Van Kleeck v. Le Roy

37 Barb. 544, 1862 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 134
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 5, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 37 Barb. 544 (Van Kleeck v. Le Roy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Kleeck v. Le Roy, 37 Barb. 544, 1862 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 134 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1862).

Opinions

Hogeboom, J.

This case comes here on exceptions ordered to be heard in the first instance at the general term. There was no motion made for a new trial on a case, or on the min[546]*546utes of the judge, and no order made in relation thereto. The case is not open, therefore, to the argument so often pressed in similar cases, that the verdict is against the weight of evidence. (Code, §§ 264, 265. Fry v. Bennett, 16 How. Pr. R. 385. Morange v. Morris, 20 id 257, 263, 264.)

The only exception made by the plaintiff, in the case, is a single one to the charge of the judge. The judge charged as follows: 1. That the action was brought to test the title to the property replevied. 2. That if the goods were purchased and procured by Le Eoy of the plaintiff upon knowingly false and fraudulent representations, no title passed, and the plaintiff was entitled to recover. • No exception was taken to either of these propositions, and they are plainly unobjectionable. 3. That if the plaintiff made or was influenced to make the sale to Le Eoy upon the strength of the representations made by Le Eoy to Ken worthy, the sale was not for that reason fraudulent, unless the jury further believed that such representations to Kenworthy were made by Le Eoy with the intent to be communicated to the plaintiff, and to influence him to give Le Eoy credit. To this the plaintiff excepted.

. I discover no error in this charge. It -was, in substance, that to justify a vendor in treating a sale of personal property as void, and retaking" the property, upon the ground of false and fraudulent representations, such representations must be made to him or be made for the purpose of being communicated to him. In other words, false statements made to a stranger, without any intent to influence the conduct of the plaintiff, cannot be made the pretext for avoiding a sale made by the plaintiff, himself. The plaintiff has no right to rely upon statements made to other parties. He cannot know all the circumstances under which they were made, nor the object of making them. For while falsehood, in a moral point of view, is never justifiable, nor wholly excusable, its design and object may be wholly misapplied and unintentiontially enlarged, if made to cover a case, or a party, [547]*547never originally meant to be embraced within its operation. Nor is it a fair and legitimate inference that its subsequent communication to a third person (like the plaintiff) was a natural and legitimate consequence of its original utterance, and should therefore have been foreseen by the defendant, and he consequently be held responsible for it. This is not so. The plaintiff, at all events, had no just reason to- believe that the representations were designed to influence Ms conduct, and therefore had no right to make them the basis of his action. It is, I think, of the essence of- a false and .fraudulent representation that it was designed to influence the conduct of the plaintiff. The fraud must be one perpetrated upon Mm. He has no right to rely upon any other, as the foundation of a business transaction—of a sale of goods. It is, I think, a degree of negligence and rashness which should defeat his action, to pick úp the loose and irresponsible declarations of a party, made for a totally different purpose, and make them, without further inquiry, the basis of his own action. It would, in my opinion, be a dangerous rule, and one which has no just foundation in the law or sound reason.'

It is upon a different principle, and for a totally different purpose, that cotemporaneous representations, made to others, are admissible in evidence. It is simply as aiding to show the quo anima with which the representations to the plaintiff were made. (Cary v. Hotailing, 1 Hill, 316. Hall v. Naylor, 18 N. Y. Rep. 588.) The latter may be to some extent inconclusive or ambiguous upon their face; and it has therefore been considered proper, with a view to throw light upon them, or upon the intent with which they were made— which is in its nature a most material question, and often difficult of solution—to admit evidence of false and suspicious statements made about the same time to other persons. And this with a view only to help to a right understanding of the transaction with the plaintiff, and not to create an orig-. inal and substantive cause of action on his part.

[548]*548This is the fair reading of the judge’s charge; to wit, that representations made to others do not furnish a substantive cause of action to him, unless designed to be communicated to and to operate upon him. If the plaintiff had ■ desired more explicit instructions, he should have sought for them. If he had asked the judge to charge that cotemporaneous fraudulent representations to others, made with a view to obtáin from them money or property thereby, were admissible evidence for the consideration of the jury on the question of fraudulent intent affecting the statements made to the plaintiff, he would doubtless have so charged. But no such request was made. And I am opposed to wresting the language of a judge from its natural and obvious meaning and, so understood, announcing a correct rule of law, simply because by a forced and unnatural construction of language it is barely possible that his remarks might have been so interpreted as' to convey an erroneous notion of the law. The remedy for such an evil is a totally different but simple and natural one, to wit, to ask for more pointed and explicit instructions. . . .

In reaching this conclusion, I have endeavored carefully to distinguish between a representation which is made the basis of an action, and a representation which is proved simply for the purpose of establishing" a fraudulent intent. The first is a substantive cause of action, when accompanied by extrinsic proof of its false and fraudulent character. And this proof may be in fact by showing other representations false, and fraudulent, and from them drawing a like inference in regard to'the first. The former, as I think, must always be made directly to the vendor of the goods, or for the purpose of being communicated to him. The latter may be made to other persons,, being employed merely as evidence of intent. To justify the rescission of a contract on account of fraudulent representations, the contract must be founded upon them—they must be the basis of the contract. It is sometimes said that a purchase of goods is fraudulent when it is [549]*549made with intent not to pay for them. :But there must he satisfactory evidence of such intent. And this evidence consists in misrepresentations or suppressions of facts designed and calculated to deceive. I cannot suppose that a purchase of goods could properly be treated as fraudulent, where there has been a full disclosure of all material facts, to the vendor; notwithstanding the purchaser may have cotemporaneously misrepresented or suppressed these facts to other vendors who might have, on account thereof, a valid cause of.action. I think the charge of the judge was founded on this distinction, and was therefore unexceptionable.

I am of opinion that there was no error in the charge of the judge, and that, the motion for a new trial should be denied.

Miller, J.

The judge, upon, the trial of this cause at the circuit, among other things charged; that if the goods were sold by the plaintiff to William F. Le Boy upon the strength of the representations made by him.

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15 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 636 (New York Supreme Court, 1876)

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Bluebook (online)
37 Barb. 544, 1862 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-kleeck-v-le-roy-nysupct-1862.