45 N.J. Eq. 830 | N.J. | 1889
The opinion of the court was delivered by
An action was brought by Pullen against Phillips. The ■declaration contained counts for criminal conversation with. Pullen’s wife, for enticing her from home and for harboring her. Issue was joined and the cause was noticed for the January Term of the Mercer circuit of 1886. When the cause was about to be moved, an agreement was made, which was subsequently reduced to writing and signed by the attorneys of the respective parties. It was in these words:
“New Jersey Supreme Court,
“Mercer County Circuit.
“ Ralph L. Pullen v. ) In Case. “ George E. Phillips. )
“ The said cause having been settled between the parties upon the terms that the said defendant is to pay the plaintiff or his attorney, the sum of seven thousand and five hundred dollars in full satisfaction of all damages under said cause; It is therefore agreed by the respective counsel of the said parties, that the payment of the said sum shall be made within two weeks from the date hereof, and upon such payment the said plaintiff shall execute a release to the defendant in full for the damages claimed in the said action.
“ Dated Trenton, N. J., Jan’y 20th, 1886.
“ G. D. W. Vroom,
“Att’y for Deft.
“ Geo. O. Vanderbilt,
“Att’y of Plaintiff.”
The order to show cause why an injunction should not issue, pursuant to the prayer of this bill, was dismissed. No reasons are assigned in the order, but the complainant, in his supplemental bill which is now before us, avers that the chancellor made said order upon the ground that the allegations of the bill could be proved, as a defence, upon the trial of the suit at law. At the trial which followed, Phillips offered his proofs, which were received in evidence, although, at the close of the case, the trial court overruled the defence, as being inadequate to support a verdict for the defendant. A writ of error was thereupon taken, and the legal propriety of this disposition of the defendant’s case was affirmed by this court. Phillips v. Pullen, 21 Vr. 439. A supplemental bill was thereupon filed by Phillips, rehearsing the facts hereinabove stated, and claiming that, inasmuch as the chancellor, before whom the original bill had come, was in error in supposing that orator’s defense could be availed of in a court of law, the court of chancery should now pass upon
By his supplemental bill, complainant secured a rehearing in the court of chancery. Between these two hearings in chancery the trial of the action at law intervened. The present status, therefore, is, that the court of chancery has, upon the same state of facts, twice declined to interfere with the action at law between these parties: before the trial, because the facts could be presented in the suit at law then pending; after the trial, because they had been disposed of in the suit at law then concluded. The only allegations found in the supplemental bill that are not contained in the original bill, are the dismissal of the first order to show cause, the trial of the action at law, its results, and their affirmance by the court of errors and appeals. The claim of the supplemental bill, that the chancellor (Runyon) was in error in determining that complainant’s defence could be availed of in a court of law, is of no substantial significance. The language of the chancellor could have meant nothing more than that the matters before him were proper subjects for investigation in the pending suit at law, not that they would there surely exonerate the complainant. Upon the trial of the legal action, Phillips offered in his defence such proofs as he desired, and they were received by the court and duly weighed. The fact that they were found wanting in legal adequacy cannot affect favorably his standing as a suitor in equity. Equity, in relegating him to the courts of law, did not become, in any sense, an insurer of his success.
The real question in the case is, has the complainant presented to the court of chancery such facts, over and above those, disposed of in the action at law, as should move a court of equity to interpose in his behalf ?
• A reference to the circuit record, which is made a part of this case, shows that, in the suit upon the written agreement, the fol
It is part of our fundamental law that facts actually decided by an issue in any suit cannot again be litigated between the same parties. Counsel for the appellant, however, challenges, at the threshold, the applicability of the doctrine of res judicata to this case. In the first place, he says that he should not be concluded by the finding of the court of law, that Phillips’s attorney had authority to sign the agreement in suit. This contention rests upon the ground, that Phillips’s affidavit to his bill in chancery states that his sole motive in authorizing his attorney to enter into an agreement to pay a stipulated sum, was his desire to prevent all further publicity to the scandal; whereas the agreement signed by his attorney is limited in terms to the action in which it is entitled, and will be satisfied by Pullen’s execution of a release therein, leaving him free to set up the illicit relations between Phillips and Mrs. Pullen in a suit for divorce, or even, in criminal proceedings.
