Bristol v. . Hull

59 N.E. 698, 166 N.Y. 59, 4 Bedell 59, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1240
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 26, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 59 N.E. 698 (Bristol v. . Hull) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bristol v. . Hull, 59 N.E. 698, 166 N.Y. 59, 4 Bedell 59, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1240 (N.Y. 1901).

Opinion

Bartlett, J.

Prior to July 1st, 1898, George Lambert, one of the original defendants, and whose administrator has been substituted pending the appeal to this court, recovered judgment against Millard F. Hoxon and Cornwall M. Uoxon, his father, in the Supreme Court for $1,079.49 damages and costs, and issued execution thereon to the sheriff of Essex county, who thereupon in the latter part of July, 1898, levied upon a stock of dry goods, which the plaintiff in this action alleged belonged to her and in which neither of the defendants had any interest.

The plaintiff having given the sheriff notice that he must not sell the goods levied upon, the latter called a jury for the purpose of determining the ownership of the property; the jury found title in the plaintiff and thereupon George Lambert executed and delivered to the sheriff a bond of indemnity, which was also executed by Orlando Kellogg and Charles ¡N". Williams, the other defendants herein, as sureties. Thereupon the sheriff continued in possession of the stock of goods, refusing to recognize the title of the plaintiff, thereby converting the property so far as plaintiff is concerned.

The foregoing is in substance the allegations of the complaint, which demands judgment for the sum of $4,800.00, with interest from August 15th, 1898.

The answer sets up in substance denial of plaintiff’s ownership and an allegation that the property was owned by Millard F. Noxon, or by him and his father, and was in the possession *62 of Millard F. Uoxon at the time of the levy; alleges recovery of the judgment, the issuing of the execution and levy, the finding of the jury and the execution of the indemnity bond; avers that thereafter the sheriff continued in the possession of the property until an order was made by the District Court of the United States in a proceeding in bankruptcy instituted by Millard F. Hoxon appointing a receiver of the property levied upon, and that said order was procured on plaintiff’s consent and the goods were afterwards sold to the highest bidder by the receiver; that on the 12th. of August, 1898, Millard F. ISToxon filed his voluntary petition in bankruptcy, etc.; alleges insolvency of the judgment debtors against whom a judgment was recovered by defendant Lambert; sets up various transfers of the property that will be hereinafter considered.

A supplemental answer was afterwards served, alleging the sale of the property by the receiver in bankruptcy and that the proceeds amounted to $1,395.89, which was paid over to the plaintiff.

There were three principal issues tried under these pleadings: Whether the plaintiff was a bona fide owner of the property alleged to have been converted; whether in the bankruptcy proceedings the plaintiff waived her action against the sheriff for conversion; the amount of plaintiff’s damages.

The.trial judge refused to submit the first'two questions to the jury, allowing them to pass only upon the question of damages; that is, the value of the property at the time of the levy.

In the spring of 1895, Millard F. Uoxon, who had been in business in Elizabethtown, Essex county, sold to his father, Cornwall M. Hoxon, the stock of goods then owned by him for $8,250. In payment the father gave the son his note for $2,000 and assumed other notes owing by the son, and upon which the father was indorser, amounting to $6,250.00. Among these notes so assumed was the one for $1,000.00 held by the defendant George Lambert, and which was put into judgment as above stated, and resulted in the levy, the validity *63 of which is now challenged. A little later the son sold to his father his book accounts for $1,640.00, taking his note therefor. At the time of this transaction Millard F. Hoxon was indebted to the plaintiff, Sarah L. Bristol, in the sum of about $4,000.00, the greater part of which she had some years before placed in his hands for investment, the total amount. being the proceeds of a farm and some personal property that she had sold in Hew Jersey, and a loan of $200.00 to Millard F. Hoxon. When his father gave Millard F. the notes for •$2,000.00 on account of the stock of goods in- store and the $1,640.00 for the book accounts, the son passed them over to the plaintiff and they were indorsed on a note for $3,800.00, which represented a part of his indebtedness to her.

Millard F. Hoxon, the son, testified in regard to this sale to his father, that. the goods remained from the first day of April, 1895, until the following January at Elizabethtown, and that they were then shipped to Broadalbin, Fulton county, or a part of them ; that his father took them there; that the witness had very little to do with transporting them; that he had something to do with it; that he assisted in packing same and that he was there at Elizabethtown for the purpose; that they were at Broadalbin in the neighborhood of six or seven months and then went to Ballston Spa; that a portion of the goods sold to his father were sent to Broadalbin and to Balls-ton ; that he helped with the inventory and in packing and unpacking the goods; that he did not have possession of the goods at Broadalbin; that he was in the store a part of the time and attended to customers and waited on same; that he could not tell what portion of the six months he was there, perhaps all told two months out of the six.

In June, 1896, Cornwall M. Hoxon sold what remained of this stock of goods to Alice J. Hoxon, the wife of Millard F. Hoxon. The consideration of this transfer was about $4,000.00, and she paid it by taking up the two notes, one of $2,000.00 and one of $1,640.00, which the plaintiff, Mrs. Bristol, held against Cornwall M. Hoxon, and surrendered them to her, she giving the plaintiff, Mrs. Bristol, her own note-therefor. For *64 the balance of the purchase price she assumed certain debts which Cornwall M. Noxon owed.

Soon after the transfer of the stock to Alice J. Noxon, it was taken to Ballston, Saratoga county, by her, and she ran the business, her husband, Millard F. Noxon, acting as her agent. This continued until about the first of October, 1897, when the goods were shipped to Elizabethtown, Essex county, and Mrs. Noxon then sold a half interest in the stock to her daughter, Mrs. Deming. The value of the stock at that time was about $3,500.00. Mrs. Deming paid-$300.00 in cash, and the firm note of Noxon & Deming for $2,000.00 was given to Mrs. Noxon for the balance. Noxon & Deming ran the business until about the first of March, 1898.

In 1897, Mrs. Bristol, the plaintiff, employed an attorney of Ballston, who married her granddaughter, to protect her interests. The plaintiff, in March, 1898, was the owner of a note for $2,000.00 of the firm of Noxon & Deming, which was given to Mrs. Noxon, she having transferred the same to the plaintiff to apply on Mrs. Noxon’s note for $3,774.47 held by the plaintiff. At that time the plaintiff owned the two notes of $3,800.00 and' $200.00 given by Millard F. Noxon. On the one for $3,800.00 were indorsed the payments of $2,000.00 and $1,640.00 made by the notes of Cornwall M. Noxon as above stated. The plaintiff also owned the note of Alice J. Noxon for $3,774.47, which Mrs. Noxon had given to her to take up the notes of Cornwall M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 N.E. 698, 166 N.Y. 59, 4 Bedell 59, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bristol-v-hull-ny-1901.