Zabriskie v. . Smith

13 N.Y. 322
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by137 cases

This text of 13 N.Y. 322 (Zabriskie v. . Smith) 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
Zabriskie v. . Smith, 13 N.Y. 322 (N.Y. 1855).

Opinion

*329 Denio, J.

The questions of law arising upon this appeal appear to be the following : 1. Whether the complaint sets forth a cause of action ; 2. Whether the evidence on the part of the plaintiffs, standing uncontradicted, made out a case suitable to be submitted to the jury, or whether, on the contrary, they ought to have been nonsuited; 3. Whether the sales of goods made by the plaintiffs to Walter H. Smith, subsequent to April, 1848, were so far out of the influence of the alleged false representation that the consideration of them should have been taken from the jury ; 4. Whether the interest of John A. C. Gray was assignable; if not, 5. Whether the action in the names of the other partners can be sustained, in consequence of the defendant having omitted to demur to the complaint,; and lastly, if the last point is determined against the defendant, whether the value of the interest of Gray ought to have been deducted from the recovery.

(1.) The complaint imputes to the defendant the sending of the message with a view of inducing the plaintiffs to sell goods to Walter H, Smith; and the message imports that the defendant had examined into Smith’s affair's with sufficient attention to enable him to express the- <.pinion that he might safely be trusted. This is somewhat qualified by the promise that in case of anything adveioc happening they should be -taken care of, a promise which, it is admitted, cannot be availed of in this action ; still, with this deduction from its force, it was a representatii >n of considerable strength, that the defendant had -ascertained that-Smith was, in a business point of view, trustworthy. The second branch of the message, as set out, is equally strong; that the defendant had talked with Smith, and was satisfied he was solvent and was going on well. Such a representation, from a person entitled to confidence, would be calculated to exercise more or less influence upon the mind of a dealer. Then the breach is that Smith was in fact insolvent, and the defendant had not made any such examina *330 tion as he represented, and was unacquainted with Smith’s affairs, except to know that he was indebted $4000. It is unnecessary to remark here upon the alleged fraudulent concealment, for I am of opinion that to represent, of a man entirely insolvent, that you have examined into his affairs, and consider him solvent and worthy of credit, and that he is going on well, when all you know of his business condition is, that he owes a large sum of money, is actionable, if the representation was made from bad motives, in order to induce a credit.

In Allen v. Addington (11 Wend., 374, 386), the court for the correction of errors decided that in an action of this kind the plaintiff must aver that the false representation was made with an intention to deceive and defraud him. Under our present system of pleading, I conceive that a complaint should contain the substance of a declaration under the former system. It is sufficient, however, that the requisite allegation can be fairly gathered from all the averments in the complaint, though the statement of them may be argumentative, and the complaint deficient in technical language. In this complaint the message is characterized as false and deceitful, and it is averred that by means of it the plaintiffs have been deceived and defrauded, and that the defendant wrongfully and deceitfully encouraged and persuaded the plaintiffs to sell the goods. And it is further alleged that the defendant, when he sent the message, well knew that the plaintiffs would rely upon its truth,, and that it would induce them to sell and deliver the goods to W. H. Smith, upon credit, when he was not a person to be safely trusted. This language, taken together, I think, by a reasonable intendment, makes out the allegation of bad faith and evil intention on the part of the defendant, though a concise averment in the terms mentioned in the books would have been better pleading, and more in accordance with the spirit of the Code.

*331 (2.) The sending of the message and its delivery by Sayre were proved, and though it varied slightly from the statement in the complaint, the defendant did not avail himself of the variance in the manner pointed out by the Code. (Catlin v. Gunter, 1 Kern., 368.) Its terms and the circumstances under which it was sent showed clearly that the intention was to induce the plaintiffs to give credit to Smith. The defendant could have had no other motive in sending it. Now, although it was not a very strong recommendation of the responsibility of Smith, it tended to convey the opinion that he was a safe person to be trusted with a quantity of goods, and that the defendant had ascertained such to be the fact from conversation with him and an examination of his affairs. The most important circumstance respecting the solvency of a business man, is the amount of the debts which he owes. The plaintiffs proved, by the defendant’s own sworn declaration, that he had no knowledge whatever of the amount of Smith’s debts. It appeared, moreover, that Smith was at that time indebted to the defendant in a sum which, considered in reference to the extent of his business, was large. This, of course, the defendant knew, for the debt was in part owing to him, and as to the rest he was surety for its payment. Good faith required that the existence of these debts should have been communicated to the plaintiffs. It was an important qualification of the information actually conveyed by the message, and should have formed a part of it. Had the plaintiffs been informed that Smith was going on at the sufferance of the defendant, who could at any time shut up his store, it is improbable that they would have trusted him. The defendant volunteered to inform the plaintiffs as to Smith’s business condition, with a view to procure credit for him, and it was disingenuous to withhold this material circumstance. I think the case was a fit one to be passed upon by the jury, and that the nonsuit was properly denied.

*332 (3.) I think, too, it was a question for the jury whether the sales made to Smith in the summer and autumn of 1848 could have been influenced by the recommendation made in April of that year. It is quite a different question from that presented in the cases referred to by the defendant’s counsel upon guaranties. (Rogers v. Warner, 8 Johns., 119; Whitney v. Groot, 24 Wend., 82.) These cases turned upon the construction of the language of a contract, and the question was whether it contemplated a single transaction or a series of transactions. In the case under consideration, the defendant is charged with infusing into the minds of the plaintiffs false views as to Smith’s business condition and circumstances ; and the question is whether, considering the defendant to be culpable, the wrong impressions thus inculcated would have been likely to operate for á period of between six and seven months. It would be manifestly unreasonable to limit the defendant’s liability strictly to the very time of making the recommendation, for it would have been as likely to operate upon the plaintiffs’ minds at any time during the same season, and within a few weeks oi months, as at the time when it was given.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 N.Y. 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zabriskie-v-smith-ny-1855.