10 Barb. 183 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1850
On the 22d of October, 1845, H. Gr. & L. B. Hotchkiss drew their draft at four months for $2,100 on the plaintiffs, who accepted the same, and paid it at maturity. On the same day the Messrs. Hotchkiss gave to the plaintiffs a receipt, stating that they had received in store, at Phelps, 86 cans of oil of peppermint marked “ D. & 0., New-York,” containing 1687 lbs. oil of peppermint, and which they
The plaintiffs showed that they had purchased bottles in New-York, of the kind and size of those replevied, and sent them to the Messrs. Hotchkiss for the plaintiffs’ oil. That they were made expressly for the plaintiffs, though the witness had no certain knowledge that they were the same as those replevied. They had labels on, similar in size, print and color to those replevied; that the labels were sent with the bottles to the Messrs. Hotchkiss. A witness for the plaintiff stated that in May, 1846, he went with Mr. Cary to Mr. Hotchkiss about the oil; that they talked about the receipts and the oil: that Hotchkiss pointed out the oil, in tin cans, in a room in the rear of his office at Phelps, and said the bottles got there the day before. They went to the barn and saw the men wasMng the bottles. Mr. Cary wanted Hotchkiss to pack the oil as soon as possible. He had the receipts then on the desk, and they looked at them, for the purpose of getting the number of cans the receipts called for. They then left. On the 9th of June following, the witness again called on Hotchkiss, and asked him if he had shipped the flour and oil as talked of by Mr. Cary and the witness when they were there before. He said he had not; that he had received a letter from the plaintiffs that morning and was going to Geneva to see it shipped. The witness and Hotchkiss rode to Geneva together; the witness staid there a short time and
Ho particular cans of oil were set apart for the use of the plaintiffs, when the receipts were given; and the only evidence that any were so set apart, afterwards, was that above detailed. The proof was sufficient to go to the jury, on the two questions whether any were so set apart for the plaintiffs in May and Juno, and whether that oil was the same received by the defendants and replevied in this action.
The Messrs. Hotchkiss were bound, by their receipts, to deliver 3918 lbs. of oil of peppermint to the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs shipped to the Messrs. Hotchkiss bottles and labels like those replevied, to pack this oil; then one of the plaintiffs called on H. with the receipts, and spoke of the oil and receipts, and asked that the oil should be packed as soon as possible. And H. recognizing his obligation to deliver the oil, pointed out oil in cans in an adjoining room; and when afterwards asked if he had shipped the oil, as Gary desired, said he was then going to Geneva to ship it; and he did go to Geneva and began shipping it by the boat H. D. Hatch, when the witness left him engaged in that business. And accordingly 21 boxes came by that boat, in due course, and were received by the defendants, with the names of the Messrs. Hotchkiss on them. With this evidence the jury could hardly draw any other conclusion than that the Messrs. Hotchkiss had set apart, at Geneva, this oil for the plaintiffs, and that it had come to the defendants’ hands. It had been demanded of the defendants before the suit was brought. The judge was correct in refusing to nonsuit the plaintiffs.
The defendants produced evidence on their part, and when the testimony was closed requested the judge to charge according to nine different points stated by them. 1. That the plaintiffs could not recover without showing that the oil was set apart for
This is also a sufficient answer to the 6th point, in which the defendants insisted that they had a right to retain the goods until their claim for advances made to the Messrs. Hotchkiss on previous consignments of goods to them should be satisfied. The judge, however, charged more liberally for the defendants, and said they would have a lien in such case if the business of making advances and receiving goods was a continuous one. The evidence was that Dows called on the defendants in the middle of June, 1846, and asked them if they had advanced on the oil, and they said they had not made any advances on it. Dows said the plaintiffs had advanced to the full value of the oil, or more, and had no objection to the defendants’ having the oil if they would reimburse to the plaintiffs their advance; and the defendants said they would give notice to the plaintiffs before they would make any advance. All this is utterly inconsistent with any claim then existing in favor of the defendants, for any advances.
The Messrs. Hotchkiss consigned oil to the defendants to be sold on commission. The defendants shipped the oil to London, for sale, to Hetherington & Co. and according to the account of that firm, which was admitted to be correct, that firm made the advance through Gr. B. Morewood the defendant, and charged it to the Messrs. Hotchkiss in account directly between the Lon
On the 8th point the judge charged in favor of the defendants. The 9th related to the measure of damages to be allowed to the defendants in case they had succeeded. As that contingency did not occur, that becomes immaterial.
