Mandeville v. Marvin

37 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 282
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 37 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 282 (Mandeville v. Marvin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mandeville v. Marvin, 37 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 282 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1883).

Opinions

Barker, J.:

The questions sought to be reviewed on this appeal are presented on the report of the referee and a bill of exceptions. The evidence produced on the trial is not set .forth in full. We cannot, therefore, review the questions of fact as found by the referee. It is stated in the bill of exceptions that certain facts were proved and tliat the evidence tended to establish other facts material to the issue; and the referee’s report contains a series of facts, as found by him, upon which he held as a conclusion of law that the plaintiff was entitled to a judgment in the sum of $730.71. It is claimed by the appellant that upon the facts as found the amount of the judgment is excessive, inequitable and unjust, arid should be set aside and a new trial ordered.

In August, 1876, the defendant was the owner of four several promissory notes; one dated May 22, 1873, made by Francis M. Whitcomb for the payment of .$125, thirty days after date, payable ■ to the order of Isaac Willetts, and by him indorsed. 2. Anote dated May 22, 1876, made by D. Rawson & Co. for the sum of $182, payable one month after date, to the order of the said Isaac Willetts, and by him indorsed. 3. A note made by D. Rawson & Co., dated October 10,1874, for the payment of $100, payable six months after date to the order of Timothy Regan, and by him indorsed. 4. A note made by D. Rawson & Co., dated the 15th day of June, 1874, for $100, payable to the order of Nathan A. Bennett three months after date, and by him indorsed, and with a guaranty of payment also thereon indorsed by the said Bennett.

[284]*284Francis M. Whitcomb, the maker of the first of the above described notes, was one of the firm of D. Rawson & Go., and he, to secure the payment of these notes, had placed in the hands of the defendant a large amount of securities, being notes made by third parties.

The plaintiff was also one of the creditors of D. Rawson & Co., and held their notes and obligations for a sum amounting to between-seven and eight hundred' dollars. The plaintiff being informed that the defendant was the owner and holder of the several notes mentioned, and as security for their payment held the collaterals to which reference has been made, purchased from the defendant the four several notes, and paid therefor the sum of $711, and the notes were delivered to the plaintiff, together with the collaterals pledged as security for their payment. At the time of the sale and transfer, the defendant, by an oral agreement, promised and agreed that the said notes were all valid and subsisting obligations against the makers, indorsers and guarantors, and that none of them had been discharged from their liabilities on the said notes. The plaintiff commenced an action against Willetts upon the two notes which he had indorsed, who defended the same upon the ground that he had been fully discharged and released as indorser prior to the time when the notes were transferrred by the defendant to the plaintiff. Upon receiving the answer interposed by Willetts, the plaintiff gave notice to the defendant of the position taken by Willetts, and offered to allow Marvin to have the control and management of the action, and he declined to assume the control and direction of the suit.

Upon the trial of the issue before a jury, Willett’s defense prevailed, and he recovered a bill of costs against the plaintiff, which, after the entry of judgment, the plaintiff paid. Thereafter the plaintiff commenced this action against Marvin to recover the damages which he had sustained by reason of the breach of the contract of warranty made by Marvin on the sale of the notes. It is well settled by the many adjudications which have been given on the question, that the judgment in the suit against Willetts is conclusive against the defendant as to the non-liability of Willetts as indorser. (Delaware Bank v. Jarvis, 20 N. Y., 226; Whitney v. Nat. Bank of Potsdam, 45 id., 303; Littauer v. Goldman, 9 Hun, 231; Bell v. Dagg, 60 N. Y., 528.) It is held by the same authorities that in [285]*285an action against a guarantor, upon his agreement that commercial paper by him sold and transferred is genuine, and that the parties thereto remain liable upon their promises, and have not been discharged therefrom, he is liable in an action for the breach of his contract for the costs which have been incurred in an unsuccessful litigation upon the paper which was the subject'of the sale. The defendant did not guaranty the payment or the collection of any of the notes. But as it was established upon the trial that D. Rawson & Co. and Whitcomb were all insolvent, the plaintiff was entitled to recover as his damages for the breach of the defendant’s contract the sums which were due and unpaid upon the face of the.-' note, as well as the costs in the suit against Willetts.

Upon the facts foymd by the referee, together with the' terms of the written assignment transferring the collaterals with the notes, the moneys collected by the plaintiff upon the nofies and securities hypothecated were, as between the parties to Ahis suit, first to be applied in the discharge of the liability of D. Rawson & Co., the makers of these several notes. /

' It was stated in the case ahd found acia fact that the plaintiff had collected and received upon the collaterals the sum of $667.75. As a question of law the referee fro and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the balance due upon the notes indorsed by Willetts and the costs of the suit against him, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $730.71. T¥e defendant in his answer sets up as a defense that since the assignment and transfer of the notes and securities to the plaintiff he' had collected and received upon the collaterals in his hands $1,000 and upwards, and more than enough to fully pay and satisfy/the amount due and unpaid upon the four notes which were transferred to the plaintiff. The referee omitted in directing judgm^ht against the defendant to make any application whatever of the/'moneys collected by and in the hands of the plaintiff at the time''of the commencement of this suit. In his conclusions of law, as i/fet forth in the report, he makes no reference to this question whatever. The appellant seeks to correct this omission and to s/ecure an application of this sum in diminution of his liability to the plaintiff. It must be conceded that the omission to make the application was an error, and that in justice and equity the defendant [286]*286should be credited with the sum so collected, the application-to be made in such manner as to protect all the' rights of the plaintiff.

i It is urged by the respondent that the defendant has failed to raise the question by omi&ing to take the proper and necessary exception to the referee’s report. Before considering this question it is proper to consider and determine how and the order in which the application of the sum collected should be made. The notes pledged as collaterals were intended to be made as a security for all of the notes which were sold by the defendant to the plaintiff.

In this action, upon the facts as they are now found, it is just and equitable to allow the plaintiff to retain out of the sums collected an amount equal to the two notes made by D. Rawson & Co., not indorsed by Willetts but by other parties, and which remain unpaid and which amounted at the time of the commencement of the suit to $256.64. Tbit sum being deducted from the sum of $667.76

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Related

Keogh v. . Westervelt
66 N.Y. 636 (New York Court of Appeals, 1876)
Delaware Bank v. . Jarvis
20 N.Y. 226 (New York Court of Appeals, 1859)
Bell v. . Dagg
60 N.Y. 528 (New York Court of Appeals, 1875)
Folger v. . Fitzhugh
41 N.Y. 228 (New York Court of Appeals, 1869)
Jarvis v. . Driggs
69 N.Y. 143 (New York Court of Appeals, 1877)
Gracie v. . Freeland
1 N.Y. 228 (New York Court of Appeals, 1848)
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88 N.Y. 110 (New York Court of Appeals, 1882)

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mandeville-v-marvin-nysupct-1883.