4 N.J. Misc. 1003 | N.J. | 1926
The trial court directed a nonsuit upon the following facts: A salesman of the defendant company visited the residence of the plaintiff for the purpose of selling to Mrs. Oehler a vacuum cleaner. She refused to purchase it, but he left it with her and promised to return and take it away. Some four or five months later he returned and instead of removing it, demanded payment for it, which Mrs. Oehler refused. The agent, in his persistence, threatened her arrest if she did not pay the purchase price. In this situation Mrs. Oehler became so frightened that she was stricken with an attack of apoplexy, which she alleges was the direct and proximate result of the agent’s conduct, and for that personal injury she, with her husband, brought this suit to recover damages from the agent’s principal.
We think the ruling of the trial court was legally correct. The physical ailment which may have resulted from mental
The judgment appealed from will therefore be-affirmed.