Lewis v. J. A.

4 Edw. Ch. 599, 1845 N.Y. LEXIS 525, 1845 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 9
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedSeptember 9, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 Edw. Ch. 599 (Lewis v. J. A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. J. A., 4 Edw. Ch. 599, 1845 N.Y. LEXIS 525, 1845 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 9 (N.Y. 1845).

Opinion

The Vice-Chancellor :

The bill, with the admissions in the answer and the proofs in the cause, present the fol[600]*600lowing among other facts :—That, in the year one thousand eight hundred and thirty-seven and for more than twenty years prior thereto, the complainant was personally and familiarly known to the defendant, who had been employed by him in his professional capacity as attorney, solicitor and counsel whenever the complainant required legal advice and assistance in the prosecution and defence of suits and in putting out money on bond and mortgage. The complainant was, moreover, in the habit of consulting him confidentially about other matters, not strictly within the line of professional business ; and the defendant frequently gave him advice about pecuniary affairs without charge. In the years one thousand eight hundred and thirty-three and one thousand eight hundred and thirty-four, the complainant was absent in Europe; and, during his absence, the defendant held his power of attorney and, as his agent, superintended his affairs without compensation. All this inspired the complainant with gratitude ; and, from their long intercourse and intimacy of a friendly and professional character, the defendant had acquired—very deservedly so—-the complainant’s unbounded confidence in his personal integrity, professional ability and experience in business, including the investment of money on security of real estate in the city of New York. In the latter part of the year one thousand eight hundred and thirty-seven the complainant had considerable money on hand, which he wished to invest, with a view to obtain a regular and permanent income therefrom; and he, then again, employed the defendant in his professional capacity to assist him in procuring its investment in good bonds and mortgages upon improved, productive and unincumbered real estate in the city of New York; and which employment the defendant accepted and acted under. In the course of the residue of that year and during the year one thousand eight hundred and thirty-eight the defendant sent in various applications made to him for loans, all of which the complainant rejected as not being satisfactory; and this was done with the knowledge of the defendant, who thereby became aware of the complainant’s extreme caution about security and of his determination not to let his money go, except upon security of the most un[601]*601questionable character—he preferring that his money should rather remain idle than be put out upon such property as should be deemed at all doubtful or troublesome. In consequence of the failure of so many of his applications, the defendant, at length, omitted to send him any more; and ceased to give himself any further concern about investments, although it would seem that the complainant still considered him employed for such purpose and that the defendant had not actually withdrawn from it as late as the month of October one thousand eight hundred and thirty-eight: for it is alleged that, about this time, the sum particularly named to the defendant in respect to which his employment related was twelve thousand dollars—and to this the defendant in his answer says and admits that, at some time pending their efforts to invest the funds, but when particularly he cannot say, he did ascertain the amount to be twelve thousand dollars or thereabouts.

On the twenty-seventh of November, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-eight, the defendant had purchased property in the country ; and being in need of money to pay for it, addressed a note in writing to the complainant, inquiring whether he still had on hand the twelve thousand dollars and saying that he, the defendant, had “ some very excellent mortgages which he should like to assign to him for that sum” ? The complainant replied, in effect, that he still had the money on hand and that it was at the defendant’s service whenever he should choose to send for it and that he could make the sum twelve thousand five hundred dollars.

Accordingly, on the sixth of December one thousand eight hundred and thirty-eight, the defendant, sent his clerk to the complainant, with five bonds and mortgages and an assignment of each, already executed, and a statement of the amounts in the aggregate, being a little over thirteen thousand dollars and requested his check for the whole sum. On looking at this statement, the complainant remarked that the amount exceeded the sum he had on hand, whereupon the defendant’s clerk withdrew one of the bonds and its accompanying mortgage from the parcel, being the smallest of the five; and the remaining four, amounting to twelve thousand two hundred and seven dollars and thirty-nine cents, [602]*602were,-on the instant, taken by the complainant and he gave his check therefor. Until that moment, the complainant had never seen the bonds and mortgages; and knew nothing of the mortgagors or the value, condition or location of the property mortgaged. And while he did not stop to examine them before he gave his check, all the information he received of those particulars was from the defendant’s clerk as he handed over the papers who told him that the Harris bond and mortgage (being one of the number) was on property in McDougall street, that Messrs. Herricks, flour merchants, who were wealthy men, were the owners and that they paid the interest, that another called the Wentworth bond and mortgage was on property in Bond street and that Wentworth was a builder, that the next was the Bogert bond and mortgage on property in Spring street and the owner was a very punctual man in the payment of the interest; and that another was the Me Vicar bond and mortgage, which was a security on lots at Chelsea. That Dr. McVicar was a professor in Columbia College and that he had sold the property to Henry J. Seaman, a merchant in Pearl street. This information was volunteered and not elicited by any inquiries made by the complainant.

It further appears that, in sending the papers in the manner before stated, the defendant did not propose or offer to submit the papers for examination or to give time or opportunity for the complainant to obtain information from other sources as to the sufficiency or value of the securities before closing the bargain; and that all that the defendant did was to write a note to the complainant, by his clerk, saying “ William will hand you assignments of mortgages, with a memorandum, showing the amount due on each. Give him your check for the amount. The assignments are all acknowledged, but you need not record them. This must be done whenever any of them are paid off.” The assignments contained no covenant or guaranty. The McVickar bond and mortgage so called had been taken by the defendant on the thirty-first day of December one thousand eight hundred, and thirty-six on two lots of ground, one fronting on Nine-> teenth street and the other on Twentieth street; to secure the payment of three thousand five hundred dollars, with inte[603]*603rest. On the bond was a memorandum made by the defendant, stating that the interest was paid upon it to the thirtieth day of June one thousand eight hundred and thirty-eight and, from that period, the interest was computed and added to the principal, making, together, three thousand six hundred and six dollars and fourteen cents—and that being the consideration paid for the assignment of this bond and mortgage.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Vanasse v. Reid
87 N.W. 192 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Edw. Ch. 599, 1845 N.Y. LEXIS 525, 1845 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-j-a-nychanct-1845.