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Smith v. Hall

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Sep 19, 1876
67 N.Y. 48 (N.Y. 1876)

Summary

In Smith v. Hall (67 N.Y. 48, 50) it was said: "In the absence of any averment of title in a third person, with which the defendant connected himself, or of a plea that the plaintiff was not the real party in interest, the evidence was clearly inadmissible."

Summary of this case from Wittner v. Burr Avenue Development Corporation

Opinion

Argued June 12, 1876

Decided September 19, 1876

E.H. Benn for the appellant. H. Bowman Smith for the respondent.


The complaint alleged, in substance, that the plaintiff pledged to the defendant $3,000 of town bonds, as security for advances to be made by the defendant. That, afterwards, the plaintiff tendered to the defendant, the full amount of money advanced by him for which the bonds were held in pledge, with the interest thereon, and demanded the bonds, but the defendant refused to deliver them, and had converted them to his own use.

The answer denied these allegations, and averred that the bonds were delivered to the defendant with authority to sell them, and, after paying out of the proceeds a certain indebtedness then existing from the plaintiff to the defendant, to pay the balance of the proceeds to the plaintiff; and in the meantime to make advances to the plaintiff on account of such balance. That the defendant sold the bonds, but the proceeds were insufficient to pay the amount due him.

The answer, also, set up certain counter-claims arising on contract.

On the trial, upon conflicting evidence, the judge submitted to the jury the question of fact, whether the bonds were delivered upon the agreement set up in the answer and testified to by the defendant, or under the agreement testified to by the plaintiff, and charged the jury that if they found that the plaintiff's statement of the case was true, and the bonds were given to secure future advances only, the plaintiff was entitled to recover. He further charged that in case they found for the plaintiff, he was entitled to recover the difference between the $3,000, and the amount of money advanced with interest, which was conceded to be $2,577.14.

Exceptions were taken to these portions of the charge, but they have not been argued upon this appeal. The appellant now insists upon certain exceptions which were taken during the trial, and which are as follows:

The defendant's counsel offered to prove that the plaintiff did not own the claim in suit. Objection was made that this was not set up in the answer and the court sustained the objection.

This ruling was, we think, correct. The pleadings admitted that the bonds were received by the defendant from or on the order of the plaintiff, and the only dispute was as to the terms upon which they were delivered. In the absence of any averment of title in a third person, with which the defendant connected himself, or of a plea that the plaintiff was not the real party in interest, the evidence was clearly inadmissible.

The defendant then offered to prove the amount of the old indebtedness of the plaintiff to the defendant. Objection was taken to this proof and sustained, the court holding that this action was for a conversion and the defendant could not set up a counter-claim.

This ruling, also, was, we think, correct, the action was plainly one for conversion, in which a counter-claim was not allowable. The reply of the plaintiff was no waiver of this objection.

The case of Austin v. Rawdon ( 44 N.Y., 63), relied upon by the appellant to show that this was an action on contract is not an authority in his favor on that point. That action was founded on an agreement by the defendants to deliver certain securities. The allegation that the refusal to deliver them was wrongful, and that the defendants wrongfully disposed of and converted them, did not make it an action of tort. All these acts were simply a violation of their contract. In the present case the right of the plaintiff to the bonds, is founded upon his own title and not upon any promise of the defendant. The wrong done is the conversion of his property, not the mere breach of an agreement to deliver property to him.

The proof offered was not material for any other purpose than to establish a counter-claim. If the bonds were delivered as security for the old indebtedness, or for the purpose of satisfying it, the action must have failed, and the court so charged. It was conceded that the amount tendered was only that of the subsequent advances and interest. The fact of the old indebtedness had been proved; the precise amount of it was of no consequence. The jury having found that the pledge was as security for the new advances only, and the proof offered, not having any bearing on that question, it was wholly irrelevant.

The judgment should be affirmed.

All concur; MILLER, J., not sitting.

Judgment affirmed.


Summaries of

Smith v. Hall

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Sep 19, 1876
67 N.Y. 48 (N.Y. 1876)

In Smith v. Hall (67 N.Y. 48, 50) it was said: "In the absence of any averment of title in a third person, with which the defendant connected himself, or of a plea that the plaintiff was not the real party in interest, the evidence was clearly inadmissible."

Summary of this case from Wittner v. Burr Avenue Development Corporation

In Smith v. Hall (67 N.Y. 48, 50) the court said: "The defendant's counsel offered to prove that the plaintiff did not own the claim in suit.

Summary of this case from Willey v. Cameron, Michel Co., Inc.
Case details for

Smith v. Hall

Case Details

Full title:DARIUS B. SMITH, Respondent, v . FRANCIS G. HALL, Appellant

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Sep 19, 1876

Citations

67 N.Y. 48 (N.Y. 1876)

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