Reab v. McAlister

8 Wend. 109
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedDecember 15, 1831
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 8 Wend. 109 (Reab v. McAlister) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reab v. McAlister, 8 Wend. 109 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1831).

Opinion

The following opinions were delivered:

By the Chancellor.

I do not think there was any error in the charge of the court of common pleas, in respect to the interest, which could render the judgment of that court erroneous. The plaintiff’s demand consisted partly of a running account, and was partly for the price of the stove, sold on a credit of six months. It was in evidence that the ordinary custom of the plaintiff was to charge interest on his accounts after ninety days, where no specific time of credit was agreed upon, and that this custom was generally known. 1 also infer from the evidence, that the interest in this case was actually charged on the plaintiff’s books, and it appeared by the testimony that the defendant had admitted the correctness of all the items charged in the account, except those which related to the stove and its appendages. On the trial, the defendant’s counsel made a general objection to the plaintiff’s right to recover interest, which was overruled by the court. As the stove was sold on a credit of six months, there could not be any possible doubt as to the right of the plaintiff to recover interest on that part of the account, after the expiration of the credit. The objection was general, that the plaintiff was not entitled to interests; as he was entitled to interest, at all events on the greatest part -of the account, the objection was properly overruled. If the defendant wished to raise the objection to any other part of the account, he should have point[112]*112ed his objection to that part particularly. The court charged the jury that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the amount of his account, including the stove; the interest to be computed from the expiration of the credit. If there was any thing ambiguous in the charge, calculated to mislead the jury, the counsel should have called the attention of the court to it at the time, by a specific objection. Ball v. Mannin, 3 Bligh’s R. N. S. 22. Indedendent, however, of the objection that the attention of the court does not appear to have been called to this particular point, I think there was sufficient testimony to authorize the jury to presume an agreement or understanding between the parties, that the defendant should pay inter- ■ est on the account, after the expiration of the 90 days. Although as a general principle, running accounts do not draw interest, yet, If a merchant has been in the general practice of charging interest after a limited period of credit, those who deal with him with a knowledge of that fact are bound to pay interest from the expiration of such period ; and their liability is the same if they have been in the habit of settling their accounts with him, in which such interest has been charged and allowed. Here the custom was proved, and previous to the trial, the correctness of the account in which this interest appears to have been charged was not objected to by the defendant ; he only objected to the charges relating to the stove. It therefore becomes necessary to consider the question whether the defendant had a right to prove the warranty of the stove, and the breach thereof, either to' defeat the recovery, or to reduce the damages.

I am inclined to think that under the revised statutes of 1813, which were in force when this suit was commenced, the defendant had a right to offset the damages for breach of the warranty of the stove' against the plaintiff’s account, although such damages were unliquidated. I am aware that in the case of Hepburn v. Hoag, 6 Cowen, 613, the supreme court came to the conclusion that the legislature did not intend to change the law by the alteration of the phraseology of the revised act of 1813 from that which was contained in the former statute. So far as related to the case then under consideration, it is evident the set-off could not be allowed. The suit was on [113]*113a bond for the performance of covenants, and the plaintiff was entitled to have his damages assessed on the breaches assigned, and to have judgment for the penalty of the bond to cover future breaches. It was therefore a case for which the statute of set-off had made no provision, and where a verdict could not be rendered against the plaintiff on the plea of non est factum, or for a simple balance in favor of the defendant without depriving the plaintiff of his remedy for future breaches. When the learned judge, who delivered the opinion in that case, used this peculiar case to show that the legislature in the revision of 1813 intended to exclude a set-off of unliquidated damages in all eases, I think it is evident he had forgotten the reasons which induced him as one of the re-visors to adopt the change in the phraseology of the act of 1813. The cases cited by Chancellor Kent, in Duncan v. Lyon, 3 Johns. Ch. R. 358, were all decided under the act of 1801, or under the British statute, which was substantially the same; and that his attention was not called to the fact of the alteration in the revision of 1813, I think is evident from his own decision upon the construction of similar terms in the justices’ act of 1801. The act of 1801, 1 R. L. of 1801, 347, authorized a set-off in courts of record, where two or more persons dealing together were indebted to each other, and provided also for the set-off of a bond for the payment of money only ; but the justices’ act of 1801, 1 R. L. 494, authorized and required a set-off by the defendant in a justice’s court, of any account or demand which he had against the plaintiff. Under the first of these statutes, the supreme court decided that the words, having mutual debts, in the English statute, and being indebted to each other, in the act of 1801, were expressions of the same import and meaning; that our statute must receive the same construction which had been given to the English statute; and that there could not be a set-off in a court of record, where the demand on either side was for unliquidated damages. Brown v. Cumming, 2 Caines’ R. 33. Gordon v. Brown, 2 Johns. R. 150. But Kent, Ch. J. who delivered the opinion of the supreme court in the last case, had previously decided that the words used in the justice act of 1801, any account or demand against the plaintiff, authorized and required [114]*114the defendant to offset any demand which he had against the piaintiff arising upon contract, although such demand was for unliquidated damages, McCumber V. Goodrich, 1 Johns. R. 56 $ and the Chief Justice there points out the difference between

the two statutes, and shows that the term demand in the last mentioned act requires a more extensive construction than the terms used in the .other statute; and in the revision of the justices’ act in 1808, this construction was expressly adopted by aprovisolimiting the set-off to damages arising on contracts only, 5 Laws of N. Y., Webster’s ed. 377. In the case of Brown v. Cumming, before referred to, the court regretted the necessity which compelled them to follow the English decisions in giving a construction to the act of 1801, relative to set-offs in courts of record, and Livingston, J. who delivered the opinion of the court, although he admits it is a hard case, and that reason and justice require that the balance only should be considered the real debt, says the forms of law render it necessary for each party to sue the other in separate actions.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Wend. 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reab-v-mcalister-nycterr-1831.