82 N.Y.S. 597 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
While, under the circumstances of this case, the testimony of Joseph D. Hamburger concerning the agreement with the plaintiff, made by telephone, for the sale of the wool, is of very doubtful veracity, yet, for the purposes of this appeal, we must accept it as true. The question is then presented as to whether the title to the wool in question was in the plaintiff, or in the D. J. Hamburger & Sons Company, at the time the latter pledged it to the appellant as security for the loan which it made; and that depends upon the validity of the alleged sale by the plaintiff to the Hamburger Company under the statute of frauds. The agreement to sell was not in writing. After it was made, the wool,, which largely exceeded $50 in value, was transferred by the Hamburger Company, without the knowledge or assent of the plaintiff, to the warehouse of the Albany Terminal Warehouse Company. Was this such an acceptance and receipt of the wool, within the meaning of those terms as used in the statute of frauds, as will take the case out of the operation of such statute? At
I think, also, that the plaintiff was entitled to recover interest, as damages for withholding the wool from the time of the demand, notwithstanding the sheriff had held it-from the time of the order of interpleader, subject to the order of the court. This disposition of it was deemed proper for the protection of the parties pending the litigation, but the unfounded claim of the appellant has prevented the plaintiff from having possession of its property since such claim was made, and the damages may well be measured by the amount of the interest on its value.
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.