Wilcox Silver Plate Company v. . Green

72 N.Y. 17, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 473
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 72 N.Y. 17 (Wilcox Silver Plate Company v. . Green) 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
Wilcox Silver Plate Company v. . Green, 72 N.Y. 17, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 473 (N.Y. 1878).

Opinion

Rapallo, J.

The complaint alleges the sale and delivery by the plaintiff to the defendant at Jackson, in the State of Mississippi, of certain goods, consisting of articles of plated ware of the value of $893.92.

The answer contains a general denial, and also sets up that the goods mentioned in the complaint were sold and delivered by the plaintiff, through its agent at Jackson, to a voluntary association called the Mississippi State Fair Association, acting through a committee, of which the defendant was a member, and that they were bought for the purpose of being used as premiums at a fair of such association; that the defendant was not at the time a member of the association, and that, in making the purchase, the committee acted collectively as agents of the association merely, and on its sole responsibility, and that the purchase was not made by any member of the committee individually, or by the members thereof jointly as individuals, and that the goods were never delivered to or received by the defendant, but were delivered to the association.

The traveling agent of the plaintiff, who made the sale, testified that in October, 1869, he met the defendant at his banking house at Jackson, and that he, together with several other members of the committee then present, settled upon a *20 list of goods they wanted; that before writing out the list the witness asked who was to be responsible for the goods, to whom they should be charged; that defendant replied: “ Charge them to me; I am good for them,” and he referred to the Park Bank of New York for his responsibility; that witness afterwards, from the memorandum then taken, made out an order and sent it to his principal, the plaintiff, in Connecticut. The witness further testified that the defendant, or one of his associates, in his presence, directed the goods to be sent by the Adams Express. The plaintiff was aware that they were to be used for the purposes of the fair.

Evidence was then given to the effect that the goods so ordered were packed in boxes, and, after the plaintiff had satisfied himself by inquiring at the Park Bank as to the solvency of the defendant, they were shipped by Adams Express, addressed to the defendant at Jackson, Mississippi.

Upon this proof the plaintiff rested, and the defendant moved for a nonsuit, upon the sole ground that no delivery to the defendant had been proved.

The court properly denied the motion. A delivery to a carrier, pursuant to the direction of the purchaser, is a good delivery to him. Though not sufficient to constitute an acceptance under the statute of frauds (61 N. Y., 1), it is sufficient to constitute a delivery. The motion for a nonsuit, in the form in which it was made, raised no question under the statute of frauds. The ground stated was not that acceptance had not been proved, but that no proof of delivery had been made. This ground was clearly untenable.

The defendant then gave evidence in support of the defense set up in the answer. The directors of the fair association, who were present at the giving of the order for the goods, contradicted the statement of plaintiff's witness, as to the defendant directing the goods to be charged to him, but confirmed his statement that they were ordered in the presence of the defendant, and that the agent was requested to make a list of them- which he did. They alleged, however, that *21 the sale was made to the fair association, and that the agent was so informed, and did not require any individual guaranty. That the goods arrived at Jackson, and were exhibited at the store of Mr. Taylor, one of the directors of the association, who was present at defendant’s banking house at the giving of the order, and took the principal part in selecting the articles, and that they were afterward distributed as prizes by the association.

The judge submitted to the jury whether the purchase was made on the individual undertaking of Mr. Green, as stated by the plaintiff’s agent, or whether it ivas made for the association, as stated by defendant’s witnesses. He also submitted to them the question, whether the defendant agreed to be responsible for the goods himself individually, or only as surety for the association, and charged them that if he only agreed to be surety, the contract was void under the statute of frauds. No exception was taken to these portions of the charge. The court then proceeded to instruct the jury, that if they should come to the conclusion that the defendant agreed to purchase the goods as an individual, the next question for them to determine was whether the goods were delivered to him, and in regard to that question he charged, that if the defendant stated to the plaintiff’s agent that the goods were to bo sent by Adams' Express, directed to him at Jackson, Mississippi, and they were so addressed and delivered to the express company to carry, and afterward reached Jackson, and then went into the hands of the men who were on the committee, and present in defendant’s banking house when the transaction took place, that was in the eye of the law a delivery to the defendant. To this portion of the charge an exception was taken.

The exception cannot be sustained. The facts submitted to the jury, if found by them in favor of the plaintiff, would clearly constitute a good delivery to the defendant. The question of acceptance is a separate matter, and was subsequently raised by the requests to charge. That question is material only in case it should be held that the stat *22 ute of frauds of this State is applicable to the contract in question, which was made in Mississippi.

The defendant made three requests to charge, which were refused: First. That the contract of sale being oral, delivery to Adams’ Express Company for the purpose of transportation was not delivery to the defendant. The ruling upon this request has already been shown to have been correct. The second request was to charge, that unless a promise, in writing, on the part of the defendant is shown, then, inasmuch as no delivery of the goods to the defendant was shown, a delivery to the Mississippi State Fair Association was not a delivery to the defendant. This request was improper, as it assumed a fact which it was for the jury to determine, viz., that no delivery to the defendant had been shown. The third request was to charge, that no acceptance or receipt of the goods by the defendant was shown, and therefore, the contract being an oral one, the section of the statute requiring that part of the goods shall be delivered, or the price or part of it paid, applied to this transaction.

This request raises the two material questions in the case: First, whether there was any evidence of acceptance, and if not, whether the statute of frauds of this State applies to a contract made in Mississippi, in the absence of proof of the existence of any such statute in that State.

In the form in which the case is made up, it is not necessary to determine the last question, provided there is any evidence of acceptance, for the refusal was not to submit the question of acceptance to the jury, or to instruct them that acceptance was requisite, but to charge them that no acceptance was shown. If, therefore, there was evidence from which the jury might have found an acceptance, the request was properly refused, even if the statute of frauds applied.

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Bluebook (online)
72 N.Y. 17, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilcox-silver-plate-company-v-green-ny-1878.