Citation Numbers: 2 N.J. Misc. 544, 1924 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 168
Judges: Leaming
Filed Date: 6/16/1924
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
(orally).
I see no way by which Mrs. Hunt can be relieved from the operation of this agreement. 'The agreement is perfectly plain; it couldn’t be made plainer by the English language. If Mrs. Hunt didn’t understand it it was her own fault; nobody has' undertaken to deceive her. She is a cultivated woman; she can read and understand what she reads; the agreement has been executed by all the formalities which the law provides, and in the absence of positive deception on the part of the complainant, or someone representing the complainant’s interest, as to the contents of this agreement, there is no way in the law to relieve her from its terms, and it must be enforced according to its terms. It may be she now thinks she accurately recalls the conversation with Mr. Evans at that time; she may be sincere in her statement that she understood the interest on this money was to be paid to her at once and as long as she lived. The agreement is perfectly plain in its statement that the interest is to he paid to her husband during his lifetime, and then, if she survives, to
On thing, among others, that leads me to- think Mrs, Hunt is mistaken in her present recollection, is the fact that upon the receipt of this agreement, or a copy of it, after it had been executed, she says she read it over and became dissatisfied with it at once, noticing then, for the first time, she was not to receive any m,one3r until her husband’s death, whereas she wrote to* Mr. Evans a letter acknowledging receipt of tlio agreement and making no mention whatever of the fact that the agreement did not provide what she had been led to understand it would provide. Later, she talked to1 Mr. Evans over the telephone and made no1 suggestion to him that he had misrepresented the contents of this agreement, and it wasn’t until some two months later, from.earty in November until January, that she even consulted an attorney in the matter, and during all that time she knew, from reading the agreement, that it did not contain the matters that she now claims she had understood it was to contain, or understood it did contain, when she signed it. The law plac'es upon an intelligent woman, or an intelligent man, when they execute a plain and clear instrument and acknowledge it in the