Case Name: Edward Blau, appellant, v. Public Service Tire and Rubber Company et al., respondents
Court: New Jersey Court of Errors and Appeals
Jurisdiction: New Jersey
Decision Date: 1919-02-06
Citations: 90 N.J. Eq. 279
Docket Number: 
Parties: Edward Blau, appellant, v. Public Service Tire and Rubber Company et al., respondents.
Judges: 
Reporter: New Jersey Equity Reports
Volume: 90
Pages: 279–281

Head Matter:
Edward Blau, appellant, v. Public Service Tire and Rubber Company et al., respondents.
[Decided February 6th, 1919.]
On appeal from a decree of the court of chancery advised by Vice-Chancellor Stevens, who filed the following opinion:
“This is a suit to rescind a release given by complainant to the defendant company. The relief is prayed in aid of an action at law.
“The officers of the company, so the bill charges, agreed to and with complainant that if he would procure a person who was ready, willing and able to invest approximately $50,000 as additional capital, the company would pay him $5,000 for bis services, he immediately to subscribe this sum to. the company’s stock.
“It is said that one Kritzman was, through the efforts of complainant, ready and willing to make the investment. It is admitted that he did not do so, but, on the contrary, invested the money in a New York corporation, which he organized under a similar name, and it is said that he was instigated thereto by the-Eisenbergs, who were the defendantls sole stockholders, with a view to cheating complainant out of his commissions.
“Whethefr the company could beheld responsible .¡for the alleged fraud of the Eisenbergs I shall not consider. It being admitted that Kritzman declined to invest his money in the company’s stock, the right to the commission .did not arise unless the company as such made itself liable in some other way.
“The correspondence shows that in an early stage of the negotiations, conducted through November, 1916, there arose, for some reason or other, a disagreement between Wallant, Kritzman’s agent, and the Eisenbergs. Kritzman may have been averse to putting his money into the New Jersey company, because, being resident in New York, he, for some reason or other, preferred a New York corporation, or because he did not care, directly or indirectly, to contribute toward Blau’s' commission, as he would have done whether that commission took the form of money paid out of the company’s treasury or whether it took the form of a stock issue. If I assume that Kritzman’s sole objection was the commission, that would not help complainant. He was free to decline on that or any other ground. The argument is that the Eisenbergs repented of their agreement to pay the commission and persuaded Kritzman to organize a similar corporation in New York. But there is not a particle of evidence that they did so. Neither Kritzman nor Wallant were sworn, and the Eisenbergs deny it. Appeal is made to the sequence of events. This is persuasive on the point that the Eisenbergs were disingenuous, in that they did not inform complainant of what was going on, hut it does not prove that Kritzman was willing to invest in the Now Jersey company and that he was dissuaded from so doing by the Eisenbergs. The letters that passed between the parties, beginning with complainant’s letter of November 8th, show that even at that stage of the negotiations the formation of a New York company was in contemplation.
• “On November 18th, the day when the New York company was incorporated, Henry Eisenberg, without referring to' what was being done, if he knew, wrote that all negotiations with reference io interesting capital in the New Jersey company were at an end. Thereupon complainant, on November 20th, sent in a bill for $250 for liis services. He accepted in lieu of that sum $100 in cash and two tires, and signed the release.
“The rule is that A court of equity will rescind a transaction entered into upon the -faith -of a material representation false, in'fact, if the person to whom it was made relied upon it and in consequence suffered injury.’ Eibel v. Von Fell, 55 N. J. Eq. 670. Blau says that the Eisenbergs stated in-conversation that they wanted nothing to do with Wallant and had a relative who would lend them a smaller sum of money. The Eisenbergs deny making such a statement. If they made it, it would not alter the fact that the commission had not been earned, and it would not make the service, for which Blau was paid, more valuable. As the false statement must result in injury in. order to be the ground' of rescission, complainant is not entitled to relief. He does not show that, if made it injured him. If there had been conflicting evidence on the question whether Kritzman was ready and willing to invest, the case would have been somewhat different. The question would have arisen whether this court should pass upon the evidence, or whether it should put the case in shape for a jury to pass upon it.”
Mfixxrx. SHein, Stein '& Jfannoch, for the appellant.
Messrs. Rileer & Ttiker, for the respondents.

Opinion:
Per Curiam.
The decree appealed from will be affirmed, for the reasons stated in the opinion filed in the court below by Vice-Chanceh lor Stevens.
For affirmance — Tun Chief-Justice, Swayze, Teen-chare, Parker, Bercen, Minturn, Kaltsci-i, Black, Williams, Gardner — 10.
For reversal — None.