Jacobson v. Mailman

138 Misc. 227, 246 N.Y.S. 438, 1930 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1679
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedOctober 31, 1930
StatusPublished

This text of 138 Misc. 227 (Jacobson v. Mailman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacobson v. Mailman, 138 Misc. 227, 246 N.Y.S. 438, 1930 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1679 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1930).

Opinion

Hazard, J.

Defendant is a pawnbroker. On March 7, 1928, one George Baker, or perhaps his wife, pawned a diamond ring with defendant, receiving therefor $200. The pawn ticket, which is known in this case as plaintiff’s Exhibit 1, was given. It does not contain the name of the pledgor but the initials “ G. B.” appear thereon. It appears that soon thereafter Baker borrowed sixty dollars from the plaintiff and delivered to him the pawn ticket, supposedly as some sort of security.

There is no dispute about the facts in the case so far. Plaintiff [228]*228claims that in the latter part of March, 1928, he went to defendant’s place of business and asked to see the ring and was shown it and told by defendant that it would cost him $212 to redeem it, and that he declined so to do, saying the ring was not worth that amount or anywhere near it. He further claims that he made a second visit to the defendant in July at which time he says he said to the defendant: “ Now, if Mr. Baker should come after the ring during the month of August, don’t give it to him. Hold it until I come back, which will be in September. He said All right.’ ” Later plaintiff says: “ I said to Mr. Mailman I wont be back until September. Now be sure and hold that ring until I come back," He said ‘ All right.’ ” It was further stated by the plaintiff that he went to Mailman’s “ About the second week in September ” and then learned that the ring in question had been redeemed by one of the Bakers. He was shown an entry on defendant’s record book showing that the ring had been redeemed September 1, 1928. It is upon this state of affairs that this action was brought. It transpires that twenty dollars of the sum loaned by the plaintiff to Baker has been repaid, and plaintiff has been given a judgment against the defendant for the balance, forty dollars, with costs.

The situation is rather unusual and the appellant claims that no cause of action has been made out against him. It, therefore, becomes necessary to make a close analysis of the “ rights ” of the respective parties. Incidentally it should be mentioned that the defendant denies the claim of the plaintiff that at any time prior to the visit in September did the plaintiff exhibit the pawn ticket to him and tell him he was holding it. Defendant claims that no such transaction ever occurred and that the first he knew the plaintiff had any interest in the transaction was when plaintiff called upon him sometime in September. I think it can safely and easily be decided that if the defendant’s version is correct, the verdict should be no cause of action. In other words, if Mr. or Mrs. Baker came to the defendant’s place about the first of September and stated they had lost the pawn ticket and wished to redeem the pledged ring, that if defendant had no notice of any rights in the pawn ticket in this plaintiff, he might properly have taken what was coming to him from Baker and surrendered the ring.

The City Court, having found in favor of the plaintiff, must, I think, have decided the question of fact in favor of the plaintiff, that is, the City Court must have believed and decided that the plaintiff had, before the maturity of the pawn ticket, shown it to defendant and informed the defendant that he, plaintiff, was holding it. In view of the testimony of Attorney Suprio, I do not see that I can interfere with that finding. It is not the function of this court, [229]*229upon an appeal of this sort, to retry the case de novo and it has been said that this court should not reverse a judgment as against the weight of evidence unless it can be plainly seen that the lower court could not reasonably have arrived at the decision which it did. (Murtagh v. Dempsey, 85 App. Div. 204, 205.)

Many other citations to this effect could be made but I deem it unnecessary. I, therefore, consider that we should set out with the consideration of this case upon the basis that it was decided in the court below, and correctly, that the plaintiff had, during the lifetime of the pawn ticket contract, given to the defendant notice that he was holding it as a security. We thus come to a consideration of the rights and obligations of the parties. It may very likely be true that no obligation was raised by the requests of the plaintiff enumerated briefly above, that the defendant should hold the diamond ring and not deliver it to the Bakers until he, plaintiff, came back to town. Even assuming that the defendant promised that he would do that, as claimed by plaintiff, I do not see that there was any consideration for any such a promise. However, we must assume, I think, that the delivery of the pawn ticket by Baker to the plaintiff was for a purpose, and there can be no question but that the purpose was to give Mm some kind of security for the loan wMch he made to Baker thereupon. Speculating upon the rights that the plaintiff might have acquired by the possession of the pawn ticket, I would say that he probably had the right to redeem the pledge and hold the ring until Ms loan was repaid. TMs he did not do, and in fact upon his own statement declined to do, and appellant claims that thereby he forfeited all Ms rights thereunder. I am unable to agree with that contention; and the cases which appellant cites as authority for it do not, to my mind, sustain the proposition. Among them is the case of Drake v. Hodgson (192 App. Div. 676), in wMch the court says that it is the well-settled law that where a contract is repudiated or its performance made impossible, a tender and demand of performance need not be made to the party so repudiating the contract or rendering Mmself unable to perform it. The other eases cited are to the same effect, and appellant claims that when the plaintiff declined to redeem the pledge from the defendant Ms so doing constituted “ an anticipatory breach of contract,” and that, according to the cases cited, plaintiff’s rights immediately terminated. I do not think the position is tenable. In the first place, there was no contract between the plaintiff and the defendant, and the plaintiff had never agreed then or witMn the six months’ period to repay the $200 loan. There could not be “ an anticipatory breach of contract ” because there was no contract between the plaintiff and the defendant to breach.

[230]*230I think the plaintiff had the right to hold that pawn ticket as security for his loan, and I think that if the defendant knew of the loan, and for the purposes of this decision he must be so held to have known, the defendant should not have given up the ring to the Bakers, upon any statement by them that the pawn ticket “ was lost.” He knew that it was not lost and that the plaintiff had it and that he was holding it as something in the nature of a security. I do not think he could, therefore, ignore the plaintiff’s rights in the premises. Defendant had himself issued the pawn ticket, Exhibit 1. It provided on its face that it was “ good for six months from date,” and the concluding paragraph of it reads: “ We will not be held responsible in any way after this pledge is delivered to the bearer of the ticket.” The pawnbroker’s contract was thus to run for a period of six months, and, incidentally, that is the term prescribed by the ordinance in effect in the city of Utica at that time.

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Related

Murtagh v. Dempsey
85 A.D. 204 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1903)
Drake v. Hodgson
192 A.D. 676 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1920)

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Bluebook (online)
138 Misc. 227, 246 N.Y.S. 438, 1930 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobson-v-mailman-nycountyct-1930.