In so far as this contention rests upon fraud in the procurement of the written contract, it is no longer an open question. That was one of the issues directly involved in the suit at law. If true, there could have been no recovery. The thing to be proved, and the quantum of proof, do not differ in the two jurisdictions. It was opened to the jury as part of the defendant’s case, and at least one witness, Mr. Edward T. Green, was ex-, amined by the defendant fully and solely upon the point that the contemplated agreement was expected to close all of the avenues by which the scandal of Phillips’s relations with Pullen’s wife might again become public. That Phillips himself did not go upon the witness-stand cannot have the effect of weakening the legal force of the decision against him upon the points involved. I see no way to avoid the conclusion that it is resjudi-.
Upon considerations, however, directly affecting the merits of ■complainant’s claim in this behalfj it must fall. His objections to the agreement, in the respect now under consideration, are limited, so far as mention goes, to the fact that, as drawn, it does not prevent Pullen from setting up, in divorce proceedings, the alleged criminality between his wife and Phillips, which Phillips says was to have been included in the settlement. Without being diverted into a discussion of the questions of public policy involved in this proposition, it will be sufficient, for present purposes, to say, that whatever a court of equity might do with such a compact, if actually entered into, it will not disturb a contract, in all other respects lawful, in order to graft into it a provision of this nature, especially in- view of the fact that such is not pretended to have been the bargain of the parties, but only to have been the expectation of one of them. What has been just said applies with even greater force to the suppression of ■criminal proceedings, and of the scandal and publicity incident ■thereto.
The main stress of appellant’s contention, however, is, that he is entitled to relief against the judgment at law, because of the inadequacy of the consideration of the contract sued on — a subject which he insists cannot be controlled by the doctrine "of res judicata. His argument upon this point rests upon the essential difference between law- and equity in dealing with inadequacy of consideration. In each fraud is the ground of relief; in law it must be proved like any other fact, whereas, equity will, in cer
The general rule undoubtedly is, that, for mere inadequacy of consideration, unconnected with fraud, a court of equity will not set aside a contract. Simmons v. Vandegrift, Sax. 55; Wintermute v. Snyder, 2 Gr. Ch. 489; Weber v. Weitling, 3 C. E. Gr. 441; Graffam v. Burgess, 117 U. S. 180, and cases there cited by Mr. Justice Bradley.
In deciding whether such inadequacy is or- is not connected with fraud, the court is guided by the following considerations r
First. "Where the known circumstances or relations between the parties are such as to throw suspicion upon the transaction,, gross inadequacy of consideration furnishes a strong indication of fraud.
Second,. Fraud will be presumed from inadequacy of consideration, standing alone, if the inadequacy be so gross as to satisfy the.court that it could have been brought about only by deceit or imposition, provided the circumstances and relations of the parties .either lend themselves to such a presumption, or are without probative force sufficient to neutralize it.
Third. Mere inadequacy of consideration will not furnish a presumption of fraud where the evidence as to the relations of the parties 'does not comport with such presumption; while, if the weight of such evidence is against it, mere inadequacy does not rise to the height of an efficient presumption of fraud.
;- Bearing these principles in mind, and ignoring, for the moment, the adjudications as to legal fraud, a study of the testi
The occasion for this settlement arose naturally, and without ¡procurement or device. Its negotiation gave neither chance for •imposition nor opportunity for fraud. If there was inequality ■of knowledge, it was not against Phillips. He was in a position where he must have known at least as much of his side of the •case as the other party could possibly know of theirs. He was, .■aided by counsel of such experience and acumen as deny to client the benefit of the very ignorance he claims. There is nothing in the relations of the parties, or in the circumstances of the settlement, to give color to the theory of fraudulent imposition or -of unconscionable oppression. In such a state of the proofs, a ■court of equity is, as we have seen, not at liberty to ascribe to mere inadequacy of consideration the force of a presumption of fraud. A conclusion which rests, not upon the doctrine of res Judieata, but upon those distinctively equitable principles which control this court in dealing with cases involving inadequacy of •consideration.
Thus far, following the premises necessary to appellant’s argument, the element of inadequacy of consideration has been treated as if it were an established fact in the case. Viewed, however, as a fact in issue, I cannot see how, under the circumstances, the consideration in this case can be said to be certainly grossly inadequate. The matter compromised was one peculiarly unsusceptible of measurement by prescribed rules. Apart from all sentimental considerations, the damages sued for were heavy, and the prospect of an adverse verdict must, to say the least, have "been regarded as among the possibilities. The trial could not 2iave proceeded without giving immediate publication to those scandals which complainant admits it was his chief concern to suppress. Thus situated, he buys his release at about one-third
Order unanimously affirmed*