Markoe v. Tiffany & Co.

49 N.Y.S. 751

This text of 49 N.Y.S. 751 (Markoe v. Tiffany & Co.) 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
Markoe v. Tiffany & Co., 49 N.Y.S. 751 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

INGRAHAM, J.

The plaintiff- deposited with the defendant for-safe-keeping a trunk which contained silverware and other articles of value, for the storage and insurance of which the plaintiff was to pay a premium or charge, the amount of which was fixed at $36 per year. The defendant issued to her a receipt acknowledging the receipt of the trunk, contents unknown, left with it for safe-keeping, and to be redelivered on surrender of the receipt. By that receipt the defendant also agreed to insure the plaintiff, her executors, administrators, or assigns, to the amount of $3,000 against loss of or damage to the said package and contents by fire or burglary, and this receipt contained the following provision: “This receipt must be returned on delivery of the goods, and all liability under this receipt shall cease on the delivery of such package and contents to the holder hereof.”" The receipt was delivered to the plaintiff when the trunk was received by the defendant’s agent, inclosed in a letter which was signed,. [752]*752"Tiffany & Co. McKinley,” and which stated that the charge for the caring of the trunk would be $36 a .year. The receipt was retained by the plaintiff from the date of its delivery, on April 17, 1889. It appeared that the plaintiff, then the wife of William B. Wetmore, subsequently obtained a divorce from him. The plaintiff testified to the contents of this trunk, describing each-of the articles therein contained. A portion of the articles were purchased by the plaintiff herself, and a portion of them were wedding presents. As to those articles which the plaintiff purchased herself, she described them, and stated the cost; and as to those articles which were presented to her she particularly described them, and their value was testified to by an expert. There is no evidence tending to contradict the plaintiff’s witness as to the value of the goods, or to contradict the description of the goods given by the plaintiff. The plaintiff further testified that in the first week of May, 1889, two or three weeks after they were delivered to the defendant, she presented the receipt, and asked for her trunk, which had been delivered to defendant; that she then saw Mr. McKinley, the same agent that had written the letter, and signed and transmitted the receipt to her; that in answer to that demand McKinley came to her, and said: “I don’t understand this at all. That trunk was delivered on the 27th of April.” The witness asked to whom it was delivered, and McKinley said that he regretted that he could not give it to her, and it never has been delivered to her. -No other explanation appears to have been offered. The defendant simply refused to deliver it. On behalf of the defendant there was evidence given tending to show that McKinley delivered this trunk, 10 days after its receipt, to the plaintiff’s then husband, without requiring the delivery of the receipt, or making any inquiry about it, except that it was delivered to the person who was supposed to be the then husband of the plaintiff. The trial judge charged the jury that, if they found as a matter of fact that the trunk and contents belonged to Mr. Wetmore, the person to whom they were delivered, the delivery thereof to him constituted a perfect defense; that the delivery of property to the real owner always constitutes a defense against the bailor; that many of the articles contained in the trunk “are conceded to have been wedding presents from friends. If the presents were made to the plaintiff, they became her individual property; if, on the other hand, they were made to Mr. and Mrs. Wetmore, jointly, they became the property of both, and in such case a delivery to either by Tiffany & Co. would be a delivery to both, and constitute a perfect defense as to such articles.” The jury were directed, therefore, to examine the list of articles which had been testified to by the plaintiff, and determine which of the articles she had purchased herself and which had been given to her individually as wedding presents, and to ascertain the value of those articles, and to allow the plaintiff only for such articles as they should determine under this instruction belonged to her. This certainly was as favorable to the defendant as was justified by the facts. Clearly, all of the articles that belonged absolutely to the plaintiff, either because they were purchased by her or because they had been given to her as wedding presents, or under other circumstances, were her separate property, for which she would be entitled to recover. Whether [753]*753or not presents given to the husband and wife jointly, which had been left in the possession of the wife, and by her delivered to a bailee for safe-keeping, could be delivered by said bailee to any other person without the consent of the bailor, is a question which it is not necessary for us to determine, as the jury were specifically instructed that they were to allow for those articles only which it was proved belonged to the plaintiff, as either having been purchased by her, or presented to her individually. The court expressly charged at the request of the defendant that the plaintiff could not recover the value of any articles given as wedding presents to herself and her husband jointly. The plaintiff, being in possession of this property, and entitled to such possession as a joint owner, would be entitled to maintain that possession; and, the properly having been delivered to the defendant for safe-keeping, any act of the defendant in delivering the property to another, by which her possession of the property is taken away, would entitle the bailor to maintain an action for conversion of the property. In such a case, possession, coupled with a joint ownership in it, is sufficient to sustain an action of trover. The rule is stated in 4 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, p. 117, as follows: “A person having a special property of goods in his rightful possession can maintain trover against all persons who may wrongfully take the goods from him, even by the command of the general owner;” but, as the jury have found that the property was the individual property of the plaintiff, and as we think that the verdict was sustained by the evidence, it is not necessary to determine that question.

We think also that it was not error for the court to charge that the act of the defendant in delivering this property was a conversion by the defendant, and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the value of the property as of the dates of the conversion, May 1, 1889. The answer of the defendant admits the deposit of the goods by the plaintiff with the defendant, to be redelivered to the plaintiff on surrender of the receipt given therefor, and that thereafter, and before the commencement of the action, the plaintiff, at the warehouse of the defendant, duly demanded of the defendant the redelivery to her of the said trunk and its contents, and thereupon produced and offered to surrender the said original receipt, which was then in her possession, and offered to pay to the defendant its premium or charges for the storage and keep of the said trunk and its contents, and that defendant neglected and refused to deliver the said trunk, or any of its contents, to the said plaintiff; and the plaintiff’s testimony fixed the date of that demand, which was not •disputed, as the first week in May, 1889. Assuming that the action was on contract, and not for a conversion, the court charged that, if the jury found for the plaintiff, they might assess the damages, and that the court would add interest thereto from the time of the conversion as agreed to by counsel.

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Bluebook (online)
49 N.Y.S. 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/markoe-v-tiffany-co-nyappdiv-1898.