52 Barb. 288 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1867
Whether the deceased employed the plaintiff to sell the tavern stand, which he had
The cases to which we have been referred for the doctrine that the contract was within the statute of frauds, and void, do not, I think, affect the question now involved. (See Bander v. Snyder, 5 Barb. 63; Lathrop v. Hoyt, 7 id. 59; Ryan v. Dox, 25 id. 440.) In each of these cases the plaintiff claimed under a parol agreement, made upon the sale of real estate, and there was no such contract to sell as was presented upon the trial of the case at bar. They relate to contracts clearly within the statute, and have no application to any other.
I think that the evidence introduced upon the trial to establish that the plaintiff was subjected to expenses in negotiating the sale, was competent. The plaintiff showed that he had employed another party to aid him in conducting the negotiations, and that he agreed to pay, and actually did pay, that party for the services rendered. This testimony was a part of the res gestee, and clearly admissible.
It was also proper to" prove that the wife of the plaintiff, and not the plaintiff himself, occupied the tavern stand, and that the plaintiff acted as her agent in conducting the hotel. This fact, if established, would exonerate the
For the same reason, it was competent to prove that the deceased had signed a lease for the tavern stand, as surety for the plaintiff’s wife; and the loss of the lease was, I think, sufficiently established to warrant the introduction of parol evidence of its contents. But if any error was committed in allowing the introduction of proof that the plaintiff acted as the agent of his wife, I think it was not material, and could have done no injury to the defendants. According to the contract, as found by the referee, the plaintiff was not bound to pay the rent, being liable only for the interest on the money paid by the deceased. It is also very manifest, I think, that the deceased did not intend that the plaintiff should pay him, as rent, any amount beyond the interest of the money he had paid for the tavern stand.
I think the referee properly allowed interest on the amount found due, between the date of the two reports, being about one month’s interest. He made the last report by the order of the court, and I do not discover that he acted without authority in the allowance of interest. He still retained control over the case, and was not divested of fiis power because he had made a report. But if he had erred in that particular, the amount could be very easily deducted from the judgment, and it would furnish no sufficient reason for its reversal.
An examination of the case has satisfied my mind that it was rightly disposed of by the referee; and as no error was committed, I think the judgment entered upon his report should be affirmed, with costs of the appeal.
leclclmm, Miller and Ingalls, Justices.]