Sage v. . Sherman

2 N.Y. 417
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 5, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 2 N.Y. 417 (Sage v. . Sherman) 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
Sage v. . Sherman, 2 N.Y. 417 (N.Y. 1849).

Opinion

Strong, J.

There is no doubt but that the liability of the defendants, if any, is joint, and that.each is responsible, so far as he is responsible at all, in solido. The purchases authorized by their contract with each other were to be joint, and there was *423 to be no severance of their interests in the lands acquired, if subsequently sold for their benefit, or if not sold, until a final settlement should be made. The defendants contend hc-wever, that so far as they were concerned, Greves acted simply as their agent, and that they were not bound by any purchase which he made, unless it corresponded with the time of, and was fully authorized by, their articles of association, and that there was an essential departure in the terms and manner of payment. Although I readily concede that a principal is not bound by the acts of his agent when he exceeds his authority, yet there is good reason why we should hold that the excess complained of should be clearly made out, and that it should be in soma substantial matter. The agent is selected by the principal, and the selection is of itself a recommendation to the world, at lé'irí, of his integrity and capacity to do what is intrusted to him. V any one must sustain a loss by reason of his incapacity or ue faithfulness, it would seem to be right, that it should be th, ' party who has placed him in a situation to effectuate the evil This must be understood, however, as applying to his conduct while acting in the business intrusted to him, and substantially according to the instructions of his principal. Where there is a clear departure, or excess, a prudent person who deals with him would not be misled.

In the case under consideration there are two clear limitations of the power to purchase, one applying to the locality of the land, and the other to the extent of the consideration money. It is provided in the clause conferring the powers, that the land should be situated in the western states, or the (then) territories of Michigan or Wisconsin, and that the aggregate amount of the consideration money should not exceed thirty thousand dollars. The plaintiff’s sale was in accordance with each of those particulars. The agreement that upon all purchases for the parties, Greves should draw on the defendant Sherman at not less than ten days’ sight, which the defendants suppose has been violated, is at the end of, and included in, a clause making several provisions for the conduct of the associates after their purchases should be made, and if the rule cognoscitur a sociis is applicable, and I think it is, it was designed *424 v.0 control their transactions with each other, and not as a limitation of the power of their agent in making the primary purchases. If it could at all affect the rights of the vendor, it would be straining a point further than either the language used by the parties, or the justice of the case requires, to extend it, beyond the payment, to the sale itself. The sale might be valid, and yet the vendees be primarily liable to pay the money only in the manner indicated. That there was at first a departure in terms from the stipulation in the agreement in this particular, there can be no doubt. The substitution of the notes for drafts could not, however, have materially injured the associates, as they were to have been paid by the same person, and of course with the same funds. The objection so far as it related to the character of the instruments, was subsequently removed by changing the notes into drafts.

• There was nothing in the original articles of agreement requiring that Greves should draw for the purchase money immediately after the sale. It was probably the expectation of the parties that he would do so, but a disappointment in this particular was not enough to exonerate them from liability to perform a contract made for their benefit. It was said, by Chief Justice Nelson, when this case was decided by the late supreme court, that by the terms of the association the purchases were to be made for cash. With great deference, I cannot find any thing positively requiring that in the articles, nor is such an intent inferable from the conduct of the defendants. The drafts were to be at not less than ten days’ sight. Nothing was said as to the other limit: but surely if it had been deemed a matter of consequence to the' associates that the sales should have been for cash, or what should be its equivalent, the parties would have said so in explicit terms. Their only anxiety seems to have been the other way—that they should have sufficient time after the drafts should be received to raise the requisite funds to pay them. They doubtless did not apprehend any injury to themselves from an extension of the time of payment, and as they were not under any obligation to deposit the money with the paying party qntil then, it is difficult to perceive how they could ®e injured by the delay. It is quite apparent that the contract *425 ors themselves viewed the matter much in the same way. The terms of the sale in the instances under consideration were made known, soon after it was effected, to five of the associates—Sherman, Porter, Vanderpool, Croswell and Corning—and they approved of the purchase, and of the terms designated for the payment of the purchase money. " There were thirteen drafts drawn by Greves upon Sherman for the purchase moneys under the agreement in question, and a supplementary agreement for a similar purpose between the same parties, (except Graham,) made in June of the same year, neither of which was a sight draft, and each of them was payable from sixty to ninety days after date. Those thirteen drafts were all paid, and, so far as appears from the testimony .in this cause, without objection. It does not appear that the plaintiff ever saw the articles of association, but if they were exhibited to him, he had a right to infer from the conduct of the parties that they did not intend to adhere to the manner of payment therein specified, or, at any rate, that they would not attempt to invalidate a sale by reason of a 'variation in a matter which they did not deem material. Upon the whole, it appears to me that Greves had the requisite power to make the purchase in question from the plaintiff for the associates, and that, under the circumstances, it was not materially violated by the variance between the terms of payment as eventually arranged, and those mentioned in the articles of association.

But if the objection of variance was at first available, it was subsequently waived by those whom it is now sought to charge. We have seen that it was clearly waived by all but Graham. It was virtually waived by him, as well as his associates. A part of the purchase money was paid at the time of the sale, and the deed was executed, recorded, and delivered to Sherman, who was fully authorized to receive, and hold it, for all the purchasers. He received it without objection, knowing all the material circumstances attending the sale, and has continued to hold it until the present time. If he intended to object to the terms of sale, he should have done so promptly. The plaintiff might then have taken his land back, and probably without loss. As it is, the title has been out of him for a number of *426 years, and he has not had the power either to improve or enjoy it himself, or to sell it to others.

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Bluebook (online)
2 N.Y. 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sage-v-sherman-ny-1849.