Lytle v. Crawford

69 A.D. 273, 74 N.Y.S. 660
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 69 A.D. 273 (Lytle v. Crawford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lytle v. Crawford, 69 A.D. 273, 74 N.Y.S. 660 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Hatch, J.:

This action is brought to recover for money had and. received by the defendants for the plaintiffs’ use, and the complaint contains appropriate averments .to state such' cause of action. .

The answer, after admitting the copartnership of the respective parties as averred in the complaint, denies the allegation of any sum due from the defendants to the plaintiffs. The answer then sets up counterclaims upon three separate promissory notes, executed by the plaintiffs, which were held and owned by the defendants, and demands judgment that the complaint be dismissed and that the defendants have judgment for the amount of the several counter^ claims. To. this answer a reply was served denying each and every allegation of the'matter averred in the counterclaims. . This action' was commenced on or about November 14,1892. It appeared from the evidence given upon thb trial that the plaintiffs were cotton brokers doing business at Dothan, in the State of Alabama, and that the general manager of such business was one Bower; that in the month of November, 1892, and prior to the commencement of this action, Bower, acting as such manager, sold to one Drewry forty-five bales of cotton, the purchase price of which was $1,566.12.

At the time of the sale, Drewry delivered his check drawn upon the defendants, who were engaged in the banking business at said place, to Bower for the purchase price of the cotton^ and thereupon Bower delivered receipts for the respective bales of cotton to Drewry, which were stored in the warehouse and which were necessary to produce a delivery of the same.

' Drewry delivered thése cotton receipts to the defendants. A short time after the transaction a bookkeeper in Bower’s office presented the check to the defendants for payment. The latter tendered in payment of the same $427.42 in cash and the three notes of the plaintiffs set.'up in defendants’ counterclaims, then past due and amounting with interest to $1,134. These two sums equaled the amount of Drewry’s check and another check drawn by'a third person and presented at the same time for $5-30.

The bookkeeper refused to take the notes in payment of the checks [275]*275or to receive the cash, unless the whole amount was paid in money, and shortly thereafter, the two checks on their presentation having been retained by the bank, demanded a return of the checks or their payment in money. This was refused, except that thereafter the defendants tendered to the plaintiffs the amount of the small check. It appeared that plaintiffs claimed that the notes were forgeries, or, for some reason, that they were not liable thereon, but no evidence was given upon that subject. After the refusal to pay the check in money or to return the same, Bower notified Drewry of the situation and thereupon these parties entered into a new arrangement respecting the cotton. The testimony of the plaintiff tended to establish that Drewry, under the latter dealing, was to give and did give a due bill for ■ the cotton, and was to procure from the defendants the cotton receipts and deliver the same to Bower, and the due bill was to be paid from the proceeds of the cotton by Savannah exchange or otherwise. Presumptively, the arrangement was to make the cotton security for the payment of the due bill. Drewry obtained the cotton receipts from the defendants, but did not deliver them to Bower nor did he take any other steps in further fulfillment of this agreement except to make and deliver his due bill to Bower. On the contrary, after receiving the receipts for the cotton from the defendants, he delivered the same to his drayman, procured a bill of lading for shipment of the cotton, drew his draft for payment upon the cotton and delivered the bill of lading and the draft to the defendants, which was paid from a sale of the cotton, and the defendants received the proceeds. When Drewry’s check was received by the defendants they charged the same to Drewry’s account, but after learning of the subsequent transaction between Drewry and Bower they credited Drewry’s account with a corresponding amount and in effect assumed to cancel that transaction. Drewry testified that the check was never in fact delivered to him, but the defendants testified that it was so delivered, but was subsequently procured from him for the purpiose of use in an action brought in a court in Alabama wherein these defendants were plaintiffs and these plaintiffs were defendants, and that the check is now a part of that court’s record.

The last-named action was commenced by an attachment on the 30th day of November, 1892; the complaint was filed on March 20, [276]*2761893, and as appears thereby the cause of action was based upon the same promissory notes which form the counterclaims alleged in defendants’ answer in this action. Issue was joined therein by the filing of an answer on March 30,1893. In such answer the defendants set up the conversion of fifty bales of cotton by the- plaintiffs of the value of $1,500, which sum they asked to set off against the plaintiffs’ cause of action. The cotton alleged in the answer to have been converted is the same cotton for which the plaintiffs seek to recover in the present action. Other pleas of usury and forgery were interposed in that answer. Issue having been thus joined on March 9, 1897, a trial was had in the Circuit Court of Dale county in the State of Alabama, and judgment was rendered therein in favor of the plaintiffs for $1,641.09, with costs, but the amount of the costs awarded do not appear in the judgment.

It appeared upon the trial of this action that $1,900 had been paid upon this judgment, and that the whole amount due thereon was nearly $2,400. It did not appear, however, that the judgment itself had ever been discharged of record. The judgment roll in the Alabama action was offered in evidence and was objected to, among other grounds, as not having been pleaded. The court overruled the objection and received the evidence, not for the purpose of defeating the present cause of action, but as evidence of the validity of the counterclaims set up in the answer. What effect the court gave to this judgment when it came to direct a verdict does not clearly appear.

Upon this state of the record several very interesting questions arise. The trial court seems to have ■ held that the information which the defendants claimed to have received, that the original transaction in the sale of the cotton had been superseded by the subsequent arrangement between Bower and Drewry, whereby the latter took from the former a due bill, authorized the defendants to deal with Drewry as the owner of the cotton, relieved from any rights which the plaintiffs had acquired against them by reason of the non-payment of the check. Upon that subject it appeared that after the payment of the check in money had been refused Bower consulted with the firm of Pearce & Pace, lawyers, residing at Dothan, in -respect to plaintiffs’ legal rights in the matter.

The defendant James R. Crawford testified upon this subject-[277]*277that after the check had been presented he saw Drewry, and in consequence of a conversation had with him, he went to the lawyers’ office where he had a conversation with Mr. Pace. Subsequently he testified that he 'had a communication with Bower the next day after the check was presented, and that the latter referred him to the lawyers, he stating that Bower said he had nothing further to do with it, that his attorneys would handle it.” He further testified that he relied upon what Pace told him as a friend.

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Bluebook (online)
69 A.D. 273, 74 N.Y.S. 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lytle-v-crawford-nyappdiv-1902.