Gage v. Jaqueth

1 Lans. 207
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 Lans. 207 (Gage v. Jaqueth) 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
Gage v. Jaqueth, 1 Lans. 207 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1869).

Opinion

Present — Bacon, Foster, Mullin and Morgan, J.J.

[209]*209By the Court

Mullin, J.

It appears by the case that there was a firm by name J. H. Gage & Co. at Syracuse, and a firm by the name of C. H. Gage & Co., at Hew York. The former firm was composed of C. H. Gage and J. H. Gage. Who compose the latter firm does not appear.

The former firm was dissolved on the 19th Hay, 1868, by the death of J. H. Gage.

On the 21st the contract between the parties for the carriage of the sugar mentioned in the contract was made and the sugar delivered to the defendant to be carried to Syracuse.

A contract with the firm of J. H. Gage & Co., could not then be made; but must have been made with the survivor, C. H. Gage. He alone could sue upon it.

J. H. Gage & Co. being the consignees of the sugar are to be deemed owners, and entitled to sue for loss of, or injury to it, by the carrier.

C. H. Gage, being survivor of the firm was entitled to receive the sugar, and to sue the carrier if not delivered in good order. Adding the word survivor does not impair his right; it is a mere descriptio persona}.

If I am right in the foregoing views of the relations of the parties, it is wholly immaterial who composed the firm of C. H. Gage & Co. They are the consignors merely. And as a firm, so far as we know, without interest in the sugar.

The objection to the plaintiff’s right to recover because of any defect of the parties was properly overruled.

The action being for the injury to the property while in the possession of the earner, the price at which the property was to be carried was a matter wholly immaterial to that issue.

If, by the contract between the consignor and carrier the goods were to be at the risk of the owner, that was a matter of defence, and proof of it devolves on the defendant.

The plaintiff, however, put in evidence what he claimed to be the contract under which the goods were carried; and by it the carrier received the property subject to the ordinary liability devolving on common carriers; one of [210]*210which is, responsibility for injuries to the property, not resulting from inevitable accident or the public enemy.

The defendant, by way of defence, offered to prove by paroi, that by the agreement between him and the consignors, the goods were to be carried at the risk of the owner; and, as a consignor, he was not liable for such injury.

The evidence was rejected on the ground that it contradicted or varied the written contract put in evidence by the plaintiff, and which was taken to be the contract under which the goods were carried.

That contract was in writing and in form a bill of lading; but it was signed by the consignors only,, and not by the captain of the vessel on which the sugar was laden, nor by any other person on the part of the defendant.

The contract was not a bill of lading, as it was not signed by the captain or the defendant. (Dows v. Greene, 24 N. Y., 638, and cases cited.)

But it was competent for the parties to enter into an agreement not in form a bill of lading; and such contract, if proved, will bind the parties as effectually as a bill of lading.

The question then is, was the. defendant bound by the writing, as being the contract under which the sugar was carried ?

It will be borne in mind that it is not signed by the defendant, nor by any one representing him. The captain received the paper, carried it with the goods to Syracuse, and there delivered it to the consignees.

As a general proposition, no person is bound by a written agreement who has' not signed it. ( Wood v. Edwards, 19 J. R., 205; Townsend v. Corning, 23 W., 435 ; Tucker v. Woods, 12 J. R., 190.)

The question as to what constitutes a contract, minute, or memorandum of a contract, has frequently arisen in England under the stamp acts. The courts have generally leaned to give full effect to those acts, by bringing within their operations all instruments which could by reasonable intendment be held to be reached by them.

[211]*211In Doe v. Pedgriph, (19 E. C. L., 402), it appeared that in an agreement for the letting of certain houses, which was put in writing by the lessee’s agent, but was not signed by either, both parties signed a writing on the back of the draft, in the following words: “We approve of the within draft.” It was objected to the introduction of this paper, that it was not stamped.

The court, however, held that it was not a contract, minute, or memorandum of a contract, and hence need not be stamped. It was a mere statement of what they intended to agree to.

It was held in The King v. Inhabitants of Leicester (2 A. & E., 212), that a writing drawn by lessor’s agent and signed by the unauthorized agent of the lessee, containing the terms of the letting, but not signed by the lessor, was not a lease, nor an agreement for a lease; and hence the pauper, who was named as lessee, did not gain settlement by occupancy under such agreement.

See, also, Vaughton v. Brine (39 E. C. L., 484); Chadwick v. Clarke (50 E. C. L., 699); Drant v. Brown (10 E. C. L., 211); Doe v. Cartwright (5 E. C. L., 306); Hawkins v. Warre (5 D. & R. 512); Parker v. Dubois (1 M. & W., 30); Wilson v. Bowie (12 E. C. L., 18); Stevens v. Pinney (4 E. C. L., 161).

There is a class of cases, in which it has been held that a party who does not sign a contract may enforce it, and may be made liable upon it at law as well as in equity. (Ballard v. Walker, 3 John. Cases, 60; Roget v. Merritt, 2 Caines, 117; Gale v. Nixon, 6 Cow., 445; Worrall v. Munn, 1 Seld., 229, and cases cited by Paige, J.)

The cases cited, and all others belonging to the same class, are cases within the statute of frauds, as they arise on contracts for the sale of lands or goods.

It was competent for the legislature to prescribe a mode of executing contracts which would bind all parties to them, although part only should sign them; and this is precisely what courts hold the legislature has done, in the enactment of the statute of frauds.

[212]*212The contract before us, is not within the statute, and the consequences resulting from an omission of the defendant to sign it are not removed by the statute.

I have been unable to find a case in which it has been held, that a party named in a written agreement was liable upon it when he had not signed it. Paige, J., in Worrall v. Munn, supra, says: This principle (that a party not signing a contract. executed in conformity to the statute of frauds, was liable upon it if he accepted and acted upon it), was applied to contracts not within the statute in Randall v. Van Vechten (19 J. R., 60); Bank of Columbia v. Patterson (7 Crunch, 299); and in White v. Cuyler (6 Term R., 176). I do not so understand the cases.

In Randall v. Van Vechten,

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