Auerbach v. Marks

10 Daly 171
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedApril 4, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 10 Daly 171 (Auerbach v. Marks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Auerbach v. Marks, 10 Daly 171 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1881).

Opinion

Charles P. Daly, Chief Justice.

The defendants were not entitled to show that at the time of the commencement of the suit the property replevied was in the possession of Goodman, and that they executed the undertaking on his behalf only. The latter part of the offer was, in effect, to contradict the recitals in the undertaking, which they were estopped from doing (Decker v. Judson, 16 N. Y. 439); and the fact that Goodman had the property in his possession when the suit was brought, was immaterial. When the undertaking was entered into by the defendants the property was in the possession of the sheriff. The undertaking recites that the sheriff had taken it as empowered by the proceedings instituted; that the plaintiff claimed that it should be delivered to him; that the defendants were desirous that it should be delivered to them, and that in consideration of the delivery of it to them, the defendants in this action bound themselves for the delivery of it to plaintiff, if a delivery of it to him should be adjudged, and for the payment to him of such sum as might, for any cause, be recovered against the defendants in the action.

The fact that no cause of action was established against the defendant Goodman, and that the complaint was dismissed as to him, does not discharge the defendants from their obliga[174]*174tions. They became bound for the delivery of the property to the plaintiff, if a delivery of it to him should be adjudged, and the result of the action was that it should be delivered to him ; and in ease a delivery could not be had, that then he should recover the value of it, $423, with interest, out of the personal or real property of the defendants Jacoby and Batt. The sheriff’s return showed that he could not find the property to deliver to the plaintiff, nor any real or personal property of the defendants Jacoby and Batt out of which to satisfy the judgment.

In consequence of the undertaking, the property was returned to all of the defendants, Jacoby, Batt and Goodman. This is inferable from the language of the instrument, the recitals in effect being that they, Jacoby, Batt and Goodman, were desirous of having it returned to them ; and that in consideration of the return of it to them, the defendants in this action became bound, &c.

The complaint avers that upon the execution of the undertaking, the property was thereupon returned to the defendants in the action. The answer avers that it was returned to Goodman. The necessary effect of the execution of the undertaking was the delivery of it to the defendants in this action, and if the defendants in this action were entitled to show that it was returned to Goodman, which, in connection with other facts, I think might have been shown, they made no offer to show it. They became bound for the delivery of the property by each and all of the defendants if a delivery of it to the plaintiff was adjudged, and it does not discharge their liability that the defendant Goodman was released from any obligation to deliver it by a judgment in his favor. They still remained bound for the delivery of it by the other defendants. All that occurred was a dismissal of the complaint as to Goodman, the only effect of which was to entitle him to costs. It in no way affected the plaintiff’s right to the property. Goodman claimed in his answer that the property be returned to him ; but the court did not award a delivery of it to him, but on the contrary, a delivery by the other two defendants to the plaintiff. As respects him, therefore, it must be regarded simply as a judgment that he did not wrongfully detain it, and such a judgment [175]*175does not entitle a defendant to a return of the property, for it in no way affects the ownership or title of the property (Angell v. Hollister, 6 Trans. Ct. of Ap. Rep. 209, 210; Bemus v. Beckman, 3 Wend. 667; Pierce v. Van Dyke, 6 Hill, 613).

Where there are several defendants the court may adjudge the return of it to one of them and refuse it to others, or may award it to all of them, or part to one and part to another, or to the plaintiff, as the rights of the parties shall appear (Wells on Replevin, §§ 478, 481, 482); or judgment may be given for a defendant on the ground that he did not take or wrongfully withhold, where he came into possession of it for a lawful purpose or in good faith by delivery from the wrongdoer, in which case no return of the property is awarded to him (Ely v. Ehle, 3 N. Y. 509, 510); which would seem to have been the case here, from Goodman’s answer that the property came into his possession as an assignee for the benefit of creditors.

The action of replevin is found upon a tort. It is brought by a party entitled to property against those in possession of it who have wrongfully taken or wrongfully withhold it, or who wrongfully conceal or put it out of their possession to defeat the suit. Where there are several defendants sued as wrongdoers, each may set up a separate defense; each may claim exclusive title to the property, or set up any matter in defense without reference to the pleading or defense of the other; and judgment may be given in favor of one and against the others, or judgment may be for both parties (Wells on Replevin, §§ 16, 21). Thus a defendant may succeed and not be entitled to a return, for a return of the property is ordered only when it appears just.

If the rule were, as the appellant contends, that the sureties are not liable unless judgment is recovered against all the defendants and they are all required by it to make delivery to the plaintiff, then the death of one of the defendants would discharge the sureties altogether, for the cause of action in replevin being regarded as in the nature of a tort, the death of one of the defendants abates the action as to him, though not as to the rest (Lahey v. Brady, 1 Daly, 443 ; Hopkins v. Adams, 5 Abb. Pr. 351; Webbers v. Underhill, 19 Wend. [176]*176447), and the effect would be, if the appellant’s construction were adopted, that the plaintiff’s suit would go on as respects the other defendants deprived of the security by virtue of which the defendants got the property delivered to them ; that the plaintiff would then lose a security that the statute meant for his benefit if he recovered and failed to get his property or the value of it, a result the statute did not intend; and that construction should be adopted which will beneficially carry out what the statute intended in respect to the party for whose indemnity, in the event of recovery, the instrument is given (Hoffman v. Etna Ins. Co., 32 N. Y. 413; Archibald v. Thomas, 3 Cow. 284; Wright v. Williams, 20 Hun, 323; Marvin v. Stone, 2 Cow. 781).

The sheriff was bound to deliver the property to the defendants upon their giving an undertaking in the form prescribed by the statute (Code of 1870, § 211), which was the undertaking here given, and which, under the appellant’s construction, would be discharged or of no avail to the plaintiff if one of the defendants should die pending the suit. The plaintiff could get his judgment for the return of the property against the other defendants, but without the security for his indemnity that the statute meant he should have, if the property, instead of being delivered to him in the action upon the undertaking given by him to the sheriff, is delivered by the sheriff to the defendants upon the undertaking which gives them the right to have it delivered to them.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Daly 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/auerbach-v-marks-nyctcompl-1881.