Gould v. . Cayuga County National Bank

86 N.Y. 75, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 186
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 4, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by169 cases

This text of 86 N.Y. 75 (Gould v. . Cayuga County National Bank) 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
Gould v. . Cayuga County National Bank, 86 N.Y. 75, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 186 (N.Y. 1881).

Opinion

Earl, J.

This action was brought to recover damages for the alleged breach of an agreement / ide by the defendants to return to the plaintiff certain TTnit d States bonds loaned by him to the bank, in June, 1865, thf defendant Beardsley being surety for the bank The deft idants, in their answer, interposed several defenses, among which were the statute of limitations and the return of the bonds to the plaintiff. "They also set up that, before the commencement of the action, the plaintiff called upon the bank for the return of the bonds, claiming that they had not been returned to him, and that the defendants denied plaintiff’s claim, alleging and claiming that the bonds had been returned to him by the bank, and that thereupon the parties entered into a compromise agreement, whereby the bank agreed to pay the plaintiff, in satisfaction of his claim *78 against it, the sum of $25,000, and that it paid, and plaintiff accepted, that sum in satisfaction of his claim against it for the bonds loaned.

Upon the trial the plaintiff proved the loan of the bonds and that they had not been returned to him, and then rested his case. The defendants then proved the compromise agreement, and the payment of the $25,000, and rested their case. The plaintiff then gave evidence tending to show that he was induced to enter into the compromise agreement by the fraud * of the defendants. The plaintiff- did not, prior to the commencement of the action, return or offer to return to the bank the $25,000 paid by it. After the defendants had at the trial taken the objection that the-plaintiff had hot returned or offered to return the money, and at the close of the evidence, the plaintiff - paid into court the sum of $25,000, with the interest thereon from the time of payment, and at the same time, as explanatory of the payment, filed a paper of .which the following is a copy, to wit: “ The plaintiff now deposits in the

court with the clerk thereof the sum of $35,159.72, a sum equal to a certain sum of $25,000, which was paid to the plaintiff by the defendant The Cayuga County National Bank, or by Josiah N. Starin, the 12th day of March, 1873, as set forth in a certain receipt or instrument of writing of that date mentioned in the pleadings and proofs in this action, and the interest upon such sum'until the 1st day of January, 1879. The said deposit being made under the following conditions

“ Fwst. The said deposit shall remain in the custody of the court and not paid to either party until final judgment shall be rendered in such action. The court by rendering such judgment or by its action under the judgment shall restore such deposit to the plaintiff unless it shall be determined in and by such final judgment that the defendant, The. Cayuga - County National Bank, ought to recover such, the said sum of $25,000, so paid to the plaintiff as aforesaid, in which case the sum of money herein mentioned shall be awarded to the defendant, The Cayuga County National Bank.’

“ HOLLIN THACT, Plaintiff's Attorney.”

*79 • This deposit was made more than five years after the payment of the money to the plaintiff, more than two years after the plaintiff had discovered the fraud, and long after the commencement of this action. The trial court found that the loan was made, that the bonds had not been returned or replaced, that the compromise agreement was made, and that the plaintiff was induced to enter into it by the fraud of the defendants; but it decided that the plaintiff could not recover because he did not before the commencement of the/action return or offer to return the $25,000 paid to him under the compromise agreement, and therefore it dismissed his complaint. The same view was taken of the case at the General Term, and as we are of opinion that that view was correct, we will confine our attention now to its consideration.

The compromise agreement, unless annulled, is an absolute bar to this action. It is a general rule laid down in the textbooks and reported cases that a party who seeks to rescind a contract into which he has been induced to enter by fraud must restore to the other party whatever he has obtained by virtue of the contract. (Cobb v. Hatfield, 46 N. Y. 533.) He cannot retain any thing he received under the contract and yet proceed in disaffirmance thereof. The rule is laid down in Evans v. Gale (17 N. H. 573), as follows: If one has been induced to make a contract to pay money or to deliver any thing, "by such means that he is entitled to rescind the transaction, he must, in order to do so, first restore to the other party whatever may have been received in exchange for the money or other thing he seeks to recover back, and to which he would become entitled as his own property immediately upon the rescission of the act, whose proper effect would have been to vest it in the other party.” The reason of the rule, as stated by Chief Justice Shaw in Thayer v. Turner (8 Metc. 550), is that “ the plaintiff, as far as it is in his power, shall put the defendant in statu quo, by restoring and revesting his former property in him, without putting him to an action to recover it, before he can exercise his own right to take back the property sold, or bring an action for it.” And as stated *80 by Chief Justice Parsons in Kimball v. Cunningham (4 Mass. 502), “the vendee shall not compel even the fraudulent seller to an action to recover back the property he has parted with in the exchange.” The effect of the avoidance of an agreement on the ground of fraud is to place the parties in the same position as if it had never been made; and' all rights which are transferred, released or created by the agreement are re-vested, restored-or discharged by the avoidance.

Here the $25,000',was not paid upon any debt acknowledged to be due the plaintiff from the bank. The bank denied the claim, but paid the money, to settle the dispute, and hence the plaintiff obtained it solely by virtue of the compromise agree•ment.

But the claim of the plaintiff is that because it was finally determined by the court that the sum paid the plaintiff and much more was due to him from the bank, the -fact that he • did not return the money furnished no defense to the action. It is believed, notwithstanding the earnest and able argument of the learned counsel for the appellant, that this claim, under the circumstances of this case, has no sound basis of principle or authority to rest on.

The defendants set up two defenses, either one of which would have defeated the plaintiff, to wit: the compromise and the return of the bonds. If plaintiff had tendered a return of the money, the bank could have taken it and the -compromise agreement would thus have been wiped out; but yet it could have defended the action by showing a return of the bonds. If it failed to show such return, the plaintiff would have recovered the full value of his bonds. If it showed a return, it would have been justly entitled to the money repaid. The receipt by the bank.of the money tendered would have placed the parties where they were before the compromise was made, and that is what the law requires, when it can be done, to make an effectual rescission.

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Bluebook (online)
86 N.Y. 75, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gould-v-cayuga-county-national-bank-ny-1881.