West v. Lynch

1 N.Y. City Ct. Rep. 225
CourtNew York Marine Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1878
StatusPublished

This text of 1 N.Y. City Ct. Rep. 225 (West v. Lynch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Marine Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West v. Lynch, 1 N.Y. City Ct. Rep. 225 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1878).

Opinion

McAdam, J.

The minds of Lawrence and of the defendant met as to the price, terms and subject of the sale. Lawrence was to convey his house, 102 East Thirty-eighth street, to the defendant, for $22,000 in diamonds. The house was put in at $34,500, subject to a mortgage of $12,500, leaving Lawrence’s equity $22,000, the amount before mentioned.

The diamonds required no particular identification, because Lawrence was to receive any diamonds so long as they were worth the stipulated $22,000. In other words, the basis of the contract was, that the diamonds, ¡being marketable, and easily converted into money, were to be deemed the equivalent of $22,000 in cash. 'The value of the diamonds, in the nature of things, had to be fixed by appraisement, or by some like ¡appropriate mode, their identity being of as little con-sequence (according to the spirit of the contract) as ¡the identity of so many gold or silver dollars would have' been, if the agreement had called for that kind of ¡coin instead of precious stones. The plaintiff brought [227]*227the contracting parties together, under a promise made by the defendant to pay him $500 for his services.

Under this employment, the plaintiff procured for the defendant a person, able and willing to carry out the proposed contract, and the evidence sufficiently establishes that the failure to consummate it was owing to the refusal of the defendant to consent to any reasonable mode of determining the value of the diamonds which she proposed to give as the representative of the stipulated $22,000.

The defendant had no right to expect Lawrence (who was not a diamond expert), to rely either upon his own imperfect judgment, or upon the defendant’s representations, in praise of her own goods. This would be exacting an advantage which no man of ordinary intelligence, purchasing $22,000 worth of diamonds, could with propriety or safety concede.

The broker did all he could to have the sale consummated, and it was neither his fault, nor that of his customer, that it fell through. The contract, as to the broker, must therefore be regarded as complete, for it is a maxim of the law, that that is certain which may be made certain; cerium est quad cerium reddi potest (Co. Litt. 43 ; Bouvier, vol. 1, p. 214, subd. 3).

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Related

Burhans v. Tibbits
7 How. Pr. 21 (New York Supreme Court, 1851)
Blackley v. Sheldon
7 Johns. 32 (New York Supreme Court, 1810)
Wells v. Cox
1 Daly 515 (New York Court of Common Pleas, 1865)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 N.Y. City Ct. Rep. 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-lynch-nymarct-1878.