Nesbit v. Bendheim

15 N.Y.S. 300, 39 N.Y. St. Rep. 109, 1891 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3199
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJune 22, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 15 N.Y.S. 300 (Nesbit v. Bendheim) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nesbit v. Bendheim, 15 N.Y.S. 300, 39 N.Y. St. Rep. 109, 1891 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3199 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1891).

Opinion

Daly, C. J.

This action is brought upon the following order.

“Mr. Henry Bendheim—Dear Sir: Please pay to the order of John Hes-bit’s Sons the sum of eight hundred dollars, and deduct the same from the 10th payment on my contract, (door and blind.) ”
“$800.00. ” Yours, respectfully, James H. Gault.”

The order was accepted by the defendant as follows:

“Accepted, payable when the tenth payment is payable under building loan agreement. Henry M. Bendheim.”

The complaint avers that the tfenth payment specified in the foregoing acceptance became due thereafter, whereupon the plaintiffs demanded payment of the draft, which defendant refused. The defenses are: (1) A denial that the said tenth payment had become due, or that payment of the order had been demanded of defendant and refused; (2) that the acceptance was obtained by the fraudulent representation made by plaintiffs to the defendant that there was then due and owing to them by Gault $800 for materials furnished for the buildings included in the said building loan agreement, in excess of payments and expenses received by them; (3) that Gault was not indebted to the plaintiffs in any sum; and (4) that the acceptance was without consideration. The building loan agreement in question was between the defendant and Gault, and provided that the defendant was to advance to Gault $31,000 for the erection of buildings on four lots in Seventy-Third street, which he had conveyed to Gault. The tenth payment ($4,000) was to be paid “when doors, blinds, and sashes are all hung and properly glazed, plumbing all finished, sinks and water-closets in, stoops and door-pieces up, and painting finished on all of said four buildings.” The plaintiffs had furnished Gault with brick, lime, and cement for the houses in question, and this order was for a balance of $800 claimed by them to be due. The questions whether the work had been completed which would entitle Gault to the tenth payment, and whether there was fraud in procuring this acceptance, were submitted to the jury, together with a third question, which was presented by the proofs, namely, whether, after demand had been made upon the defendant for the payment of his acceptance, he had made a new promise, upon a new consideration, to pay the order in question. The questions of fact in. the case were all properly submitted to the jury, and their verdict in the plaintiffs’ favor can be sustained upon the evidence. Upon the issue as to whether the tenth payment had become due, one of the plaintiffs, William H. Nesbit. testified positively that the defendant told him that the payment was due, and only refused to pay the order because Gault had claimed that plaintiffs had overcharged him for materials; and that defendant promised to pay the order if plaintiffs would get another written order from Gault. Defendant denies this admission and promise, and gave proof to show that Gault had abandoned his contract before earning the tenth payment, leaving several hundred dollars’ worth of work to be done on that account, although defend[302]*302•ant had advanced to him the whole $31,000 required by the contract, and more. It would seem from the case that W. H. Nesbit testified that when he received the order in question, which was at the office of defendant’s counsel, in the presence of the latter and defendant himself, it was made payable ■out of the tenth payment at the defendant’s request; that Nesbit was not familiar with all the contents of the tenth payment, and wanted it out of one of the previous ones, and that they told him “it was when the doors and sashes were hung;” that he asked for a copy of the contract, so that he could see, but neither the defendant nor his counsel had one, so he had no way of seeing; and he testified that when he demanded payment of the acceptance the doors and sashes were on. This, however, was denied; but upon the whole evidence in the case on this point there was a question of fact for the jury. Upon the issue of fraud the defendant testified that when the order was presented to him for acceptance W. H. Nesbit stated positively that $800 was due for materials delivered on the job at market prices; and defendant produced evidence to show that this representation was false, in that the plaintiffs •had overcharged Gault for the materials delivered by them. The plaintiff ■testified that he never made such representation to defendant, although he admitted that he had agreed to deliver the goods to Gault at the market price. A question of fact as to whether such representations were made was thus presented to the jury. There was some contradiction in Nesbit’s own ■evidence on the question, but that did not authorize the court to take that question from the jury. On the question of the alleged new promise made by the defendant, as before stated, the plaintiff W. H. Nesbit testified that when he presented the defendant’s acceptance for payment the latter refused to pay, because Gault claimed that he had been overcharged; told him that ■Gault had stopped payment of the order for that reason, but instructed him to .get another written order from Gault, and he would pay it. The plaintiff immediately procured from Gault the following:

“New York, August 11th, 1887.
“Mr. Henry M. Bendheim: I hereby withdraw all my objections to your paying Messrs. John Nesbit’s Sons the amount of their order for $800. The •order is due, and you will please pay the same without further delay.
“John N Gault.”

Nesbit further testified that this order was presented to Gault, who promised to give plaintiffs a check for it the next day. The check was demanded the next day, but defendant refused to give it, and thereupon this action was brought.

The defendant admitted that hetold the plaintiff to see Gault about the overcharges, and that this order was brought to him the next day; but denies that he directed the plaintiff to get it, or promised to pay him if he did so. The ■question as to the promise was properly submitted to the jury, and, if they found that it was made, the plaintiffs would be entitled to recover; for, even if the original acceptance by defendant never became payable, by its terms, so -that an action could be maintained upon it, yet the new agreement, in addition to the original contract, authorized a recovery. The procurement by plaintiffs, at defendant’s request, of the withdrawal by Gault of his objections, was sufficient consideration for the new promise, if such withdrawal were obtained. We are not obliged to inquire whether compliance with this request and the procurement of this withdrawal were of any value to defend-ant. He had his own dealings with Gault, and is presumed to have had his ■own reasons for whairhe did. It is sufficient that he specified the conditions upon which he would make immediate payment upon his acceptance, (for materials which plaintiffs had furnished, and which had gone to erect the building in which he was interested,) and that plaintiffs complied with such condition. In the case of Willetts v. Insurance Co., 45 N. Y. 45, which was an action on a policy of marine insurance upon certain barrels of cider, it was -conceded that the loss was not covered by the policy, but, the company’s [303]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 N.Y.S. 300, 39 N.Y. St. Rep. 109, 1891 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nesbit-v-bendheim-nyctcompl-1891.