Pinckney v. Darling

73 N.Y. St. Rep. 831

This text of 73 N.Y. St. Rep. 831 (Pinckney v. Darling) 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
Pinckney v. Darling, 73 N.Y. St. Rep. 831 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

PATTERSON, J.

This appeal is from a 'judgment in favor of! the defendant, entered by direction of the court after a trial of the issues, and from an order denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.! The pleadings present a somewhat unusual situation as regards! the attempt at enforcement of a claim of the character sued uponi here. The facts as they appear are substantially the following:: The defendant, the sheriff of Suffolk county, on February 18,1892, levied upon certain personal property in the possession of the Orient Manufacturing Company at its works, in Suffolk county,, under an execution against that company issued upon a judgment' obtained by the firm of Crenshaw & Wisner, merchants in the city of New York, and also described as having been the agents of thei Oriental Manufacturing Company. On or about the 2d of March, 1892, the plaintiff, claiming the same property, began this action,, which was then in form an action in replevin, and caused a writ to be issued to the coroner of Suffolk county, who o'fl the same! day took the property from the possession of the sheriff, and held) it for the plaintiff, and that property was not rebonded, and never was in any form returned to the custody of the sheriff. For two years the action proceeded. upon the distinct baáis of its being ini replevin. In April, 1894, an application was made by the plaintiff to this court for. leave to amend the complaint, and to set up another cause of action, which leave was accorded; and thereupon the plaintiff inserted in the complaint a second count, charging the sheriff with the unlawful conversion of the merchandise, and asking a judgment for damages occasioned by such conversion. Upon this state of the pleadings, the cause came to trial, and the effort on the part of the plaintiff was to establish his own title to and right of possession of the goods at the time this action was instituted; or, failing in that, to establish his right to recover damages for the conversion of the goods, upon the ground that their retention by the sheriff after demand was unlawful, and authorized a recovery as in an action of trover. The facts appearing in evidence upon which these respective claims of the plaintiff are based must be stated in detail.

Mr. Pinckney, the plaintiff,' was the proprietor.of certain phosphate beds in South Carolina, the product of which beds was sold) in the market. The Orient Manufacturing Company was a cus-: tomer of Mr. Pinckney. All of-the transactions of the Orient: Manufacturing Company with Mr. Pinckney were had through a> broker in Baltimore, who represented the plaintiff; and for several years the Orient Company and its predecessor in business had1 purchased phosphate from Mr. Pinckney through the Baltimore broker. All of their dealings were carried ón by correspondence, between the broker and Crenshaw & Wisner, officers or agents of the Orient Company.

On the 14th of December, 1891, Mr. Pinckney’s broker in Baltimore made an offer in writing to the Orient Company of a certain quantity of phosphate, in a letter which is as follows;

[833]*833“ December 14,1891.

•‘‘Messrs. Orient Manufacturing Company.

“ Mr. C. C. Pinckney, Jr.

“A cargo of about six hundred tons sand-rock phosphate from Magnolia Mines, South Carolina, hot air dried. All moisture over 2 per cent, to be allowed for at $6.00 per ton, 2,240 lbs., delivered to buyer’s schooner at seller’s wharf, Ashley river, South Carolina. Actual sworn weights. Prompt shipment. Payable, cash or by four months’ note, to buyer’s order, from date bill lading, adding ■interest at six per cent. P. at buyer’s option.”

On the 15th of December, 1891, the contract proposed in the letter above quoted was accepted by the Orient Manufacturing-Company through John H. Wisner, its treasurer, by a letter dated on the last-mentioned day, in which it is stated, among other things:

“Contract for sale of Magnolia rock herewith accepted. The clause about sworn weights we presume to be intended for output weights heretofore, but it is not clear. We shall be glad if you will amend the contract to cover this point.” And, “ We have a ■wire from our Mr. Armstrong advising the charter of a vessel now in Wilmington, North Carolina, and to proceed at once to loading point on the same date.”

The plaintiff’s agent at Baltimore wrote to Mi; Wisner, the treasurer, acknowledgedging the receipt of his letter, and said:

“Glad your man got vessel so promptly. ' Give us her name, please, and siza The clause about sworn weights referred to in ■contract means just as we have delivered heretofore.”

On the 17th of December, Mr. Wisner, the treasurer of the ■Orient Company,, wrote to the agent of the plaintiff at Baltimore a letter containing, among other things, the following:

“The vessel we have chartered to load in Charleston is the ‘Emma Knowlton,’ and we hand herewith copies of the charter •party. Will you kindly pass them to Mr. G. C. Pinckney, Jr., for inspection?”

On the 18th of December the plaintiff’s agent in Baltimore -wrote to the Orient Manufacturing Company as follows:

“Note you have taken the schooner ‘Emma Knowlton’ to load the cargo of Magnolia rock, and have handed the charter party to Mr. Pinckney. Inclosed, we beg to hand you note for this cargo (referring to the broker’s note).”

On the 30th of December, 1891, the agent of the plaintiff at Baltimore, wrote to Mr. Wisner, the-treasurer of the Orient Company, inclosing the bill of lading for the cargo per schooner Knowlton; and on the same day the receipt of that bill of hiding wras acknowledged by the Oriental Manufacturing Company.. On the 20th of January the Orient Company sent to the broker of Mr. Pinckney at Baltimore the weigher’s returns of the cargo of the Emma Knowlton, the receipt of which was acknowledged on January- 21, 1892. And on the 27th of the same month the agents wrote to the Orient Company that those weights were approved [834]*834by Mr. Pinckney, and asked for a prompt settlement. On the-30th of January, 1892, a note at four months of the Orient Manufacturing Company for $3,184.86, dated back to December 4, 1891,, was forwarded in settlement.

This correspondence contains the whole history of the transaction concerning the purchase and sale of the cargo of phospháterock, the subject of this action. It will be observed that there-was not one word of communication between the parties other than what is contained in this correspondence. It appeared in evidence at the trial that the Orient Manufacturing Company, at the time-the transaction was entered into, was, as matter of fact, in some-financial embarrassment; and the effort was made by the plaintiff" to show that the concern was actually, and to the knowledge of those engaged in its management, insolvent, and a claim is based-upon that state of facts which will presently be further considered.

Upon the proofs as they appear from the correpondence above-quoted, it is claimed by the plaintiff that he was entitled to repossess himself of the goods in an action of replevin, for the reason-that the title thereto never passed out of him, and that the facts-proved indicate that there was no intention that the title should, be divested from him until after the goods were weighed, the returns accepted, and the merchandise paid for, either in cash or by a good note of a solvent maker. We do not see how it is possible-to infer from the correspondence as it is spread out before us-that the contract entered into between the plaintiff and the Orient.

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Bluebook (online)
73 N.Y. St. Rep. 831, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pinckney-v-darling-nyappdiv-1896.