77 N.J.L. 724 | N.J. | 1909
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This suit was instituted by the plaintiff to recover the value of certain plaster boards sold and delivered by him to the defendant. The cause was tried at the Essex Circuit, where the plaintiff recovered a judgment which the defendant, the plaintiff in error, seeks to reverse.
At the close of the plaintiff’s ease there was a motion for nonsuit based upon the failure to file a certificate, and this motion being refused, an exception was sealed and error assigned. The act does not make the contract void, but subjects the offender to indictment. It is highly penal, and must be strictly construed. Its manifest intention is to protect persons giving credit to one doing business under a fictitious name, and follows, in substance, a similar statute of the State of New York, adopted in this state after it had received judicial construction in New York, which it will be presumed was accepted by the legislature of this state to be the true interpretation of the words of the act so adopted. Fritts v. Kuhl, 22 Vroom 191; DeRaismes v. DeRaismes, 41 Id. 15-18.
In construing the New York act the Court of Appeals of that state, in Gay et al. v. Seibold, 97 N. Y. 472, said: “The purpose of the statute was obviously to protect persons giving credit to the fictitious firm on the faith of the fictitious designation. It could have no other purpose. It was not needed to protect those who obtained credit from such a firm.” Tliis construction being, in our opinion, justified by the very words
The next alleged error argued was the refusal to nonsuit upon the ground that the plaintiff had failed to prove an agreement “whereby the plaintiff agreed to sell within a certain time a certain quantity of goods for the price of which the suit was brought.The basis of this assignment of error is that proof of the agreement rested upon a carbon copy' of an alleged order, which the court admitted after proof that notice had been given to the defendant to produce the original. As the plaintiff in error has not seen fit to print in the record submitted to the court the copy of the order we are without any knowledge of its contents, but there was evidence of a sale, delivery and part payment, sufficient to justify the verdict. The order was admitted as evidence aud submitted to the jury, together with proof of delivery and acceptance of the goods, the value of which was the subject-matter of the controversy between these parties, and as the plaintiff in error has not afforded the court an opportunity to examine the order, we cannot say that the jury were not justified in finding as a fact that its terms had been complied with on the part of the plaintiff.
The other point argued, relating to an alleged misrepresentation as to the character of the goods sold, is not the subject of any exception taken, and therefore cannot be considered.
The judgment below is affirmed, with costs.
For reversal—None.