French v. White

5 Duer 254
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJanuary 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 5 Duer 254 (French v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
French v. White, 5 Duer 254 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1856).

Opinion

The material facts sufficiently appear in the opinion of the court.

By the Court. Woodruff, J.

In this case it appeared, and the verdict 'must be taken to find, that George W. French lent to the defendant twelve thousand five hundred dollars, in various sums, from time to time, in the years 1851 and 1852. The testimony in regard to the terms of the loan is, that there was no agreement as to the day of payment or rate of interest. The money was, therefore, payable by the defendant on demand.

If the lender had assigned his claim for this money to the plaintiff, while it remained in the simple form of a claim for money lent, there would have been no question of the right of the latter to recover—the case would have exhibited an ordinary money demand, assigned to the plaintiff by the creditor, and the plaintiff’s right of action would have been complete, by proving the loan by the assignor and the assignment to himself; and had this been the whole case exhibited by the parties, the question whether the defendant procured the loan by fraudulent representations would have been wholly immaterial, and the evidence, bearing upon that question, irrelevant.

But, in November, 1853, many months after the money was lent, the assignor of the plaintiff accepted the promissory notes of the defendant, payable, at various dates, for the amount of the loan, some of which notes were not due at the time this action was brought. To avoid the effect of these notes, as an extension of the time of payment of the moneys, the plaintiff avers, that his assignor was induced to take these promissory notes, by the fraudulent representations of the defendant, in regard to his property and ability to pay, and was deceived and defrauded into the giving of this extended credit. It is true, that the complaint also avers, that the original loan was procured by false and fraudulent representations, but this averment, I apprehend, might have been struck out, as immaterial and unnecessary to sustain the plaintiff’s action, since, as before remarked, , if the loan was made and was payable [256]*256on demand, the right of action was complete, whether there was fraud in procuring the loan or not. The proof of the original fraud, on the trial, was not necessary, nor material, except so far as it formed part of an entire scheme to defraud, which terminated in inducing the assignor of the plaintiff to accept the defendant’s notes, before referred to. The jury have found, distinctly, that the defendant was guilty of the fraud alleged, under a charge from the court, which instructed them, that, unless they found the fraud, they could not find for the plaintiff.

Under this verdict, the case stands thus: the assignor of the plaintiff, having a money demand, for loans made to the defendant, is induced, by fraud, to accept promissory notes giving an extended credit to the defendant.

It is not necessary to examine the reports, to find authority for the proposition, that this fraud vitiated the credit thus agreed to, and no obligation whatever rested upon the assignor of the plaintiff, to delay his action for an hour. All that it was necessary for him to do, was, to produce the notes, on the trial, to be cancelled. Indeed, upon the facts, thus found, it is manifest that the assignor of the plaintiff had, at all times, from the moment the loans were made, to and at the time of the assignment, a just and valid claim to the money lent, and a right of action therefor.

Under these circumstances, he assigned this claim to the plaintifij and delivered to him the notes; and I perceive no ground, upon which to hold that such a claim was not assignable.

The counsel for the defendant has treated the assignment, as if it were the assignment of a mere tort, and referred us to some authorities, which, he conceives, show, that the right to recover damages, for a tort of this description, is not assignable. But the present is an action for money lent—not for damages, as such. The complaint states the lending of the money, a demand of repayment, non-payment by the defendant, and demands judgment for the sum remaining due, with interest. It may, perhaps, account for the introduction into the complaint of the averment, that the debt was, in the first instance, fraudulently contracted, to suggest, that it was at one time held, by some Judges, that if the plaintiff desired to arrest the defendant on that ground, and, finally, to have execution against his body, such an averment in the complaint was necessary; but that doctrine being repudiated, the fact, that the de[257]*257fendant procured the loans by fraud, was in nowise material to the right of action, nor material for any of the purposes of the trial, unless it was evidence of the scheme, which was consummated by inducing the plaintiff’s assignor to take the notes, as before suggested.

The question, whether a right of action for a tort is assignable, and under what circumstances, does not arise. As conceded by the defendant’s counsel, it was the claim for the money lent which was assigned, and that is the claim set up in the complaint, and for which judgment is demanded.

There was no proper exception to the charge of the court to the jury. The general statement, that the defendant excepted to the charge, is too general to be treated as an exception, unless every part of the charge is erroneous, and so it is well settled. (Lansing v. Wiswall, 5 Denio, 213; Haggart v. Dunn, 1 Selden, 422-7; Jones v. Osgood, 2 id. 233; Hunt v. Maybee, 3 id. 273, 4 id. 37; 1 Kernan, 416.) But it seems, at least, doubtful whether the Judge was not himself misled, by the averments in the complaint that the original loans were procured by fraud, for, in his charge, he says: “ The first question is, was this money lent upon fraudulent representations?” If he had made the right of the plaintiff to depend upon this question alone, there would, I think, have been error in his direction, for which, on a case, a new trial should be ordered; for, according to the views above expressed, the title of the plaintiff to recover did not at all depend upon this question. If the money was lent upon such representations, still the plaintiff could not recover, unless the fraud also extended to the giving and receipt of the notes, afterwards taken for the loan, by the plaintiff’s assignor. And, on the other hand, if there was no fraud, in the procurement of the loan, the plaintiff was entitled to recover, if he showed that the defendant induced his assignor to take the notes by fraud.

But the court did not leave the case upon that sole question; the instruction to the jury was, also, that, to entitle the plaintiff to recover, they must “ also find, that White committed a fraud, in inducing French to accept the notes.”

The defendant, therefore, has .no cause of complaint, in this respect, but rather the plaintiff, if the views above expressed are correct.

In substance, the charge was, that, to entitle the plaintiff to recover, the jury must find, not only that the loan was procured [258]*258by fraud, but that French was afterwards also induced, by fraud, to accept the notes; whereas, according to our view of the case, if French was induced by fraud to accept the notes, the plaintiff was entitled to recover, whether the loan was originally procured by fraud or not.

There is, therefore, in this respect, no reason to interfere with the verdict. The charge was more favorable to the defendant than he had a right to ask.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Duer 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/french-v-white-nysuperctnyc-1856.