Webster v. Zielly

52 Barb. 482, 1866 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 206
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 14, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 52 Barb. 482 (Webster v. Zielly) 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
Webster v. Zielly, 52 Barb. 482, 1866 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 206 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1866).

Opinion

By the Court, Potter, J.

1. It is claimed by the defendant, that at the time of making the contracts in question, the subject of the contracts, hop roots, was real estate; that they were perennial, and not “fruotus industriales,” and therefore the contract was within the statute of frauds, (2 R. S. 134, 135, §§ 6, 8,) which requires the agreement to be in writing, &c. I think there is no question now, that hop roots, when rooted in the ground, are a part of the real estate of the proprietor of the soil, and would pass to the purchaser by a conveyance of the land, (Bishop v. Bishop, 11 N. Y. Rep. 124,) and wóuld pass to the heir by inheritance. In this case it was no portion of the plaintiffs’ real estate, which they agreed to sell, or to purchase for the defendant; nor was it the real estate of any other person, that the plaintiffs agreed to deliver to the defend- | ant. f The contract was an executory contract to purchase, | or to sell and deliver to the defendant, an article of merichandise, which, when delivered, would be personal property. Doubtless, in the very nature of things, both parties to the contract contemplated that the hop roots to be delivered, in order to be of any value, must, at the time of making the contract, of necessity, be then rooted in the ground. They could not well, otherwise, be preserved, and they would, therefore, at that time, be the real estate of somebody. It is equally fair and legitimate to presume that both parties contemplated, at the time, that before delivery a severance from the freehold must take place, so that the article, when delivered, would be personalty. It was in that character that the article was to be delivered and received. Had the agreement been for a present or executed sale of the hop roots of the plaintiffs, then forming a part of their real estate, even though the plaintiffs were to make the severance, so as to make the article personal estate at the time of delivery, it would present a different feature. In this case the plaintiffs neither agreed to sell, nor the defendant to purchase, an interest in real [485]*485estate. In this respect the case is distinguished from Green v. Armstrong, (1 Denio, 552,) which was a parol agreement, by which the defendant was to sell trees standing and growing on his land to the plaintiff, with liberty to cut and remove them at any time within twenty years. This was clearly an agreement to sell an interest in real estate. Hop roots, when severed, are personal estate; they are a market commodity. It was such a commodity that the plaintiffs agreed to sell and deliver, and if the agreement was otherwise valid, they were responsible for its non-performance. I apprehend that a sawyer may make a valid executory contract with another person for the delivery to him of a quantity of saw logs at his mill, and it would be none the less valid, if it was in the contemplation of the parties that the contractor expected to purchase standing trees, or a timber lot of trees, to be converted into logs. Standing trees are real estate, but when severed and converted into saw logs, they become a market commodity, and are personal estate. So, I think, a sculptor or a stonecutter may make a good executory contract to sell and deliver’, or to manufacture and deliver, a piece of statuary, a monument or mantelpiece, though the parties may contemplate, or even know, that the marble out of which it is to be prepared, is, at the time of making the contract, in the quarry, and part of the real estate of somebody ; and that severance from the real estate is a matter of necessity before the contract can be consummated. Cases innumerable can be supposed, of this character—■ mineral waters, lime, cabinet and coopers’ work, &e.

2. But there is another ground in this case that would take the case out of the statute of frauds, if otherwise within it. I think there was a note, or- memorandum in writing, of the contract subscribed by the defendant, the party to be charged thereby. The statute does not require that this memorandum should be made at the time of making the agreement; it may be made at anytime after-[486]*486wards, and before the time for its consummation. The parol contract was made with the plaintiffs, by the brother and agent of the defendant. On the 19th" April, 1867, and after the plaintiffs had purchased, according to direction, 200 bushels of the hop roots, the defendant wrote to the plaintiffs, saying: “ I wrote to my brother a few days ago, to buy another 100 bushels of hop roots; since then, roots begin to come in, and I think you had better hold on, and not buy any more for a day or two, until I see how it is going. Take all you have contracted. If it is 200 bushels, all right; but if not, hold on. I will write to James in a day or two.” This letter, I think, is not only a ratification of the contract, but is a sufficient note or-memorandum of the contract, in the words of "the statute. It was held, in Gale v. Nixon, (6 Cowen, 445,) that a written recognition of a contract, void by the statute of frauds, though after it is entered into, will make it binding. (See also Robt. on Frauds,. 121; Comyn on Cont. 109, 110.)

3. There is another ground upon which this contract can be sustained; to wit, that of an original contract or undertaking on the part of the defendant to employ the plaintiffs to buy hop roots for the defendant, and to pay them as-a compensation therefor, six dollars per bushel; or in other words, for work and labor to be done and performed and materials found and for money paid, laid out and expended for the defendant. The testimony was as follows: “James Zielly, (plaintiffs’ brother and agent,) wanted to know what we would buy a hundred bushels of hop roots for, to be delivered at the depot of the Ogdensburgh and Lake Champlain railroad, here, for his brother ? We agreed to luy them for him, at six dollars per bushel. He was to pay us $50 down, and the balance at the time of the delivery, the delivery to be at the first ‘ hop rooting.’ I told him we should have to pick them up of different ones, and we could get the first hop roots. I expended my own money in the purchase of roots.” There was no [487]*487employment of the plaintiffs to take the joh, and incur the expense of purchasing hop roots for the defendant, with a fixed compensation. The statute of frauds has no application to such a case. (Crookshank v. Burrell, 18 John. 58. Sewall v. Fitch, 8 Cowen, 219. Rondeau v. Wyatt, 2 H. Black. 63.)

4. The main point of defense, upon which reliance was made was, that, assuming the agreement to be a contract for the sale of personal property exceeding $50 in value, and there being, as conceded, neither a memorandum m writing nor a delivery of any part of the property, no part of the purchase money was paid down at the time of the making the contract. The $50 that was to have been paid by the terms of the oral agreement, was not paid at the time the parties first entered into the contract; but a few days afterward the defendant’s agent called upon the plaintiffs and then paid it, and it was accepted by the plaintiffs. Upon the authority. of the case of Bissell v. Balcom, (40 Barb. 98,) this would bring the case within the statute of frauds. By that case, the subsequent payment of the money, is not a compliance with the statute which requires it to be paid at the time.

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Bluebook (online)
52 Barb. 482, 1866 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webster-v-zielly-nysupct-1866.