Schmidt v. Kattenhorn

2 Hilt. 157
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedDecember 15, 1858
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Hilt. 157 (Schmidt v. Kattenhorn) 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
Schmidt v. Kattenhorn, 2 Hilt. 157 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1858).

Opinions

Hilton, J.

The plaintiffs sued for the damages resulting from the wrongful conversion of their property by the defendants. At the trial it appeared, from the evidence on the part of the plaintiffs, that the property consisted of brandy in casks, sold by the plaintiffs to the defendants for cash less 4 per cent., and delivered on the 24th and 25th of June, 1857. The bills were sent on the same day the goods were delivered, and followed up by the plaintiffs calling the next day for the money. Not finding the defendants at their place of business, a demand was made of their bookkeeper. Failing to get the money, the plaintiffs sent their clerk, who was told by the defendants to come again in a couple of days, and they would pay. After this, and about five or six days after the delivery, the plaintiffs again called and demanded the cash or the brandy. The defendants refused to give either, but offered to pay in two protested bills of exchange drawn by the plaintiffs, with a small sum in cash additional to make up the amount of the plaintiffs’ claim for the goods thus purchased. It also appeared that after the sale was agreed upon, but before the brandy was delivered, the plaintiffs made inquiries respecting the trustworthiness of the defendants, to learn whether they could be trusted with a cash article; and, the information being satisfactory, the goods were thereupon delivered. The plaintiffs having rested their case, the defendants moved to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that this evidence showed a delivery of the property without qualifi[160]*160cation, and therefore this action could not be maintained. The motion was denied, and the defendants excepted. Evidence was then introduced by the defendants, and the case submitted to the jury upon a charge of the judge to which no exception was taken, and a verdict found for the plaintiffs for the amount claimed.

On this appeal by the defendants, we are to review the decision of the judge upon the motion to dismiss the complaint, and to determine whether the evidence thus given was sufficient to warrant its submission to the jury upon the question, whether there had been an unqualified delivery of the property by which the condition of the sale was waived.

I think the evidence was clearly sufficient to show that the plaintiffs did not intend to waive the condition of the sale, or to make an absolute delivery; and it is equally apparent from it that the defendants did not suppose the condition was intended to be waived, or that the delivery was unqualified. Leven v. Smith, 1 Denio, 571. On such testimony, the judge very properly held that it was for the jury to say what was the intention of the parties upon which such a delivery was made; and he was right in refusing to dismiss the complaint. Smith v. Lynes, 1 Seld. 41; Furniss v. Holt, 8 Wend. 256; Smith v. Dennie, 6 Pick. 266; Russell v. Minor, 22 Wend. 662; Van Neste v. Conover, 5 How. P. R. 148.

The judgment should be affirmed.

Brady, J.

The brandies purchased were delivered on the 24th and 25th of June, 1857. The purchases were for cash. On the day after the delivery of the first purchase, the defendants sent an order for the lot of the 25 th of June, requesting the plaintiffs to send the bill by the bearer of their order. The bills were sent with the brandy, and the terms are stated on the bills to be for cash less 4 per cent The bills were marked correct by the clerk of defendants. The plaintiff Hollander went to the defendants’ store on the day after each delivery, and demanded a check from a young man in charge of the store, the defendants being absent. Hollander told him he had sold low for cash. The young man said he could not draw a check. Hollander then [161]*161sent his bookkeeper to get a check. The bookkeeper called twice. On the second occasion, he saw the defendant Kattenhorn, who said “ Come in a couple of days, and I will pay it.” The bookkeeper called, as requested, and the defendant Kattenhorn then offered bills of exchange drawn by the plaintiffs, and some money. Hollander, on the same day that this offer was made, went with, his bookkeeper to the defendants, and demanded from Kattenhorn cash or the brandies. The defendants refused either. This interview was the only one between Hollander and the defendant Kattenhorn after the delivery, as appears by the testimony of both; and in this interview the plaintiff Hollander was for the first time advised by the defendants personally that they would not pay cash, or give up the brandy. He was probably informed the same day, by his bookkeeper, that the defendant Kattenhorn had offered bills of exchange in payment. It also appeared that the plaintiff Hollander made inquiries about the defendants—not before the purchase, but after the bargain was made—to know of their trustworthiness. He says “ I wanted to know whether I could trust him (Kattenhorn) with a cash article. I said I must be cautious about delivering ; and I said to him (Kattenhorn) that I was pleased with the good account I got of him."

On these facts I refused to dismiss the complaint, and my refusal, I think, was proper. The question presented by them was, whether the delivery was intended to be complete until the performance-of the condition of payment of the cash. That question was submitted to the jury, and they answered in favor of the plaintiffs, The evidence shows that Hollander had satisfied himself that the-defendants could be trusted with a cash article, without, at the moment of delivery, exacting the cash. His inquiries were not about the general credit or responsibility of the defendants—that was immaterial to him, his sale being for cash; and the demands upon the clerk of the defendants, and upon the defendant Kattenhorn, show that there was no intention to relinquish the payment of the cash. The promise of the defendant Kattenhorn to pay in a couple of days, after he was seen for the first time, [162]*162shows that he so understood the matter, and that he felt bound to comply with the terms of sale. It was not in evidence, at tins time, that Hollander asked Kattenhorn for a note. That was proved on the defence, after which no motion was made to dismiss the complaint, and the cause was submitted to the jury. The fact is, that Behrens, who testified to the demand for the notej was mistaken, if he did not swear falsely. He proves two interviews, after the delivery, between Kattenhorn and Hollander, in one of which the former offered the bills of exchange; and states that in the other, which occurred two or three days previously, Hollander asked for the note. The defendant Kattenhorn swears that he first saw Hollander ten days or two weeks after the purchase—that the bookkeeper was present; and that he offered the bills of exchange. Hollander corroborates this. He says that he did not see Kattenhorn until he saw him with the bookkeeper, when the bills of exchange were offered for cash. There was no interview, then, between them, prior to that after the delivery, according to their own statements, and Behrens was in error. That was, however, if trae, only a circumstance to be considered, with others, on the «question submitted to the jury.

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Related

Leven v. Smith
1 Denio 571 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1845)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Hilt. 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmidt-v-kattenhorn-nyctcompl-1858.