Nowell v. Gilbert

2 N.Y.S. 525, 56 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 489, 18 N.Y. St. Rep. 639, 49 Hun 489, 1888 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 818
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 N.Y.S. 525 (Nowell v. Gilbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nowell v. Gilbert, 2 N.Y.S. 525, 56 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 489, 18 N.Y. St. Rep. 639, 49 Hun 489, 1888 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 818 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

Bradley, J.

The plaintiffs were wholesale dealers in woolen goods in the city of Hew York, and sold to. one Moses ¡Ruslander 48 pieces of such goods, which is the property in question. The action is founded upon the charge [526]*526that the plaintiffs were induced by fraud on his part to sell and deliver such goods to him; and the evidence was sufficient to warrant that conclusion. That question of fact will therefore be deemed1 disposed of by the finding of the referee. The defendant, on November 18, 1886, by virtue of six executions issued upon judgments entered the day before upon confessions of Ruslander, amounting to about $28,000, levied upon a stock of goods in a store occupied by the latter in the city of Buffalo; and afterwards on the same day, and after the levy, Ruslander made a general assignment for the benefit of his creditors. The plaintiffs claiming that the goods so sold by them were in the stock upon which the defendant had levied the executions, and having demanded of him the possession of them, commenced this action for their recovery on the 23d day of that month. The property taken upon the affidavit and requisition from the stock of goods was, pursuant to proceedings duly taken for that purpose in behalf of the defendant,.returned to the latter.

The main question, and the most important one requiring consideration, is whether the defendant was, by the undertaking upon which the return of the property was procured, estopped from asserting that he had not had possession of all the property mentioned in such affidavit, and to recover which the action was brought. In the affidavit and in the complaint the property is described as 48 pieces of woolen goods, manufactured into clothing and unmanufactured; and the plaintiffs gave evidence tending to prove, and the referee found, that the property so described was of the value of $2,268.87. The ■question arose upon exceptions taken to the exclusion of evidence offered by the defendant to prove that, at the time the executions were issued to the defendant, Ruslander had, in due course of his business, sold and disposed of more than three-fourths of the property mentioned in the complaint, and did not then have in his possession or under his control more than one-fourth of it; that the defendant did not at any time have in his possession more than one-fourth of'such property; and that the value of such of the property so de.scribed, as in any manner came to his possession, did not exceed $500. The •evidence was excluded, upon the objection that it was in conflict with the admissions in the undertaking made on the part of the defendant for the return •of the replevied property to him; and the referee held that the defendant was at liberty to give evidence of the value of all the property described in the affidavit, but that any evidence tending to show that the defendant had not the possession of all the property so described at the time the requisition was executed by the coroner was not admissible; to which ruling exception was taken. The undertaking was executed by two sureties, and not by the defendant. And in it was the recital that “whereas, the plaintiffs in this action have ■claimed the delivery to them of certain chattels specified in the affidavit, made in behalf of the plaintiffs for that purpose, of the alleged value of two thousand two hundred and sixty-eight dollars and twenty-seven cents, and have caused the same to be replevied by the coroner of the county of Erie, pursuant to chapter fourteen of the Code of Civil Procedure, but the same has not yet been delivered to the plaintiffs; and whereas, the defendant is desirous of having the said chattels returned to him. ” It then proceeds 1,0 conclusion, as required by statute. Code Civil Proc. § 1704. The fact that the defendant did not sign the undertaking, did not, for aught that appears in the evidence, deny its conclusive effect upon him, as well as upon the sureties who did execute it. It was prepared by his attorney, made in his behalf, and used to produce the restoration to his possession of the property taken by the coroner; and he was estopped by the undertaking from denying his previous possession of the property replevied. Diossy v. Morgan, 74 N. Y. 11; Harrison v. Wilkin, 69 N. Y. 412; Decker v. Judson, 16 N. Y. 439.

But, to support the ruling of the referee, the fact must be deemed conclusively established by estoppel that the property replevied embraced all that was mentioned in the affidavit. The recital, although not requisite to the [527]*527statutory undertaking, was evidently made to explain its occasion and purpose. The estoppel arose from the defeated delivery to the plaintiff founded upon the right, and its exercise, to require the return to the defendant of the property taken by the coroner, for which purpose the undertaking prescribed by the statute was required. This proceeding rests upon the assumption that he previously had the possession of the property of which he had been divested by the execution of the requisition; and the right to thus obtain the return did not depend upon the replevy of all the property described in the affidavit or complaint, but for the return of such portion of it, if not all, as had been taken from him upon the plaintiffs’ requisition. With this in view the statute provides that, for the purpose of obtaining such return, the defendant must serve upon the officer a notice that he requires a return of the chattels replevied. Code Civil Proc. § 1704. It also contemplated by the statute that the officer may replevy less than the whole of the property described in the affi<1 ivit, and he is required to do so when a part only can be found; but, for the purposes of the proceeding for the return of it in such case, the value of the whole, as stated in the affidavit, when there stated in the aggregate only, will he deemed the value of the portion replevied. Id. § 1698. In the present case the undertaking for the return of the property necessarily represented twice the value of the entire property, as stated in the affidavit, without reference to the quantity of it taken by the coroner. The recital in the undertaking may be broad enough to import that all the property in question was taken by him, and may properly have been treated as evidence; but in view -of the fact that such recital was not essential to the purpose for which the undertaking was made, and added nothing to its force to produce a return of the property, it is difficult to see that it is conclusive as such, or how it can he effectual as an estoppel. Talcott v. Belding, 4 Jones & S. 84. It is a mere admission, not of record, but in pais; and, to give to it the effect of estoppel, the plaintiffs must by it have been induced to so act, or to refrain from taking action, that the denial of the truth of the recital would in the legal sense prejudice them. Malloney v. Horan, 49 N. Y. 111; Blair v. Wait, 69 N. Y. 113; Winegar v. Fowler, 82 N. Y. 315.

Such was the case of Dezell v. Odell, 3 Hill, 215, where a party having assumed the relation of receiptor of chattels levied upon, and promised to deliver them to the officer, was held estopped from withholding them upon the assertion of title in himself; because in reliance upon his recognition of the •effectual force of the levy, and his promise to deliver the property to the officer, the latter was induced to leave it in his possession.

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12 N.Y.S. 370 (New York Supreme Court, 1891)

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Bluebook (online)
2 N.Y.S. 525, 56 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 489, 18 N.Y. St. Rep. 639, 49 Hun 489, 1888 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nowell-v-gilbert-nysupct-1888.