Friedman v. Mandelbaum

Decision Date01 February 1947
PartiesFRIEDMAN et al. v. MANDELBAUM et al.
CourtNew Jersey Circuit Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Action by Max Friedman and Joseph Kronberg, partners trading as J. & M. Fabrics, against Arthur Mandelbaum and others to recover upon an alleged breach of contract for the manufacture of cloth, the loss of contemplated profits upon yardage not manufactured. On defendants' motion to quash writ of attachment.

Motion granted.

A. Victor Koch, of Paterson, for plaintiffs.

Cole, Morrill & Nadell, of Paterson, for defendants.

DAVIDSON, Judge.

This is a motion to quash a writ of attachment. Defendants appear specially and recorded stipulation of counsel provided for presentation of oral testimony to the end that the Court might directly pass upon the merits of the issue.

The only question presented for determination is whether plaintiffs' claim is for liquidated damages within the contemplation of R.S. 2:42-5, N.J.S.A., as the general rule established in this State is that ‘an attachment will not lie for unliquidated damages, and can be used only when the demand is for a sum certain.’ Schenck v. Griffin, 38 N.J.L. 462, 467.

The suit is based upon an alleged breach of contract for the manufacture of 100,000 yards of cloth, the claim arising out of loss of contemplated profits upon the yardage not yet manufactured.

Our reported cases consistently follow Heckscher v. Trotter, 48 N.J.L. 419, 5 A. 581, 584, which holds that: ‘The general rule is that unliquidated damages, resulting from the violation of a contract, cannot be recovered by attachment, unless the contract affords a certain measure or standard for ascertaining the amount of the damages. * * * The standard should be the subject-matter of the contract. * * * The standard must be shown by the contract without the aid of inferences from extrinsic facts or circumstances.'

Manifestly, the present case is not embraced within the limits of the rule, for ‘neither reference to the contract nor to any method of calculation arising out of it or resulting from it by operation of the law, could establish the profit which the plaintiffs would have made upon the merchandise so manufactured.’ MacDowell & Co. v. Edward & John Burke, Limited, 130 A. 199, 3 N.J.Misc. 741; Sher v. Church, 93 N.J.L. 73, 75, 107 A. 57.

The profit in any business transaction necessarily depends upon many variable and uncertain factors and attachment will not lie where the damages flowing from a breach of the...

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