Hunter v. . Wetsell

57 N.Y. 375
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 57 N.Y. 375 (Hunter v. . Wetsell) 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
Hunter v. . Wetsell, 57 N.Y. 375 (N.Y. 1874).

Opinion

*377 Earl, C.

This action was brought to recover the price of hops which plaintiff claims to have sold to the defendants. It is claimed, on the part of the defendants, that the contract was void under the statute of frauds, and whether it was or not is the only question I propose to consider.

The only compliance with the statute claimed is part payment of the purchase-price. The facts are as follows: The contract was made September 27, 1867, and no portion of the purchase-price was then paid. Subsequently, the defendants paid the plaintiff §300 upon the purchase-price, §200 in November and §100 in December. There is no proof of what was said about the hops or the contract when these payments were made. The evidence does not even show that the contract was mentioned or referred to. It is simply, that the payments were made toward the hops.

The English statute of frauds, enacted in the reign of Charles the Second, did not require the payment, to render a contract for the sale of goods valid, to be made at the time of making the contract, neither did the statute of this State, in force prior to the Ee vised Statutes. (1 R. L., 80, § 15.) The revisers, in their report to the legislature, provided that the memorandum, the delivery and the payment should be made at the time the contract was made. But the legislature modified the provision as reported, and adopted it as we now find it in the statutes. The revisers deemed it important that the conditions prescribed to render the contract of sale valid, should be complied with at the time of making the contract. This was an alteration of the law as it had before, for more than a century, existed in this State and in England, and the attention of the legislature was thus distinctly called to it. It omitted the requirement as to time, so far as related to the memorandum and part delivery, but retained it as to the part payment. Effect must be given to this language. A contract for the sale of personal property for the price of fifty dollars or more is declared void unless one of three things be done, the last of which is payment by the buyer, at the time, of part of the purchase-money. Payment after *378 ward will not do. The payment must be made when the contract is made. Such is the plain language of the statute. Here there was but one contract made, which was in September. There was no attempt to make any other. There was no talk about any, and so far as appears no renewal, reaffirmation or restatement in any form of that one. All that took place afterward was a payment of $300 toward the hops. If this could be called a payment at the time of making the contract, within the meaning of the statute, then this provision of the statute serves no purpose, as every payment subsequently made, to apply upon the contract, would render it binding within the statute, and the pro1 vision requiring payment at the time would be nullified. A payment not made at the time can never, under any circumstances, satisfy the requirement of the statute. But when a contract for the sale of personal property, valid at common law, is made, and the buyer afterward pays expressly to bind the contract, or when payment is'made the parties then reaffirm or restate the terms of the-contract, and their minds then meet so as to make a contract, the statute is undoubtedly satisfied. Such a payment is made at the time of the contract and not afterward.

This particular provision of the statute has not received much attention in the courts. It seems first to have been under consideration in Massachusetts, in Thompson v. Alger (12 Metcalf, 428), a case growing out of the sale of railroad stock, made in this State. In that case, Dewey, J., expresses the opinion that a payment made subsequently to the time of making the contract, with the concurrence of both parties, will answer the requirement of the statute and that the contract becomes valid from the time of such payment; but the decision bf the case was put upon the ground, that what took place when the payment was made was sufficient to show that the minds of the parties then met and an agreement was then made. In Sprague v. Blake (20 Wend., 61), it was held that a subsequent delivery and acceptance of property, sold under a contract otherwise void *379 under the statute of frauds, rendered the contract valid. Judge Oowek: writing the opinion says : “ The statute does not require that the part acceptance should be at the time of the oral contract, though it seems to be otherwise of earnest-money which is to bind the bargain.” In McKnight v. Dunlop (5 N. Y., 537) the same provision of the statute was under consideration, and a similar decision as to the effect of subsequent delivery and acceptance was made. Judge Paige writing the opinion, refers to the case of Thompsoii v. Alger, and citing the doctrine of Dewey, J., as to the effect of subsequent payment says: If the contract is not, in law, deemed to be made until the part payment of the purchase-money, and the previous invalid oral agreement is merely referred to, to ascertain the terms of the subsequent valid contract, the decision of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts may be regarded as sound.” In Bissell v. Balcom (39 N. Y., 274) some of the language used by Judge Woodruff goes far to sustain the claim of the plaintiff in this case. That was an action to recover the price of certain cattle sold by defendant to the plaintiff. At the time of the sale, the cattle were left in the possession of the plaintiff, and nothing was done to make the contract binding within the statute of frauds. On the next day, the plaintiff called upon the defendants for part payment to bind the bargain, arid the defendant paid him three dollars for that purpose. It was held that the payment was sufficient for the statute. The parties came together speaking of and referring to the contract which they recognized as incomplete and invalid, and for the express purpose of a compliance with the statute the purchaser, at. the request of the seller, made the payment. The contract was, intentionally, then made, and, hence, it could with propriety be held that the payment was made at the time of making the contract. In Allis v. Read (45 N. Y., 142) the plaintiff agreed verbally with the defendants for the purchase of a quantity of cloths, no portion of the purchase-money being then paid or goods delivered ; but, subsequently, when, by the first arrangement a payment became due, the parties *380

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Bluebook (online)
57 N.Y. 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-v-wetsell-ny-1874.