Condict v. . Cowdrey

34 N.E. 781, 139 N.Y. 273, 54 N.Y. St. Rep. 648, 94 Sickels 273, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 996
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 3, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 34 N.E. 781 (Condict v. . Cowdrey) 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
Condict v. . Cowdrey, 34 N.E. 781, 139 N.Y. 273, 54 N.Y. St. Rep. 648, 94 Sickels 273, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 996 (N.Y. 1893).

Opinion

Maynard, J.

The defendant was the executrix of her husband’s will and the devisee of his real estate. Among the title papers which came into her possession were conveyances to him of eight different tracts of land in various counties in the state of Kentucky, aggregating 435,000 acr.es, and what - purported to be duly certified abstracts of title, showing, upon their face, a complete chain from the commonwealth of Yir *275 ginia. It does not appear that the defendant, or her managing agent, one Samuel R. Dickson, had any knowledge of the genuineness of these abstracts. In 1887 Dickson, acting for the defendant, employed the plaintiff, a real estate broker, to effect a sale of these lands for her, and on May 10th she addressed, signed and delivered to the plaintiff the following written memorandum of his employment:

I hereby agree to pay you a commission of ten per cent on the price I may accept for the 435,000 acres of land in Eastern Kentucky belonging to me, if sold through your agency. I hereby acknowledge your agency in bringing Jere Baxter and his associates to me, whereby a refusal mitil Sept. 10 next was given by me.”

On the same day a written option was given by her to Baxter for the purchase of these lands at ten cents per acre for a period of four months, and it was expressly stipulated in this writing, “ that he, the said Baxter, shall, at his own expense, time and labor, have the titles to said property examined into, and the condition and character of the lands •examined, and gather all information he may deem necessary for him to act intelligently in the premises, the vendors not being able to give him such information.” This option was to be renewed for ninety days, if Baxter desired it. Baxter resided at Ffashville, Tenn., and endeavored to associate W. A. Milliken, a lawyer of that city, with him in the negotiations. Milliken visited the lands and made some examination as to their location and quality and the extent to which they were occupied by squatters, but made no investigation of the title. Baxter’s option expired without effecting a purchase, and Milliken then continued the negotiations in his own behalf. As the defendant required payment either in money or short time paper, it seemed necessary for him to obtain the assistance of some one possessed of the requisite means to meet these requirements. In April, 1888, lie succeeded in inducing Frederick Wolff, a banker and broker in Few York, to consent to join with him in the purchase of the property. It was finally agreed between them and the defendant’s agent that *276 they would pay at the rate of ten cents per acre, or $43,500 for the property, as follows: $2,000 down, and three acceptances of $13,833.33 each, drawn by Milliken on Wolff to the order of defendant and accepted by Wolff, payable at three, four and six months, respectively, and the defendant should sign and acknowledge the deeds of the property, and that the acceptances and the deeds should be deposited as an escrow with the Second National Bank of New York, and upon the payment of the acceptances, the deeds were to be delivered by the bank to Wolff and Milliken. On April 26th, 1888, the $2,000 were paid, and the acceptances signed and the deeds-executed, and both deposited with the bank, as agreed, and a written receipt signed by the defendant and delivered to Mil-liken and Wolff, showing that all these things had been done. At the same time there was left with the bank a written memorandum called “ Conditions of Hypothecation,” not signed by anyone, and, as shown by the evidence, drawn by the defendant’s agent without the knowledge or assent of the purchasers, reciting that there was placed with the bank, for safe-keeping and delivery, eight deeds transferring the title to 435,000 acres of land, situated in the state of Kentucky, from, the defendant to Milliken and Wolff; also, three obligations for the payment of money, describing them, which three obligations are made for the purchase of said lands, and stating that if the obligations are paid at maturity, the deeds are to be delivered, but in case of any default in the payment, the deeds are to be delivered to the defendant, and that all moneys paid shall be forfeited in liquidation of damages sustained by virtue of the non-payment of any of the obligations. As yet the title had not been investigated. The defendant was not "willing to make any other ■ conveyance than a quit-claim deed; the intending purchasers were not willing to complete the purchase and take the property unless the title was found, upon examination, to be good; and the proof shows that it was also a part of the agreement of the parties that Milliken and Wolff should examine the title before the acceptances matured, and if it was found that the defendant had no title, *277 then there was to be no sale. Before the first acceptance fell due Milliken went to Kentucky and examined the title and found that the abstracts, which the defendant had, were false in every material respect; that the signatures to the certificates were genuine, but the conveyances set forth in the abstracts did not exist and had never existed, and that there was a complete chain of title to the lands in another upon the public, records. The defendant, therefore, had no lands, and not even a colorable title to any lands in Kentucky, which she could convey. Milliken and Wolff immediately notified the defendant and the bank of the discovery of the nonexistence of her title, and of their refusal to complete the purchase, and they demanded of the defendant the re-payment of the $2,000, and of the bank the surrender of the acceptances. They also brought an action against the defendant in the U. S. Circuit Court for the recovery of the money and the cancellation of the acceptances. The defendant was willing to refund the $2,000, but Milliken and Wolff demanded damages for fraud in the transaction, which the defendant resisted. This suit was compromised June 20, 1889, by the defendant agreeing to re-pay the $2,000, and to pay $900 in addition for the expenses of Milliken and Wolff, and the acceptances were to be surrendered and the deeds returned.

It appears from the testimony of Milliken why the investigation of the title was left to the last. He was acquainted with the reputation of the officer who certified to the abstracts, and knew him to be a prominent lawyer of Kentucky, and had confidence that the abstracts would, upon examination, be found to be correct.

The plaintiff insists that there was a sale of the property by the defendant to Milliken and Wolff, and that he was entitled to his commissions under the agreement of May 10tli, and he has recovered judgment for the full amount and interest, from which this appeal has been taken.

When the plaintiff rested, the defendant moved for a non-suit upon the ground that this transaction, which we have *278 detailed, was not a sale which entitled plaintiff to a commission, but simply an option, and that under the terms of that option the property was not finally taken; in' other words, that the transaction was not consummated, and failing in the consummation, the property not having been sold, nothing was earned by the plaintiff. This motion was denied and also a like motion, at the conclusion of the evidence, and an exception taken.

This case has been here on a former appeal (123 bT. T.

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.E. 781, 139 N.Y. 273, 54 N.Y. St. Rep. 648, 94 Sickels 273, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 996, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/condict-v-cowdrey-ny-1893.