Vosburgh v. . Diefendorf

23 N.E. 801, 119 N.Y. 357, 29 N.Y. St. Rep. 448, 74 Sickels 357, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1094
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 25, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by94 cases

This text of 23 N.E. 801 (Vosburgh v. . Diefendorf) 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
Vosburgh v. . Diefendorf, 23 N.E. 801, 119 N.Y. 357, 29 N.Y. St. Rep. 448, 74 Sickels 357, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1094 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

*361 O’Brien, J.

This action was upon an instrument, in form, a promissory note, of which the following is a copy:

“ $2,000. Gouvebnbub, N. Y., December 15, 1886.
“ Sixty days after date I promise to pay B. T. Van Yalkenburgh or bearer Two Thousand Dollars at Spraker’s National Bank, Canajoharie, N. Y., value received, with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum.
“JOHN F. DIEFENDOBF.”

The defendant is the maker of the note, and at its date was a farmer who lived in the town of Boot, about ten miles from Canajoharie, Avhere, by the terms of the instrument, it was payable.

The defenses interposed to the note are,

1. That it was obtained from defendant by fraud and deceit practiced upon him by the payee.

2. That its only consideration was an interest in a patent right for improvements in fire kindlers, and that it did not comply with the provisions of chapter 65 of the Laws of 1877, requiring the words, “ given for a patent right,” to be written or printed across the face thereof.

3. That the note was void for usury, in that, before it had any legal inception, it was transferred to the plaintiff for one-half its face value.

4. That the note was never executed or delivered as a note or valid obligation, and that between the original parties thereto it had been cancelled and destroyed, and that the plaintiff was not a bona fide holder.

The defendant testified at the trial and gave his version of the transaction, which resulted in his signing the note in question. In brief it is this: In the month of December, 1886, one Henderson, who falsely represented that he was interested in a firm, composed of himself, the payee of the note, and another person, that was engaged in manufacturing fire kindlers under a patent, which was a valuable invention, and that the business promised large gains, called upon the defendant at his house and induced him to *362 go to Rochester with him, to the end that he might obtain an interest in the business, or be employed in connection with it. The defendant went to Rochester, and there was introduced to Yan. Yallcenburgh, the payee of the note in question. It does not distinctly appear what took place at Rochester, except, that the defendant gave his notes for $8,000, on the representations, as he claims, that these notes were not to be-used or transferred, and were simply memoranda showing his one-third interest in the business of manufacturing and selling fire kindlers. While defendant was at Rochester Henderson disappeared, and it seems went to Canajoharie and negotiated the notes thus obtained. In the meantime Yan Yallcenburgh induced the defendant to go with him to Gouverneur, where they arrived a day or two before the date of the note in question. The defendant supposed lie was to aid in some way in the sale of the right to manufacture and sell the fire kindlersUnder the patent in which he supposed he had, or was about to have, an interest as an equal partner "with Henderson and Yan Yallcenburgh. On arriving at Gouveneur, they went to a hotel and there met two other persons, who' pretended to be anxious to purchase the right covered by the patent for the state of Iowa. These two persons with the defendant, and the payee of the note in question, went to a room and there the defendant was induced to sign two notes of $2,000 each, of which the note in suit is one. Yan Yallcenburgh pretended to sell, and the two persons before referred to to buy, two-thirds, of the right covered by the patent in the state of Iowa for $8,000, and in the presence of defendant each of them gave, or pretended to give, to Yan Yallcenburgh his note for $4,000. Defendant was told by Yan Yallcenburgh that, in order to-consummate this sale, it would be necessary for him to go through the form of giving his note for the same amount, that is to say $4,000, in order to represent the interest that the firm still retained in that state. That after the transaction was completed this note could be returned to him, and that, in any event, the paper would not be used as a note, or transferred. The defendant assented to this arrangment and Yan Yallcenburgh *363 thereupon drew, and procured the defendant to sign and deliver,, the two notes of $2,000 each. After all the parties had left the room and defendant supposed that the transaction was completed, and that the notes he signed had answered the purpose for which they were intended, he called the attention of Yan Yalkenburgh to the promise he had made to destroy the notes, whereupon he drew from his- pocket two pieces of paper that appeared like the notes defendant had signed and burnt them in defendant’s presence. The defendant and Yan Yalkenburgh then parted, the defendant returning to his home, in Montgomery county, and without seeing either Henderson or Yan Yalkenburgh afterwards.

The plaintiff claimed to have purchased the note in suit from one Richmond, a few days after its date, and Richmond claimed to have bought it the same day from Henderson. The testimony was that Richmond, Henderson and the plaintiff were together at the time of the transaction that resulted in the transfer of the note to the plaintiff. That Henderson delivered to Richmond the two1 notes of $2,000 each, made at Gouveneur, for- half their face value ; that Richmond kept one of them himself and delivered the other to the plaintiff who furnished the money paid Henderson for it, and directed Richmond. to purchase it. Richmond testified that he had no knowledge of the fraudulent origin of the paper,, or of any fact constituting a defense thereto by the maker. The two persons who-were present with the defendant and the payee of the note at Gouverneur when it was made testified in behalf of the plaintiff, and in contradiction of the defendant’s version; but neither the plaintiff, Henderson nor Yan Yalkenburgh were sworn.

It is plain that the jury could well have found, from the testimony of the defendant and the facts and circumstances-surrounding the transaction, that the note in question was procured from the defendant through a gross fraud practiced upon him by the payee. This was the condition of the case when the proofs closed. The trial court thereupon ruled that the plaintiff, as matter of law, was entitled to recover the amount *364 he had paid for the note, but if anything beyond that was claimed, then the case was one for the jury. The plaintiff elected to take a verdict for one-half the face of the note and interest, and the court, against the defendant’s objection and exception, directed a verdict accordingly, and the judgment entered thereon has been reversed by the General Term.

Apart from the claim that the plaintiff derived title to the note from one who was a 'bona fide holder, and, therefore, succeeded to all his rights, which will be noticed hereafter, he was not entitled to recover as the case stood. For all the purposes of this appeal it must be assumed that the note was procured by fraud practiced upon the defendant by the payee, because evidence was given from which such fact could have been found by the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.E. 801, 119 N.Y. 357, 29 N.Y. St. Rep. 448, 74 Sickels 357, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vosburgh-v-diefendorf-ny-1890.