148 N.Y. 129 | NY | 1895
This action was brought upon a written agreement entered into between the plaintiff and defendant on the 5th day of May, 1871. This agreement recited that the defendant had recovered a judgment against the Marine Bank *132 of Chicago, November 2, 1870, for $1,282.62, in which action an attachment had been issued and levied by the sheriff of New York upon a judgment which the bank had obtained against one Tunis Van Brunt on March 1, 1867, for $6,858.12. The agreement further recited that the plaintiff desired to acquire the title to this last-named judgment, and provided for the following proceedings to accomplish that result: The defendant was to issue execution upon his judgment against the bank, and direct the sale thereon of the judgment which the bank had against Van Brunt and which had already been attached in the defendant's suit. The defendant further agreed to bid in the judgment on the execution sale at the plaintiff's risk for the whole amount of his own judgment and interest and immediately thereafter transfer the interest in the judgment thus acquired upon that sale to the plaintiff. The plaintiff on his part agreed to pay to the defendant, and did pay down the sum of $260 to cover sheriff's fees and charges to be incurred in thus obtaining title to the judgment, and, on the transfer to him of the judgment, the further sum of $1,372.36. The agreement contained a proviso to the effect that in case the sheriff upon the execution sale should receive and accept a higher bid the agreement should be void.
The defendant then, in performance of the agreement, procured a direction from the court to the sheriff to sell the judgment under an execution. The defendant's lien resting upon an attachment, an application to the court for that purpose was proper. The sheriff sold the judgment to the defendant for $1,372.36, and the defendant transferred it to the plaintiff who paid him that sum, which, together with the $260 previously advanced, makes $1,632.36 that plaintiff paid to the defendant in order to procure the title to the judgment.
What the plaintiff now complains of is that, although he has paid this money to the defendant under the agreement, and although both parties have complied with the forms prescribed by the agreement to give the plaintiff title to the judgment, he has obtained no such title or any interest whatever. It appears that the judgment thus sold by the defendant *133 to the plaintiff was never in fact levied upon by any attachment, and, hence, the execution sale was void and no title was acquired by the defendant under it, and none, of course, ever transferred to the plaintiff. That, at least, is the ground upon which the plaintiff seeks to recover back in this action the money which he paid and advanced, and for which, as he claims, he received nothing.
It appears, or at least is alleged, that Van Brunt, the person against whom the plaintiff desired to acquire the judgment, was solvent, so that if the plaintiff had succeeded in obtaining a valid transfer from the defendant, the former could have collected the whole sum due upon the judgment. The learned court below held, very properly, that there was to be implied from the transaction a representation or warranty on the part of the defendant that the judgment which he sold and transferred to the plaintiff not only existed as such, but that he had acquired a lien upon it by virtue of a valid attachment, issued in his own suit and duly levied upon the judgment against Van Brunt, and that he was in a position to acquire title to the judgment by sale upon execution. The agreement, as the court said, rested upon the assumption by both parties that the defendant had a valid lien by attachment upon the judgment which he agreed to transfer and which would enable him, by means of the proceedings stated in the agreement, to acquire good title and to transfer the same to the plaintiff. There is no ground for holding that the plaintiff intended simply to acquire whatever title the defendant could confer through an execution sale. When the plaintiff paid to the defendant over $1,600, he certainly expected to receive something in return. While it might be assumed that he intended to take some chances with respect to its collection, yet it evidently was the intention and understanding of both parties that the defendant could and would confer a valid title to it, and this, at least, it must be assumed the defendant impliedly warranted. Since this point was determined in the plaintiff's favor by the learned court below, and is not seriously contested here, it is not necessary to enter *134
into any extensive discussion in support of our views, which are substantially the same as those expressed by the learned General Term. It will be quite sufficient to refer to some of the cases bearing on the general subject. (Schwinger v. Hickok,
The plaintiff advanced his money on a contract and did not get that for which he paid. There was a failure of consideration, and there is no injustice in requiring the defendant to pay back the price.
The plaintiff has been defeated in the action not, it seems, because the law was against him, but because he failed to show that the title to the judgment, which he got from the defendant, was in fact invalid. The record does not show upon what ground the complaint was dismissed at the trial, but it appears from the opinion of the learned General Term that the dismissal was affirmed on that ground. The records of this court show that the plaintiff attempted to enforce the judgment against the estate of Van Brunt, who died, and that he failed upon the ground that the attachment was never served upon the Chicago bank (the owner), but upon its attorney, who had procured it, and that no lien was ever acquired by such service. (In re Flandrow,
Their legal effect was to establish, at least prima facie,
the fact that the attachment was executed and served, not upon the owner of the judgment attached, but his attorney of record, and consequently that no lien upon the judgment was ever acquired by the defendant, and no title to it ever acquired by him or transferred to the plaintiff. It should be observed also that the defendant's counsel made no specific objection at the trial on this ground. He made a motion for the dismissal of the complaint on general grounds. He omitted to call the attention of the court or the opposing counsel to any specific defect in the plaintiff's proof with respect to the manner of serving the attachment. If the papers referred to were not presumptive evidence of the facts stated in them under §§ 922, 708 of the Code, the defendant's counsel should have raised the question in such a way as to enable the plaintiff to supply other proofs. The defendant not having specifically raised the question at the trial as to any defect in the proofs in regard to the service of the attachment, cannot raise it now for the first time on this appeal. (Gillies
v. Improvement Co.,
The judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
All concur.
Judgment reversed.