Manning, Bowman Co. v. . Keenan

73 N.Y. 45, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 579
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 19, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 73 N.Y. 45 (Manning, Bowman Co. v. . Keenan) 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
Manning, Bowman Co. v. . Keenan, 73 N.Y. 45, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 579 (N.Y. 1878).

Opinion

Folger, J.

The jury were charged with the question of fact, whether the plaintiffs had such an interest in the property in question in the first instance as would maintain an action for an interference with it. They were told that to entitle the plaintiffs to recover in this action at all, it must be fomid that they were the owners of the property, and had never ceased to be the owners of it; or, that although it had gone into Olney’s actual possession at one time, and he had been allowed to treat with it, to keep it, to sell portions of it in order to raise money out of it to pay to the plaintiffs, it was finally brought back again by him, and put into Losee’s hands, to hold as a security to them for the purchase-price of it.

The verdict of the jury in favor of the plaintiffs is an affirmative answer to one or the other of these propositions ; and it follows that at and before the time of the giving by Losee to Olney of the receipt or instrument in writing, expressing that the goods had been received in store by Losee, for account of Olney, on storage, at a certain rate of storage per month, the plaintiffs had, as matter of fact, such an interest in the property, as owners or pledgees, as gave them a *50 prima facie right to inforoe a claim to it against any one withholding it from them. There are some other facts in the case whioh it is claimed operate to defeat that right.

First. It is claimed that by reason of the paper given by Losee to Olney, Hodges, purchasing from the latter, got a good and exclusive title to the goods. If the plaintiffs are bound by the act of Losee in giving that paper, and if Hodges bought of Olney in good faith, and for a valuable consideration, relying upon it to his harm if his title is not now sustained, it would be difficult to hold tliat this claim is not good. The paper, by its terms, indicates an ownership of the property by Olney, and a right to the possession of it at any time, on the payment of the storage. It is such a paper-as one might well trust to, for a belief that he who made it had no claim to the property against the one to whom it was given, save for the charge of storage at a fixed rate ; and a purchase in good faith, and for a valuable consideration, in reliance alone, or chiefly, upon it, would raise an estoppel in favor of the purchaser against him who made and delivered it. But though it may be sufficient to work that effect against Losee, it is a different question whether it is enough therefor against the plaintiffs. It does not appear that they knew of its existence until after the transaction between Hodges and Olney ; but it is said that it was the act of the agent of the plaintiffs, and thus their act. It was not an act though, within the scope of his agency, nor was it an act, which was a part of any transaction within or without that scope, which has been ratified by the plaintiffs. True, the plaintiffs ratified the act of Losee in taking from Olney the possession of the goods, to hold them as security for the price. Had the giving of that paper been a part of the means needed or used to obtain that possession, then an adoption of the possession would have been an adoption of the paper ; but it was not given until some time after possession was got. Losee was under no necessity of giving it to acquire or maintain possession. He had no authority to give it. All that was beneficial to the plaintiffs in the surrender of pos *51 session by Olney to Losee had already been accomplished. It was no part of the bargain for the transfer of possession, and it was, if valid against the plaintiffs, an injury to their security. By adopting the first act of Losee, which Avas of benefit to them, they did not adopt a subsequent act of his, of which they were ignorant, and which was not a part of the act ratified by them, nor to their benefit, and to do which he had not their authority. Nor had Losee authority to treat the goods as his oavii ; though he Avas ostensibly to Hodges in the possession of them, and ostensibly with exclusive right; save as the paper gave notice of a right in Olney, he was actually holding them in the right alone of his principals. The principals were not bound to make known that his possession was special, and for them, nor were they to be affected injuriously by a mistake therein of Hodges. It must be noticed here that it was left to the jury to say whether Hodges Avas a bona fide purchaser of the paper and Avliat it represented ; or Avhether he had reason to believe that the plaintiff or Losee had any claim upon the property ; or that Olney’s relation to it was different from what Avas expressed in the paper. The verdict of the jury sustains the title of the plaintiff and is against that of Hodges, on Avhich the defendants as to this branch of the case relied. The jury must have found that he did not purchase in good faith.

Second. It is also claimed that the plaintiffs held as their Olney the notes of Olney, given for the price of the goods, and that they availed themselves of them as a counter-claim in his action against them. I do not see that that is necessarily inconsistent, either Avith the notion of a conditional sale of the property at first, or with the idea of a possession of it afterwards as a pledge or security for the price. It is not unusual that a vendor or a creditor has two strings to his boAV. He may use either means of realizing his purchase-money or debt without losing the benefit of the other, and the right finally to resort to it, if need be. I do not see how the dealing of the plaintiffs with the notes of Olney has been different from that. The facts as to the notes were left to *52 the jury to say whether they showed an unconditional delivery and a final payment for the merchandise. The verdict gave a negative. It appears then that in the view of the jury upon all the facts of the case as submitted to them, the plaintiffs had in the start an absolute or a special right or interest in the property, with which they had not parted when this action was commenced. That right had, however, been interfered with before these defendants took it. The sheriff' of the county of New York had seized it on an execution against the property of Olney, and it was in the actual possession of the sheriff or his deputy or his agent when the defendants took it, according to law, by virtue of the requirement made upon them by Hodges. They were required by papers having the effect of valid mandatory process to take this specified property from that particularized person, and they did it; and for a time they did no more, nor for a time, so far as the record shows, made omission to do anything in the line of their duty. We have held, that so far as they had then gone, like process in the hands of the sheriff protects him in like acts. (Bullís v. Montgomery, 50 N. Y., 352.) We see no reason why that holding should not be adhered to in the case of these defendants, who in these acts stood in a like position to that of the sheriff, with like duties, powers and defenses.

But a question is brought out in this case which was not in Bullís v. Montgomery, nor, as far as we have noticed, in any other case in this court.

The Code (§ 216) empowers the plaintiffs to make an affidavit of their title to the property and right to the possession of it, and of the grounds of such right and title, and to serve the same upon the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
73 N.Y. 45, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manning-bowman-co-v-keenan-ny-1878.