Bigler v. Atkins

7 N.Y. St. Rep. 235
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 7 N.Y. St. Rep. 235 (Bigler v. Atkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bigler v. Atkins, 7 N.Y. St. Rep. 235 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1887).

Opinion

Daniels, J.

The action was to recover damages for fraudulent representations charged to have been made by [236]*236the defendant to the plaintiff and thereby inducing him to become the purchaser of the ship called the Elizabeth Hamilton. It was before this court on a previous occasion when the complaint had been dismissed at the trial, and upon an examination of the case as it then appeared it was considered to be one for the disposition of the jury, and a new trial was accordingly ordered for that as well as another reason. Very much the same evidence was given on behalf of the plaintiff as had then been introduced into the case, but this evidence was controverted on the part of the defendant, and both at the close of the plaintiff’s case and at the close of all the evidence, an application was made to dismiss the complaint on the ground that the case had not been proved in such a manner as to entitle the plaintiff to have it submitted to the jury. And for the like reason, as well as upon certain exceptions taken during the trial, the motion was made to set aside the verdict which was denied by the court.

The evidence upon this trial proved the fact to be that the ship was built in the year 1841, and that she was purchased and owned by the plaintiff and his partner in or about the year 1855, when she was about eight years old, and she was afterwards owned by them until the decease of the other owner shortly before the sale was made to the plaintiff, and that the defendant had owned his interest in her for the period of eighteen years. Before the time of the sale, she had been in her lower hold whitewashed and painted freshly between decks and her rigging had been tarred with coal tar, and her iron work painted red, and the residue white, giving her the appearance of a ship in good condition, and to a great extent in that manner avoiding the exposure of defects in her which might have indicated to the purchaser what was then her actual condition. But by the use of these materials that, to all outward appearance, was obscured and concealed and for that reason it was insisted upon the trial that the plaintiff had purchased the ship relying solely and wholly upon the representations made of her condition by the defendant.

At the close of their negotiations,' a letter was written by the defendant to the plaintiff offering her for sale for the sum of $19,000, which the plaintiff by a letter to the defendant, at the same time accepted. The defendant’s letter was not presented as part of proof at the trial, the plaintiff stating that he had been unable to find and produce it, and he was allowed therefore to state its contents from his recollection, and as a part of such contents his testimony was that it stated that he would take the ship at that price if she was as the defendant represented her to be. This was denied by the defendant, whose statement was that by [237]*237his letter he proposed to sell the ship as she then was at Congress street in Brooklyn. It is not necessary to determine, nor was it for the jury, which of these parties may have been the most reliable in his recollection of the contents of the letter, for if it was written in the form mentioned by the defendant, still if he fraudulently misrepresented the condition of the ship to the plaintiff and in that manner induced him to purchase her, when he otherwise would not have done so, a right of action for damages would be made out. And whether he had or not, so misrepresented her condition, was a vital inquiry presented and contested before the jury during the trial.

The first of the interviews relative to the sale of the ship took place between the defendant and the witness Henry A. Curtiss, who was acting for and in behalf of plaintiff, and was so understood by the defendant. He testified that the defendant stated to him that the ship “had a large, heavy frame of white oak, and was staunch and strong and tight, and a good old ship. * * * And that she was all ready to take in a cargo, and he could send her to sea without any expense, and that she might need some running rigging to the amount of five or six hundred dollars. * * He said her sails were all good and piled up between decks.” He testified further: “I stated to him that he, the plaintiff, wanted a ship to load for San Francisco to take a cargo of white oak timber to the navy yard right away. * * * He said he had just the ship for that voyage * * * And the ship was all ready to load, tight, staunch and good, and would require but very little for such a voyage.” And this the witness stated was in substance repeated by him to the plaintiff. After that an interview on the same subject is stated to have taken place between the plaintiff and the defendant, in which the plaintiff stated that the defendant “said she was tight and staunch and a good carrier, and there was not a better ship sailed out of the port of New York; that she was built in Portsmouth; built of white oak, and her frame was very heavy, and she was in splendid condition. He had put her in condition, and he said from four to six hundred dollars at the outside would send her to any port, and he said she is the very vessel you want to go to California with; she is a large carrier * * * I have told you she is in first-class order, well found in everything, and with the exception of two or three spare sails and some running rigging is all you require to send her to sea, and four to six hundred dollars would be the outside, and she is all ready to load at once.” And it was in reliance upon these representations that the plaintiff testified he purchased the ship. The defendant denied the making of such representations, and in [238]*238his denial he was to a certain extent, though not wholly, sustained by two witnesses who were in his office at the time when the negotiations for the purchase of the ship took place between these parties. But their corroboration was not entirely complete, for the reason that they did not appear to have heard all the conversation which took place between the plaintiff and the defendant, their attention being employed in part by other subjects, and one of them being for a portion of .the time out of the office.

As the case was presented by this evidence, the point was very clearly one for the jury to decide whether the representations affirmed on behalf of the plaintiff had been made by the defendant, and it cannot justly be said that there was not a preponderance of proof against the defendant when the probability is considered and added to the positive evidence that a person would not ordinarily be inclined or willing to purchase a ship without understanding from the vendor something in reference to her capacity and condition. As the evidence was made to appear and obtained from the witnesses who were before and observed by the jury, it was for them to decide who was right in that given concerning these alleged representations, and they must have found that they were made, as that was alleged to be the fact, to induce the plaintiff to become the purchaser of the ship.

It was not, as it could not have been, very seriously contended that these representations were truthfully made, for the ship was immediately taken to Newburg, where she was to be laden with timber, for the purpose of receiving her cargo. This was in August, 1813. She was then overhauled and her condition was disclosed, and the witnesses who did the work, as well as.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 N.Y. St. Rep. 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bigler-v-atkins-nysupct-1887.