7 Daly 45 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1877
There was no ground
The defendants had no right to- sell it. They had no charges for keeping it. They had agreed to keep it gratuitously, and if unwilling to do so any longer, and they meant to charge for keeping it thereafter, they were bound to show that they had notified the plaintiff to that effect. If they could not notify him, not knowing where he was, or where a letter would reach him, then their course was to put it on storage with a person who follows that business for hire. Instead of doing this they sent it to auction., where it was sold, on their account, for $10; the machine having cost $1,000 to build; and at the lowest estimate upon the evidence, it was of the value of $120. This was a conversion, whatever may have been their private intent (Pease v. Smith, 61 N. Y. 477).
They gave evidence of a very defective kind to show that they notified the plaintiff to take it away, or that they would sell it to pay costs and charges. There were no costs or charges then, nor could there be any under the agreement. The evidence was simply that their bookkeeper addressed á letter to the plaintiff at Washington, to that effect. It was not shown that the plaintiff was there, nor when this letter was sent, or to what address in Washington, or that it was duly mailed. One of the defendants was told, before this letter was written, that the plaintiff could be seen somewhere in Greene street, and testified that when
The judgment of the general term should therefore be reversed, and the judgment of the trial term affirmed.
Robinson and Larremore, JJ., concurred.
Ordered accordingly.