Haydock v. . Stow

40 N.Y. 363, 1869 N.Y. LEXIS 33
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 11, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 40 N.Y. 363 (Haydock v. . Stow) 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
Haydock v. . Stow, 40 N.Y. 363, 1869 N.Y. LEXIS 33 (N.Y. 1869).

Opinion

*367 Hunt, Oh. J.

A determination of the character of the instrument signed by the defendant, dated February 18, 1864, will go far to determine this controversy. It is conceded that this determination is to be made upon the instrument itself. It is plain, distinct, free from ambiguity in its terms; and its meaning and character, as a legal question, are to be decided upon the face of the document itself. It is variously styled an agreement to sell, an offer or proposition of sale, and a power of attorney.

It is not an agreement to sell, for the reason that there are not two parties to it. An agreement cannot be made by one party alone. There is no pretence that Peck and Hillman agreed to buy, or that the defendant agreed to sell to them, and they are the only parties named in the paper except the defendant himself. Mor do I see any ground upon which it can be called an offer of sale, except so far as the appointment of an attorney to sell, may include such offer. I agree that if the defendant had addressed to Mr. Burden a letter offering to sell him these premises upon the terms specified herein, and Mr. Burden had made a written acceptance of the same, addressed and delivered to the defendant, that a contract of sale would have been thereby created. (Vassar v. Camp, 11 N. Y., 441.) But that is not the present state of facts. I consider the instrument to be a plain, direct, unqualified power of attorney to sell the land mentioned in it; nothing more, nothing less. I do not discover in it a single expression that embarrasses such a conclusion. Peck & Co. were real estate brokers in Troy, and kept a book in which the authorities given to them were entered. Doubtless there were blank forms in use by them in which, with the necessary filling up, the authority was given. I thus account for the limitation of — days, as well as for the reservation of the right to withdraw at any time before sale, upon giving notice to Peck & Co. In law, this reservation was unnecessary. The right belonged to the defendant, and was as perfect without the formal reservation as with it. The paper begins thus: I hereby authorize and empower Peck, Hill- *368 man & Parts, agents for me, to sell the following described property, viz.” This is neither an agreement for sale nor an offer to sell to any particular person, or to the world at large. It is simply a vesting in Peck & Oo. of a power before existing in the defendant only, to wit, the power of sale. Before that time his farm could only be sold by himself. How, another as well as himself, may exercise that power. The defendant not only says that he empowers Peck & Oo. to sell his farm, but affirmatively and repetitiously says, I give them authority as agents for me,” thus to make sale. A giving of power and authority, in law creates an agency; but the defendant and Peck & Oo. were not content with the declaration of law to that effect, but take the pains to allege, that in fact, Peck & Oo. are the agents of the defendant to sell his property. They stand then as agents empowered to sell, and not simply as brokers or middlemen, acting for both parties, and whose duty is ordinarily limited to bringing together the parties, upon an agreement, Avithout power to execute the contract itself. (Story on Sales, §§ 85 to 90; Moses v. Bierling, 31 N. Y., 462; Barnard v. Monnot, 33 How. Pr. R., 440.)

An agent authorized to sell either real or personal estate may enter into a contract, within the terms of his authority, which will bind his principal. This is of the very essence of the authority given, viz., an authority to sell. That he can bind his principal by a formal contract is the doctrine of the books from the earliest law tin the subject. (Worrall v. Munn, 1 Seld., 229, and the numerous cases cited; Mc Whorter v. Baldwin, 10 Paige, 386; Champlin v. Parrish, 11 Paige, 411; Story on Agency, §§ 58, 60.) The case of Coleman v. Carrigues (18 Barb., 60), to the contrary was not Avell decided.

The document next contains a limitation of time of the authority to sell, the days in which are left blank. I have given the explanation of this. It then fixes the price at which a sale may be made, to wit, $300 per acre. This is a minimum, not a maximum, price. Suppose *369 that, on the ninth of March, Mr. Burden had come into the office of Peck & Co., accompanied by Mr. Beach, now his counsel, and Mr. Burden had said I will buy that property upon the terms stated in your power to sell, to wit, §300 per acre, and Mr. Beach had said I also wish to buy the property, and I will give you §400 per acre for it, and, in other respects, will comply with the defendant’s requirements. Here was an agent to sell; a person standing in the place of and representing the vendor, bound to discard every feeling of friendship, to know no self-interest, to act as he judged the interests of the vendor would induce the vendor to act, if present in person, instead of being present by an agent. It would have been his evident duty to have accepted the larger offer, to have benefited his client, and not Mr. Burden. (Story on Agency, §§ 210, 211, 183, 217; Moore v. Moore, 1 Seld., 256, affirming 4 Sand., Ch., 37; Tarry v. Bank of Orleans, 9 Paige, 649, affirmed 7 Hill, 260.)

Assuming that the firm of Peck & Ilillman were the agents and attorneys of the defendant to make a sale for him of his real estate, the next question occurs upon the transaction of March 9th, 1864. The power of attorney being still in force, Mr. Burden, on that day, with the concurrence of Peck & Go., wrote across the face of the instrument these words: “I hereby agree to purchase the property herein mentioned upon the terms expressed, Troy, 9th March, 1864,” and signed the same. The written power of attorney and the writing signed by Mr. Burden are all the written evidence of a sale or a contract for a sale of the premises. Upon now being called upon by Mr. Burden to perform the contract of sale, as he alleges it to exist, the defendant interposes the defence of the statute of frauds. The statute upon that subject is in these words:

“Section 8. Every contract for the leasing for a longer period than one year or for the sale of any lands, or any interest in lands, shall be void, unless the contract or some note or memorandum thereof expressing the con *370 pideration bo in writing, and be subscribed by the party ¡by whom the lease or sale is to be made.”

“Section 9. Every instrument required to be subscribed "by any party, under the last preceding section, may be subscribed by the agent of such party lawfully authorized.” (2 R. S., 135; 139, Stat. at Large.)

Peck & Go. had full authority to subscribe the name of the defendant as a party agreeing to sell the premises in question; and if they had made such a contract with Hr. Burden, the defendant would have been bound by it. K"o such agreement or subscription was made. Hr. Burden has, indeed, expressed in writing his readiness to purchase upon the terms that Peck & Oo.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 N.Y. 363, 1869 N.Y. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haydock-v-stow-ny-1869.