Ming v. . Corbin

37 N.E. 105, 142 N.Y. 334, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 14, 97 Sickels 334, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 759
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 1, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 37 N.E. 105 (Ming v. . Corbin) 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
Ming v. . Corbin, 37 N.E. 105, 142 N.Y. 334, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 14, 97 Sickels 334, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 759 (N.Y. 1894).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

This action, commenced in 1878, is founded upon a business transaction between the parties in 1872. The litigation has been in progress ever since with varying results at the Circuit and the General Term, and this appeal requires us to review a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs recovered on the third trial. The general contention of each party upon *336 the argument in this court is simple enough, but it involves the consideration of numerous facts and some questions of law, or, perhaps, mixed questions of law and fact, not entirely free from difficulty. The verdict for the plaintiffs was for a balance of the purchase price of certain bonds sold and delivered to the defendant by the plaintiffs. The contention of the learned counsel for the defendant is that the judgment is erroneous for the reason that upon the undisputed facts the bonds were delivered pursuant to a contract, entire in its nature and legal effect, whereby the plaintiffs sold them to defendant with other securities which were never delivered. That the plaintiffs before they can be permitted to recover must show performance on their part of all the provisions of this entire contract. The only way that the defendant has raised any question of law is by a single exception to the denial of his motion for the direction of a verdict in his favor at the close of all the testimony. In this condition of the record the appeal cannot be sustained unless it appears that there Were no controverted questions of fact for the jury, but simply questions of law for the court, and that the jury did not correctly determine the questions of law erroneously submitted to them by the court. If the case involved purely a question of law and nothing else, and if that question has been well decided, the judgment is not erroneous because the decision was by the jury and not the court. It is the duty of the court to decide the questions of law arising in the case, but if a question of law has been erroneously submitted to the jury, and decided as it should have been by the court, no one has been prejudiced by the error.

In order to get a clear view of the case it is necessary to refer to the facts with some detail. The plaintiffs were residents of Helena, in the territory of Montana, and engaged in buying and selling securities there. The defendant was a banker and broker in Hew York. In March, 1872, one Sherwood, of Montana, being about to visit Hew York, had some conversation with the plaintiffs’ firm in regard to placing some of their securities. This led to a letter from him, written from *337 the defendant’s office in New York under date of March 6, 1872, in which he informed the plaintiffs that he could place for them $5,000 county bonds and same amount territorial scrip at 85. Neither the county bonds nor the scrip were otherwise described, but the letter was written evidently after a conversation between Sherwood and the defendant. On receipt of this letter the plaintiffs telegraphed Sherwood on the 19th of • March in defendant’s care as follows: Will sell five each bonds and territorial warrants, at eighty-five for face and interest, and give you two hundred. If wanted, telegraph.” This was the first step on tlie part of the plaintiffs in making any contract with the defendant, and it will be seen t that the particular bonds, or the character of the warrants, or the rate of interest payable, was not specified, but Sherwood testifies that his conversation with defendant related to bonds of the county of Lewis & Clark and convertible territorial warrants. The next day the defendant in Sherwood’s name telegraphed the plaintiffs as follows: “ Send them; draw on me.” Subsequently, on the same day, defendant sent the following telegram, also in Sherwood’s name: Send bonds, cannot use warrants unless to be bonded in June.” The proof is that the plaintiffs intended to fill the order with warrants they then had on hand, some of which were fundable in June and some not, but on receipt of the telegram they regarded that part of the order relating to the territorial warrants as withdrawn or at least suspended for the time, and that part relating to the bonds as required to be immediately filled. The plaintiffs’ position in respect to the warrants appears from the following letter written by them on the 20tli of March, and addressed to Sherwood:

“ Your two telegrams of the 20th are at hand. We will ship $5,000 in bonds to-morrow night as we were unable to get them ready for to-night’s coach. All territorial warrants issued prior to Dec. 1st, 1871 (under which head ours come), are to be bonded in June at 12 per cent interest, but from the tenor of your second dispatch we think you understand this fact, and are not certain whether ours are of the description *338 or not. But as we are not certain about it, we will not ship . till we hear further from you. As a matter of course we cannot allow you more than $100 for sale of bonds alone. In case you want the warrants you must let us know. The bonds will reach you the day after this letter comes to hand.
“Very truly yours,
“J. H. MING & GO.”

On the next day, March 21, the plaintiffs shipped the county bonds to the defendant of the face value of $5,300. Nothing more was heard from the defendant in regard to the warrants until April 9, when the defendant telegraphed the plaintiffs to “ send the five thousand territorial warrants,” but in the meantime, and on March 26, the plaintiffs sold them to another party at eighty-five for face and interest, the same price for which they were to sell them to the defendant, and no warrants were ever delivered to the defendant. Now, it may be that there was a contract entire in its nature for the delivery of the bonds and warrants without any specification as to their precise character or the interest which they drew, but the defendant was not quite satisfied with the contract in that form. His subsequent telegrams and letters were in such terms as to warrant the jury in finding that they left the plaintiffs in doubt whether he required the delivery of the warrants or not. He certainly did not want them unless they were of a certain kind not specifically mentioned in the plaintiffs’ written offer to sell. It appears that there was then in the market two classes of warrants, one class convertible into bonds in June and the other, payable by the treasurer in cash at some future time. The plaintiffs evidently acted in good faith in selling the warrants on hand to another party, as they got no more for them than the price which, in the end, it turned out that the defendant was willing to pay. The true situation was revealed to the plaintiffs more clearly by a letter addressed to them by the defendant under date of April 13. In this the defendant informed them that he had about six weeks before purchased the bonds and warrants from Sherwood. That he understood *339 tlie bonds drew fifteen per cent interest instead of twelve, and was astonished to find on their arrival that they drew but twelve. That his first impression was to hold them subject to their order, but on reflection concluded to place them at best rates without loss, hold funds subject to their order, and trust them to make the thing satisfactory when the situation was understood.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 N.E. 105, 142 N.Y. 334, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 14, 97 Sickels 334, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ming-v-corbin-ny-1894.