90 N.J. Eq. 363 | New York Court of Chancery | 1919
The bill in this suit seeks the rescission and cancellation of a . written contract signed by complainant for the purchase of certain improved real estate and the recovery from defendants of the part of the purchase price which complainant paid when the contract was signed, and also seeks an injunction preventing-defendant suing at la-w on the contract for the recovery of the unpaid portion of the stipulated purchase price. .
This objection necessitates a consideration of the specific aver-' menta of the bill and its supporting affidavits, and of the jurisdiction of this .court in cases of this nature.
The theory of the bill, briefly stated, is that defendants and one Carpenter, acting in collusion, in order to coerce complainant and induce her .to buy at an excessive price a property owned by defendants, informed complainant that it would be necessary for her to vacate in six days the property she then occupied with her insane husband, and that no property was available for complainant except one owned by defendant which was worth $15,200; that complainant was wholly without business experience and was overwrought by the fear of being turned out of her home with an insane husband and with no place to go, and had no one but defendants and Carpenter to advise her, and accordingly relied upon the representations so made to her and signed a contract to purchase for $15,200 the property owned by defendants and paid them on account two $500 Liberty Bonds; that the property so purchased is assessed for purposes of taxation at $4,470- and is worth at most $9,000.
It is clearly within the jurisdiction of this court to entertain a bill to rescind and cancel a contract procured through coercion, misrepresentation, or any other fraudulent means, and in such suit to enjoin proceedings at law for the enforcement of the contract, and also to award recovery of the money paid under and by reason of the fraudulent contract. The ancient jurisdiction of the court of chancery of England in this class of cases, as defined in 2 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 912, obtains in this state. See to that effect Eggers v. Anderson, 63 N. J. Eq. 264, 271. Whether the jurisdiction should be exercised, however, depends upon the circumstances of the particular case. In this suit the circumstance that a successful defence at. law to an action for the balance of the purchase price would afford but
It accordingly remaims to inquire whether the averments of the bill and supporting affidavits adequately establish a prima facie case of fraud.
The bill and the affidavit of complainant aver that the signature of complainant to the contract was procured through fraud on the part of the defendants; but general averments of fraud may be disregarded unless facts are disclosed which reasonably establish the fraud alleged. The great disparity between the contract price and the real value, standing alone, would aid complainant little even though it approaches proportions from which fraud is presumed, and representations as to value are ordinarily treated as mere matters of opinion. See Wise v. Fuller, 29 N. J. Eq. 257. But when the excessive purchase price and misrepresentations as to value are considered in connection with the additional facts already referred to, a situation is presented which in my judgment reasonably discloses fraudulent imposition. The contrast between two persons on equal footing negotiating the sale and purchase of a property, and that of a vendor making sale in the circumstances stated in the bill is obvious. Assuming the averments of the bill to be true it seems impossible to escape the conclusion that defendants not only brought about the emergent conditions which rendered it necessary for complainant to purchase a property in haste by reason of her distress, but also wrongfully took advantage of and misused for their own benefit the trust and confidence invited by them and reposed in them by complainant and thus precluded tbe exercise of a free or intelligent or deliberate or voluntary judgment on the part of complainant, and in that manner secured for themselves a purchase price so far in excess of real value as to be in itself almost if not quite presumptive of fraud.
I am convinced that this court should proceed to final hearing of the suit and restrain any trial at law in the interim.
But since at final hearing relief may be denied I see no reason why defendants should not, if so advised, institute a suit at law for the balance of the purchase price and in that manner procure