Talman v. Franklin

3 Duer 395
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedMay 29, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 3 Duer 395 (Talman v. Franklin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Talman v. Franklin, 3 Duer 395 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1854).

Opinion

By the Court. Duer, J.

It is with considerable reluctance that we have arrived at the conclusion that this action, upon the evidence before us, cannot be maintained; but we are now satisfied, that, without an entire disregard of the authorities that ought to govern us, it is a conclusion from which we cannot escape.

It is very doubtful whether Mr. Taiman, who, by the assignment to his co-plaintiff, had divested himself of all interest in the subject of the .action, could properly be made a party, but as this objection is not raised in the pleadings, and was riot taken on the trial, it cannot now be entertained. Admitting that the proof that has been given of his entire want of interest would preclude us from rendering a judgment in his favor, yet, under the provisions of the Code (§ 294), it would be no bar to a judgment in favor of his co-plaintiff, whose right to maintain the action, if maintainable at all, is not disputed.

The only question, therefore, and that which alone was meant to be reserved upon the trial, plainly is, whether the entry in the sales-book of the auctioneer is a sufficient note or memorandum of the alleged sale to the defendant, within those provisions of the statute of frauds which declare “ that every contract for the sale of lands shall be void, unless the same, or some note or memorandum thereof, expressing the consideration, be in writing, and be subscribed by the party by whom the sale is to be made, or by an agent of such party, lawfully authorized.” (2 R. S. 135, §§ 8, 9.)

There are some of the objections that have been taken to the sufficiency of the memorandum that we are clearly of opinion are' untenable, and these I shall first notice.

It is said that the writing produced, as evidence of the contract, does not contain the names of the owners of the lots to be sold, but the statute does not require that it should. When the sale is by auction the name of the person directing or authorizing the sale, and by whom a title is to be given, must .doubtless be stated ; but it is not necessary that he should be the owner of the lands, in the full sense of the term, or indeed have any beneficial interest whatever. It is quite immaterial whether he is an absolute owner, or a trustee having a legal title, or acting merely under a power. It is enough that he is [401]*401legally competent to make and complete the sale. Here the name of George F. Taiman, trustee, is entered in the column of the entry of the sales-book which is headed £‘ Employers,” and we think this a sufficient declaration, that, as a trustee, he directed the sale of the lots, and would convey them to the purchasers entitled to demand conveyances. It was quite unnecessary to mention the names of those for whom, as a trustee, he was acting.

The objection that the entry in the sales-book, although subscribed by the auctioneer, is subscribed by him in his own name, and not as agent for the party making the sale, we are also convinced ought not to be sustained. This objection, it is true, derives some countenance from the language of Chancellor Walworth in Champlin v. Parish, but when that case is examined it will be found that the entry, which was then relied on as a sufficient memorandum, was not subscribed by the auctioneer at all; and all that the Chancellor probably meant to say is, that since that alteration in the law which the revised statutes have made, an actual subscription, as distinguished from a mere signing of the name, either of the party making the sale, or of his agent, the auctioneer, is indispensable, which is undoubtedly true, and has in several cases been expressly decided. (Davis v. Shields, 26 Wend. 34; Townsend v. Hubbard, 4 Hill, 351.) Hnder the old statute of frauds, which required that the necessary writing, the evidence of the sale, should be signed, not subscribed, by the party to be charged, or his agent, it was held, that when the sale of lands is by auction, an entry by the auctioneer in his sales-book of the name of the highest bidder, as the purchaser, is a sufficient signing to give validity to the contract. It was not necessary that the auctioneer should sign his own name at all. (White v. Proctor, 4 Taunt. 209; McComb v. Wright, 4 John. C. R. 659.) Hnder our present statute it is still necessary that the name of the purchaser should be stated in the writing, which is designed to be a memorandum of the contract, but it is also necessary, to render the memorandum valid, that it shall be subscribed by the party making the sale, or by the auctioneer, as his agent. It is not necessary, however, we are convinced, that when the auctioneer subscribes he should declare, by some addition to [402]*402his signature, that it is made on. behalf of, or as the agent of, the seller. It is sufficient that it is apparent, on the face of the writing, that it is only in the capacity of an agent that he can be acting; and this is manifest, in all cases, where the writing, as in the case before us, contains the names of other persons as the seller and purchaser.

The exact question arose, and was decided by this court, as we now decide. it, in the case of Pinckney v. Hagadorn, 1 Duer, 89. Hor should we have thought it expedient to reconsider it had we not been pressed with the authority of the Chancellor’s observation in Champlin v. Parish. We believe that we have given the true explanation of his language in that case, but were we satisfied that he meant to be understood in the literal sense that his words import, we should still esteem it our duty to adhere to our former decision.

The last of the objections that we hold to be groundless is, that the particulars of the contract were not reduced to writing at the time of the sale. The argument is, that, as the lots were separately sold, the sale of each was a separate contract, which to render it valid ought to have been signed by the auctioneer as soon the name of the purchaser was declared ; whereas, the name of the auctioneer was not subscribed at all until the sales of the day, which embraced many lots, in addition to those struck down to the defendant, were completed, and it was then subscribed to an entry which embraced them all. We think that this course of proceeding on the part of the auctioneer was entirely correct, and it is not denied to have been that which a long and invariable usage has sanctioned. Although his name was subscribed but once, and not until the sales of the day were closed, the subscription then made was intended to apply, and ought, therefore, to be construed as applying, to every sale, considered as a distinct contract, which the entry that he subscribed properly embraced. The sales made by an auctioneer on the same day and without interruption are usually, and we think properly, regarded as a contimious proceeding, and when the proper entries in relation to each lot that is sold are made, as the sale proceeds, the final signature, by which all are to be attested, may with propriety be delayed, until the sales, considered as one proceeding, have been fully closed.

[403]*403Such would be our decision, even were it true, as was assumed upon the argument, that the statutory provision, which requires that in sales by auction all the particulars of the contract must be entered by the auctioneer in his sale-book at the time of the sale, were applicable to the sale of lands; but it so happens that the provision is, by its express words, confined to the sale of goods (2 R. S.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Duer 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talman-v-franklin-nysuperctnyc-1854.