Steward v. Scudder

24 N.J.L. 96
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 N.J.L. 96 (Steward v. Scudder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steward v. Scudder, 24 N.J.L. 96 (N.J. 1853).

Opinion

Elmer, J.

The plaintiffs, who are commission merchants in the city of New York, sold a parcel of com for the defendant, and advanced the money. They sold for cash, without any special instructions, at the usual charge for commissions in such cases, of one cent a bushel. The sale was made on Tuesday, the second day of April, the corn being then on [99]*99board, the vessel in which the defendant, whose residence is in Princeton, New Jersey, had sent it to New York, he being himself in the city at the time, and informed who was the purchaser. He left town on the nest day, and, on Thursday, the fourth of April, plaintiffs sent to him by mail the measurer’s bill, bearing date the second, and an account of sales, bearing date the fourth. The account states the sale to have been made, on the second, to D. D. Conover, for $747.72, and from this sum is deducted the charges, amounting to #47.06, leaving a balance of net proceeds amounting to #700.66, for which amount they sent their check, on one of the banks in New York, payable to the order of defendant, which was endorsed by him, and afterwards paid. The money was thus sent, as was stated by the plaintiffs’ clerk, at the special request of the defendant, who said he had use for it, and wanted it by the fifth. No intimation was made to him, when he made the request, before leaving town, or when the check was sent, that the payment of the money was at his risk, or that he might be called on in any contingency to refund it.

At the time of the sale to Conover, it appears he was ih good credit. Plaintiffs’ clerk called for the money on Friday, the fifth, and again on Saturday, but he was not to be found, and on Monday it became known that he had failed. No part of the money was evor paid to the plaintiffs. Some time during the week succeeding Conover’s failure, plaintiffs apprized the defendant, by letter, of the fact that they had not received the money, and called upon him t® refund it. To this defendant replied, by a letter dated the thirteenth, declining so to do, and thereupon this suit was brought to recover back the money advanced.

It was alleged, on the part of the plaintiffs, that by the custom of trade in Now York, when a sale is made for cash, the purchaser has three or four days in which to pay the money ; and that, as upon such sales the commission merchant does not guarantee, the risk of payment remains upon the owner. The question was submitted to the jury, by the judge who tried the cause, whether such a custom was established by the evidence; and they were instructed that if it was, and the [100]*100jury were satisfied that the plaintiffs had acted in accordance with the common usage, and in the absence of specific instructions had been guilty of no negligence in transacting the business intrusted to them, they were entitled to recover. The verdict was for the defehdant. No exception was taken to the charge of the judge; but, upon the coming in of the postea, a rule was obtained to show cause why the verdict should not be set aside as contrary to the evidence, and the question now is, whether, for that reason, there ought to be a new trial.

That the usage of trade may be given in evidence to interpret the otherwise indeterminate intentions of parties, and to ascertain the nature and extent of their contracts, is well settled. But such a usage, to be available, must be established, known, certain, uniform, reasonable, and not contrary to law. 2 Greenl. Ev. § 251.

In the case of Clark v. Van Northwick, 1 Pick. 343, the same usage which was set up in this case was established and sanctioned by the court. The purchaser in that case paid a party the money, and became deranged the next day; and the court thought, that under the circumstances the seller was not bound to follow and reclaim the goods, and decided that the loss must fall on the owner. In the case of Bliss v. Arnold, 8 Vermont R. 252, the Supreme Court of Vermont held the same usage to be unreasonable and illegal.

The evidence produced on the trial of the usage set up by the plaintiffs in the case now before us was certainly not very definite. The clerk says, “ it is customary to render the bill, and then wait three or four days; on cash sales money is considered payable in three or four days. It is the custom of commission merchants to allow three, four, or five days before calling for the money.” Mr. Nevius, another witness, who had been in the business in New York forty years and upwards, says, “as far as my experience goes, cash sales embrace from three to seven days, and such is the custom there. Articles vary a little; wheat and corn average three or four days; flour seven or eight, — seven at the least.” On the part of the defendant, several witnesses who were examined testi[101]*101fied that they had never heard of the usage; and these who had, generally agreed in saying that they always understood that the risk of the delay was upon the commission merchant. It appeared that in two cases where losses had happened by the failure of purchasers, there had been a dispute about the usage, and the matter was compromised. No instance was shown in which the loss had been borne wholly by the owner.

In the case of the schooner Seaside (2 Sumner 567), Justice Story remarks, with great force and pertinency: “I own myself no friend to the almost indiscriminate habit of late years, of setting up particular usages or customs, in almost all-kinds of business and trade, to control, vary, or annul the general liabilities of parties under the common law, as well as under the commercial law. It lias long appeared to me that there is no small clanger in admitting such loose and inconclusive usages and customs, often unknown to particular parties, and always liable to great misunderstandings and misintcrpretings and abuses, to outweigh the well known and well settled principles of law. And I rejoice to find that of lato years the courts of law, both in England and in America, have been disposed to narrow the limits of the operation of such usages and customs, and to discountenance any further extension of them.”

A case could hardly occ-ur, it seems to me, better calculated to show the propriety of those remarks than the one before tjs. The defendant, a corn dealer residing in the country, sends his corn to a commission merchant in. the great mart of trade, to be sold for cash. This he has a right to suppose the safest, of all operations, and so that he finds a safe agent he thinks himself secure of his money. A sale for cash is- a sale for the money in hand, at least such is the general meaning of the term. Upon such a sale the owner is not bound to deliver the goods until the price is paid. If the price cannot be ascertained until the goods are weighed or measured,*ordinarily no property passes to the purchaser until that is done; and the lien of the seller on the goods for the price is extended so far as to entitle him, even after he has parted with the possession, and while the goods are in transitu, to. retake them, on the [102]*102bankruptcy or insolvency of the purchaser, if the price be unpaid.

That the owner of goods who confides them to a factor to be sold for cash, must still look after and run the risk of the solvency of the purchaser for any length of time, longer or shorter, seems in opposition to the very idea of a sale for cash, the first principle of such a sale being, that the goods shall not become the property of the purchaser until he pays the money.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kronisch v. Howard Savings Institution
382 A.2d 64 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1977)
White v. MERRILL, LYNCH, ETC.
218 A.2d 655 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1966)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 N.J.L. 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steward-v-scudder-nj-1853.