence, it was a fair, justi•fiable, and, in my judgment, a necessary, inference that the contract of sale and purchase would not have been entered into except defendants simultaneously bound themselves by the contract in question.

■ Upon this view of the evidence it is apparent that there was a consideration for the contract, because it procured a ■sale for the sugar of defendants’ principals, which might be inferred to be beneficial to defendants as establishing their right to the compensation usually obtained by agents, or because it induced plaintiffs to enter into a purchase which might be detrimental to them. It clearly appears that under the then lately enacted law of the United States regulating duties upon imports, it was uncertain whether the sugar in question would be admissible at a duty of $1.95 per one hundred pounds, or at a higher rate. When plaintiffs, at defendants’ instance, entered into a contract to purchase sugar to be imported and delivered to them in the United States, they took •the risk of a construction of the law which would require a ■higher duty, and this was a detriment which would furnish a -consideration for such a contract of indemnity.

This view disposes of the objection thus presented, and the judgment cannot be disturbed upon this ground.

It is next contended that defendants, if liable upon this contract, were relieved from liability because the contract of sale required the sellers to furnish with the shipments of sugar certain certificates to be presented to the revenue officers, and that the required certificates, if produced, would have reduced the rate of duty chargeable on the importations.

It will be observed that the contract of sale contained in [201]*201the statement prefacing this opinion, contains no term re-quiring such certificates to be furnished. It was contended at the trial that the requirement of such certificates was imposed by a memorandum attached to the contract, but the trial judge expressly found that the memorandum in question was not attached to the contract at the time of its execution and delivery, but afterward, and that it did not become part -of the contract.

The trial judge allowed two exceptions to his finding in these respects, and it is upon these exceptions that this point has been presented. As, however, there was evidence on which the finding thus challenged could be supported, the •.alleged error is not open to review (Weger v. Delran, ubi supra),

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

Related

Roberts, Walsh & Co. v. Trugman
264 A.2d 237 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1970)
Conlan v. Leonard
81 A. 492 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1911)
Wallace, Muller & Co. v. Leber
55 A. 475 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 A. 430, 65 N.J.L. 195, 36 Vroom 195, 1900 N.J. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallace-muller-co-v-leber-nj-1900.