Marfield v. . Goodhue

3 N.Y. 62
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 3 N.Y. 62 (Marfield v. . Goodhue) 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
Marfield v. . Goodhue, 3 N.Y. 62 (N.Y. 1849).

Opinion

Cady, J.

Two questions are to be determined : 1st. Did the chief justice commit any error in the charge given to the jury? 2d. Ought he to have given to the jury all or any of the instructions which he was requested to give by the plaintiff’s counsel?

To determine whether the charge was such as the law required, the facts in the case must all be taken into consideration. These parties lived so near to each other, that letters could pass from one to the other in five or six days4_mrd they could, without any inconvenient delay, consult each other and inform each other of their intentions, views and wishes. If the defendants had belieyed it necessary that they should sell the plaintiff’s pork to secure the repayment of their advances, it would have been a very easy matter for them to have informed the plaintiff, that unless their advances were repaid, they should sell his pork to reimburse themselves. In two weeks from the time they had •mailed such notice in New-Y ork: the plaintiff might have been in that city and paid them, or sent them a draft on a responsible house or bank. But the law as given in charge to the jury would apply to all cases indiscriminately, whether the parties lived in the same house in the same city, or on opposite sides of the globe. According to the charge, the fact that the plain *71 tiff had directed the defendants not to sell the pork, was wholly immaterial, because the defendants had a perfect right to disregard the directions. The jury were in effect told, that if a consignor has received any advances upon goods consigned, the factor has a perfect right to disregard any directions which the consignor may give in relation to the goods, and may rightfully sell without giving notice to his principal, or asking for a repayment of his advances, although he may give such notice without an hour’s delay, and has good reason to believe that the consignor would repay the advances on an hour’s notice. Can the interests of commerce require, that a factor should have such an unrestrained power over the goods of his principal'? The charge given by the chief justice was reviewed and affirmed by the superior court, and that court were of opinion that the charge was fully warranted by the judgment of the supreme court of the United States in the case of Brown & Co. v. McGran, (14 Peters, 479.) The decisions of that court are entitled to great consideration; and in all cases which can be reviewed in that court, its judgments must be regarded as binding on all other judicial tribunals in our country; but in other cases the opinions of that court are entitled to the same respect, and no other, that is due to the opinions of any other court composed of judges of equal learning and ability.

There were facts in the case of Brown & Co. v. McGran, not to be found in this, which probably had an influence on the decision. The parties in that case lived in different countries, and they could not, in 1833, when the cause of action arose, have corresponded with each other in less, than about seven or eight weeks. The consignor had become insolvent, and notice to him of an intended sale would have been useless. The factor could not delay a sale without taking on himself all the hazard of a fall in the market. It was insisted that the wish expressed by McGran to his factor, was not to be regarded as an order. In this case the superior court when speaking of the letters of the plaintiff to the defendants, say: “ They contain a plain direction to withdraw the plaintiff’s pork from the market;” and the parties lived so near each other, that letters passed from *72 one to the other in five or six days. There is no pretence that the plaintiff was insolvent and could not, if he had received notice of the defendants’ intention to sell, have repaid their advances by the return mail. The defendants, therefore, could have incurred no hazard by ten or twelve days’ delay,. The facts in the two cases are so dissimilar, that in one the defendants might be entitled to judgment; while in the other the plaintiff would be, unless it be law in all cases between principal and factor, that if the factor has made any advances he can sell at his discretion, without notice to his principal, and without any demand of repayment, although the principal has ordered the factor not to sell. I have found no case other than that of Brown & Co. v. McGran in which the principle has been thus broadly stated and acted upon, nor do I believe that the rule adopted in that case ought to be regarded of such high authority as to be applied in all cases. The two cases to which Justice Story refers in support of the main point decided, are Pothonier v. Dawson, (1 Holts R. 383,) and Graham v. Dys ter, (6 M. & Sel. 1, 4, 5.) The former was a case of a pledge, and the question whether a pledgee was bound to give notice of a sale was not raised. The question was whether a pledgee could sell at all; not whether he was bound to give notice before he sold. The question in the latter case was whether a factor could pledge the goods of his principal; not whether he could sell them without notice, contrary to the orders of his principal.

Where goods are sent to a factor for sale, without any limitation or instructions as to the terms or time of sale, he is at liberty to sell as in the exercise of a sound discretion he shall deem proper for the interest of his principal. The factor in such a case is intrusted with the exercise of a discretion for the benefit of his principal and not for his own advantage, and that discretion the principal has a right to control. But after the factor has this authority, to be exercised exclusively for the benefit of his principal, he makes advances, and then his principal becomes satisfied that his interest will be promoted if the sale be delayed and he orders his factor not to sell. The chief justice instruct *73 ed the jury that such an order was powerless, and in no respect Limited the authority of the factor. Can this be so? The authority when given to the factor was given for the exclusive benefit of the principal. The interest of the factor was not to be regarded at all in the exercise of the authority. Then the factor makes an advance upon the credit of the goods, and of his principal ; is he not, after that, as much bound as he was before, to have solely in view the interest of his principal when he sells, or is he at liberty, afterwards, to consult his own interest instead of that of this principal? After the advance, the principal has good reason to believe that a delay in selling wfll be advantageous to him, and he so informs his factor; is there any hardship in requiring of the factor, if he is unwilEng to obey the order of his principal, to say to him—“ as you have revoked my authority to sell at my discretion for your benefit, I shall seE at my discretion for my own benefit, unless you forthwith repay my advances.”

When the principal has revoked the authority so far as it was to be exercised for him, he by no means impairs the power to sell which the factor has as a pledgee. A pledgee may seE on giving reasonable notice. (4 Kent’s Com. 139,140.) (a)

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.Y. 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marfield-v-goodhue-ny-1849.