5th point. There had been mutual dealings between Dows and Cary on one side, and the Messrs. Hotchkiss on the other; and accounts were produced at the trial, showing the nature and state of those accounts. The plaintiffs advanced largely to the Messrs. Hotchkiss, and apparently generally trusted for their reimbursement to the credit of the Messrs. Hotchkiss, or to goods sent or to be sent by them on sale. On the 1st of December, 1845, the Messrs. Hotchkiss owed the plaintiffs nearly $4000 cash balance, and on drafts accepted by the plaintiffs but to fall due between that and June following, $37,000 more. The plaintiffs may however have held goods of the Messrs. Hotchkiss unsold, at this time; as their accounts only credit actual sales. Another account, brought down to 1 Feb. 1847, shows due to the plaintiffs at that time about $12,000 in cash, and over $7000 in drafts accepted and due but not paid. This last account includes the three drafts for which the receipts were given as first above mentioned, and charge the Messrs. Hotchkiss with them. According to it the amount for which the Messrs. Hotchkiss were debtors on the 9th nf March, 1846, when the 2d draft was due, was $21,986,74, and by the 23d of June following they had paid $36,845,93. If these were the only items of the account, it would be plain that the plaintiffs had not only been paid these two drafts, but were largely overpaid. But by the 23d of June, 1846, the gross indebtedness of the Messrs. Hotchkiss, including
The defendants requested the judge to charge that the credits to the Messrs. Hotchkiss were to be applied to the satisfaction of the charges against them, in the order of time in which they accrued; and that if the credits exceeded the acceptances and previous charges, then the acceptances were paid, and the lien on the goods ceased. The principle of the defendants was, that in a running account like this, when neither party has applied the payments, they are to be applied first to satisfy the debts oldest in time. In thfe they are sustained by the cases of Seymour v. Van Slyck, (8 Wend. 403, 417, 418;) Allen v. Culver, &c. (3 Denio, 293;) and Clayton's case, (Merivale, 585, and 604 to 611.) Judge Jewett says, (3 Denio, 293,) “In the case of a running account between parties, when there are various items of debit on one side, and of credit on the other, occurring at different times, and no special appropriation of payments constituting the credits, has been made by either party, the successive payments and credits are to be applied in discharge of the items of debit antecedently due in the order of time in which they stand in the account. In other words, each item of payment or credit is applied in extinguishment of the earliest items of debt, until it is exhausted.”
Judge Cowen, in Pattison v. Hull, (9 Cowen 747,) sustained another principle applicable to this case ; that where the parties make no application of the payments, the law will apply them to that debt, a relief from which will be most beneficial to the debtor ; as if the debts be a mortgage and account, or judgment and account, the law will apply them to the mortgage or judgment. On that principle, the first payments here would go to satisfy the acceptances for which an instrument in the nature of a mortgage, was given, viz.: those secured by the receipts in this case.
But while the judge admitted the general principle, he declined charging on that point, as requested, and said it was
The charge and refusal of the judge, in the 5th point, were correct, and affected the merits, at least as to the oil for which the first two drafts were given. Under the charge of the judge, the jury, if they believed the oil set apart, necessarily found for the plaintiffs for all the oil, as well for that covered by the first two receipts, and which Avas paid for as above stated, as for the oil mentioned in the 3d receipt.
The exception taken by the defendant to the several refusals and decisions of the judge, was broad enough to include his decision on this point. His charging that the law was not as the defendants requested him to state it, unless the oil was set apart, Avas also a refusal to charge as the defendant requested.
The 3d and 4th points taken by the defendants, may be considered together. The 3d was, that if this oil was set apart, yet if the plaintiffs agreed that it should be sent to, and sold by the defendants on account of the Messrs. Hotchkiss, such agreement was a waiver of any lien on the oil. The judge may have refused so to charge, because he may have considered that the correspondence from which this agreement, if it existed, was to be inferred, showed that such agreement was conditional, viz.: that the oil should be sent to the defendants and sold, on account of the Messrs. Hotchkiss, but so that the defendants should repay to the plaintiffs the amount of their acceptances. For the same reason, also, he may have refused to charge as requested in the 4th point, that the agreement of the Messrs. Hotchkiss to allow the plaintiffs to be so reimbursed, and the subsequent refusal of the Messrs. Hotchkiss to do this, did not restore the plaintiffs’ lien. To have charged the jury so, would only have misled them, if the plaintiffs had never agreed to waive their lien, except on condition of their being paid by the defendants, in place of the Messrs. Hotchkiss.
The only expressions in the correspondence which can be made to imply a waiver of the plaintiffs’ lien, show that it was only a consent to substitute advances to be made to them from some other house, in place of their claim. “ It is, if you are to get an advance upon this, very important to us that you do so before the 1st of May.” “ If you could realize the importance to us to have money, we think you would send the oil at once forward and get an advance on itespecially as in the previous part of the letter, the plaintiffs engaged to have the oil packed here;
It may be, however, if the accounts show that the drafts were paid, that these letters, in connection with those accounts, would show that the plaintiffs did not claim any lien, but only a general right as creditors, to have property and funds remitted to them to pay their advances or liabilities for the Messrs. Hotchkiss. In other words, that they do not waive any lien; and on the other hand, do not set up any lien. And it might also be, that if'those letters and accounts had been produced before the plaintiffs rested, a nonsuit would have been proper. They do y seem to indicate that the oil was to be forwarded from Geneva for general account of the plaintiffs, and not in consequence of, or in recognition of, any lien in their favor. That matter need not now be passed upon.
There should be a new trial; costs to abide the event.