Genin & Lockwood v. Tompkins

12 Barb. 265
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 12 Barb. 265 (Genin & Lockwood v. Tompkins) 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
Genin & Lockwood v. Tompkins, 12 Barb. 265 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1851).

Opinion

By the Court,

King, J.

In these three cases, an appeal has been taken from an order, at special term, allowing amendments to be made in each case, to the attachments issued therein, and upon such amendments being made, denying the motion of the defendant, to set aside such attachments. In their main features, the several cases are similar, and the principal questions involved, the same.

These questions may be reduced to two heads:

1. Those concerning the right to issue any attachment at all.

2. Those concerning the form of the attachments actually issued.

The attachments were, upon the argument, all treated as having been issued on the 29th of January, 1851; though in the papers furnished to us, the attachment in the action of Genin v. Lockwood, bears date the 30th January. 1851. They will be here considered as having actually been issued on the 29th of January.

The first point made by the defendant’s counsel is, that in each of these cases, the claim upon which the suit was commenced was not then due; as the defendant had all the day on [279]*279which the action was commenced, (the 29th of January,) in which to perform his contract.

It appears, as the result of the affidavits upon which the attachments were granted, of those upon which the motion to discharge was founded, and of the affidavits in opposition to such motion, that in each of the above cases, the plaintiffs had contracted with the defendant, to deliver him stock, for cash on delivery, and that the day for the performance of the contract, on the plaintiffs’ part, was, or might at the defendant’s option, be the 29th of January. That on that day, he called upon the plaintiffs for the stock, which was transferred to him, either upon his assurance that he would pay' cash for it, upon its transfer; or, in expectation that he would do so, according to previous agreement, without such express promise, at the time of delivery. That upon the transfer being made, the several plaintiffs sent to the defendant’s office, for their money, and not succeeding in. them first efforts, repeated their visits; that at or about two o’clock, the defendant left Wall-street, and that shortly before three o’clock, the plaintiffs either received from the defendant’s clerk, or took from the defendant’s drawer, with such clerk’s assent, checks for the respective amounts due them, drawn to their order on the Merchants’ Exchange Bank, not certified, however; and which, when presented, were refused payment for want of funds, the defendant having, on that day, drawn out all his funds in that bank, by checks, payable to himself or others.

It is contended that the taking of these checks suspended the plaintiffs’ right of action until the next day; as the defendant was entitled to the whole of the 29th to meet the same. If these checks were not given to the plaintiffs, but were obtained, as was on the argument contended, by the tortious act of the plaintiffs in seizing upon that which did not belong to them, then, whatever new right of action accrued thereby to the defendant against the plaintiffs, their original right of action upon the contract concerning the stock was unaffected and continued in full force; but, if the checks were in fact given by the defendant’s authority, the case of Bickford v. Maxwell, (6 T. R. [280]*28052,) seems applicable. There, a defendant having been arrested, gave the plaintiff a draft for part of the amount due, saying it would be immediately paid, and agreed to settle the balance in a few days ; on which the plaintiff agreed he might be discharged from custody. The draft was dishonored, and upon the same affidavit upon which the first capias issued, the defendant was again arrested on another capias. A motion was made to discharge the defendant from custody. Lord Kenyon said, “In cases of this kind, if the bill, which is given in payment, do not turn out to be productive, it is not that which it purports to be and which the party receiving it expects it to be, and therefore he may consider it as a nullity, and act as if no such bill had been given at all. These questions have frequently arisen at nisi prius, where they have always been determined the same way. I remember one in particular a few years ago, where a rider in the country gave a draft on a person in London, with whom he had no connexion whatever; and it was admitted on all hands, that it ought to be considered as if no bill had been given at all, and that the original debt remained in force.” (See also the conclusion of the opinion of Butter, J. in Bickerdike v. Bollman, 1 T. R. 410.)

Treating the checks then as nullities, what was the condition of the parties ? The plaintiffs had delivered their property to the defendant, upon his then or prior agreement, to pay cash on delivery. Did the defendant, in consequence of such delivery, obtain credit for the whole of the day to pay the cash ?

Upon the argument, the case of Osborn v. Moneare, (3 Wend. 171,) was cited, that an action can not be brought against the maker of a note on the last day of grace, because he has the whole of that day in which to make payment; and that a suit commenced on such last day was premature. So too Chapman v. Lathrop, (6 Cowen, 110,) and Lupin v. Marie, (6 Wend. 77,) were cited in support of the proposition that if the contract called for cash on delivery, a delivery without requiring the cash, was a waiver of the condition.

But the waiver of the condition is in respect to the right of property of the vendor in the goods sold, which, by such delivery. [281]*281passes to the vendee; but not in respect to the right to demand immediate payment, for that is the consideration of the delivery, and the contract of the vendee. However applicable these cases may be to the question whether the property in the stock vested, on its transfer, in the defendant, they are not applicable to the question of his liability to pay. This question respecting the time which contracting parties have, within which to deliver goods, or pay money, or in other words to tender performance of their respective contracts, was much considered in Startup v. Macdonald, (6 Man. & Gr. 593 ; 46 Eng. Com. Law Rep. 591.) Parke, B. thus sums up the law at pages 623, 624: “ A party who is, by contract, to pay money, or to do a thing transitory, to another, any where on a certain day, has the whole of the day, and if on one of several days, the whole of the day for the performance of his part of the contract; and.until the whole day, or the whole of the last day, has expired, no action will lie against him for the breach of such contract.” The subject is further pursued in reference to the necessity of seeking out the party to whom performance is to be tendered, that sufficient of the day must remain to enable the subject matter tendered to be examined, and other considerations, not necessary here to be referred to. But this case, and all others that I have met with, proceed upon the ground that a day is fixed for the performance of the contract; and the law not in general regarding fractions of a day, considers the party entitled to the whole day for performance.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Barb. 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/genin-lockwood-v-tompkins-nysupct-1851.