32 Barb. 396 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1860
By the Court,
The plaintiff recovered a verdict in this action for the sum of $5000, the value of the goods claimed in the complaint, and for $281.96 damages, at the Kings circuit before Mr. Justice Lott, which was afterwards set aside at the special term, on motion of the defendant, and thereupon the plaintiff appealed.
The action is brought to recover the possession of certain bundles of telegraph wire shipped from London, by the plaintiff, to one Sherman Webster, in New York, in October, 1856. The defendant claimed the property as owner, by purchase from Webster on credit. The title of the plaintiff to the property is by no means free from doubt; for portions of the evidence tends to show that Webster and Andrews, the plaintiff, were joint owners, while the invoice of the goods and the letters and correspondence of the plaintiff tended to establish a sale from him to Webster, the receiving of the notes
It is not claimed that the defendant took these goods tortiously. The most that the plaintiff asserts is that they were consigned to Sherman Webster to sell for cash, for the benefit of the plaintiff, and that Webster, in disregard of his instructions, made the sale to the defendant and received his paper in payment, payable on time. This theory implies that the goods, came to the possession of the defendant by delivery from the plaintiff’s agent who had authority to sell and deliver. This state of things imposed upon the plaintiff the burden of proving a conversion by the defendant. This he attempted to do; for he proved that he demanded the goods from the defendant before the commencement of the action, and the defendant failed to deliver them. To render a demand and refusal equivalent to direct proof of a conversion, it must appear that the defendant had the actual possession at the time of the demand, and thus had power to comply with it; or that he had before that time parted with the goods fraudulently with a view to evade the demand, or for his own benefit. It is an undisputed fact in the case that the goods were seized by the collector, under the revenue laws of the United States, as they entered the port of Hew York, under a claim that they were forfeited in consequence of a fraudulent undervaluation in the invoice. That an action for their condemnation was immediately commenced in the United States district court. That the goods were taken under the process of the court, by its proper offi
Lott, Emott and Brown, Justices.]
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.