Monnet v. . Merz

27 N.E. 827, 127 N.Y. 151, 38 N.Y. St. Rep. 165, 82 Sickels 151, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1766
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 27 N.E. 827 (Monnet v. . Merz) 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
Monnet v. . Merz, 27 N.E. 827, 127 N.Y. 151, 38 N.Y. St. Rep. 165, 82 Sickels 151, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1766 (N.Y. 1891).

Opinion

Bbowu, J.

The plaintiffs were manufacturers of aniline colors or dyes at La Plaine, Switzerland, and the original defendants were their consignees and agents at the city of Mew York for the sale of such dyes.

By the agreement between the parties, the defendants were to pay freight and import duties upon the goods, advance to the plaintiffs fifty per cent of the invoice price, and render account of sales semi-monthly, deducting and receiving a commission of eight and one-half per cent on the sales for their services.

This agreement was terminated in June, 1883.

The complaint alleges an indebtedness from the defendants upon an account- from January 1, 1880, to July 1, 1883, of eighteen thousand nine hundred and fifty-eight dollars and forty cents, and a demand and refusal of payment.

That there was a large indebtedness to the plaintiffs appeared from an account rendered by the defendants. Some items of account were in dispute on the trial, but are not before us on this appeal.

On the 26th of June, 1883, the defendants had in hand of the consigned goods 1,590 pounds of the market value of that date of $4,995.05. The referee charged the defendants with this amount, giving them credit for the duties and other charges that had been paid. This is now claimed by the defendants as erroneous.

After the date above-mentioned the value of the goods declined. A part were sold by defendants for $1,739.55 and the value of the remainder, at the time of the trial, was shown to be $947.36, and it is the defendants’ claim that these two last-mentioned sums should be substituted for the value of the goods in June, 1883.

We are of the opinion that the referee’s ruling was correct.

While the referee has not found specifically that a demand was made for the goods by the plaintiffs such fact appears in the evidence, and that the defendants refused to deliver them *155 to the plaintiffs’ agent unless they were paid a sum upwards of' six thousand dollars, which represented the advancements on the goods and the amount paid for freight and duties.

The defendants had no right to make such payment a condition of the delivery, as their own account showed a large indebtedness at that time to the plaintiffs for sales, and as they had, in their answer asked for an accounting, they were properly charged with the value of the goods on hand at the termination of the agency.

And we may presume a finding in accordance with the evidence in the case, that they refused to deliver the goods upon plaintiffs’ demand.

The main defense pleaded by the defendants and the one mainly relied on on this appeal was the pendency, undetermined, of an action brought by the United States against the defendants to recover, as a penalty, the value of a part of the goods, consigned to them by the plaintiffs, and which value was in excess of the amount claimed in this action.

This penalty was claimed upon the ground that the goods were under-valued in the invoices which defendants had used in entering said goods at the custom house.

It appeared in this action that such invoices were prepared and made up by the plaintiffs, and with them defendants had nothing to do, and if they were false under-valuations of the-goods, for the purpose of evading the revenue laws, such acts were the plaintiffs’ and not the defendants’.

The defendants alleged in their answer and claimed upon the trial, that this action could not be maintained while the government suit was pending, but the referee overruled this claim, to which an exception was taken.

Upon the assumption that defendants ■ would have been entitled to be reimbursed for any sum which they would have been compelled to pay in the government suit as a penalty for false and fraudulent valuations put upon the goods by the plaintiffs, such facts might have justified the court in staying-the trial of this action until the determination of the government suit.

*156 The defendants could thus have been enabled to ascertain the amount of their liability, and possibly asserted it as a counter-claim to the cause of action alleged in the complaint. Whether such an application was made or not we are not informed.

But as a defense the mere pendency of the government suit was not available. It had no connection with the cause of action set up in the complaint and could not be pleaded either in bar or in abatement.

But passing this question it is clear that there was no liability to the government upon the part of the defendants.

The government suit was based upon sections 2839 and 2864 of the Revised Statutes.

These sections were construed by the Supreme Court of the United States in U. S. v. Auffmordt (122 U. S. Rep. 197), and it was there held that section 2839 applied only to purchased goods, and that there ■ could be no recovery under it for the forfeiture of the value of imported merchandise, the property of the foreign manufacturer, against the person to whom it was consigned for sale on commission, the forfeiture being claimed on the ground that the merchandise was entered at invoice prices lower than the market value at the place of exportation, and that section 2864, so far as it provides for a forfeiture of the value of merchandise, was repealed by section 12 of the act of June 22, 1874.

The complaint in the government suit against defendants sought to recover the value of the goods, and there was no attempt made to forfeit the goods themselves.

Under the decision cited, therefore, there was no liability. But the whole current of authority in the United States Courts is to the effect that in suits for penalties and for forfeitures against a consignee an actual intent on his part to defraud must be shown. ( U. S. v. 90 Demijohns of Rum, 8 Fed. Rep. 485; 40 Sacks of Wool, 14 id. 643; The Rurissima Concepcion, 24 id. 358).

In this case it appeal’s from findings made at defendants’ request that no such intent existed and that defendants had no *157 knowledge of the cost of manufacture of the goods and were ignorant of any undervaluation in said invoices in entering the goods at the custom house.

It is very clear, therefore, we think that if the Government could establish any liability against the defendants it would be for their own wrongful acts and upon grounds that would not sustain a claim on their part against plaintiffs either for reimbursement or contribution.

"While it is true as claimed by the learned counsel for the defendants that in deciding this question we should not look into the merits of the controversy between them and the government or attempt to decide or forecast what would be the result of that suit we may examine the legal principles that are. applicable to and must govern the determination of that and all kindred cases and determine whether a recovery upon such principles would support a claim for reimbursement by defendants against the plaintiffs.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

James T. Kelly, Jr., P. E., P. C. v. Schroeter
209 A.D.2d 737 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1994)
Mills Novelty Co. v. Dupouy
203 F. 254 (Seventh Circuit, 1913)
Monnet v. Merz
29 Jones & S. 120 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1892)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 N.E. 827, 127 N.Y. 151, 38 N.Y. St. Rep. 165, 82 Sickels 151, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monnet-v-merz-ny-1891.