105 N.Y.S. 794 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1907
There is no substantial dispute as to the facts in this case. The plaintiff, on or about the 3d day of January, 1905, ordered from one John 33. "Vickery, an' agent of the International Mahogany Company, 25,000 feet of cypress lumber of specified quality and size, to be delivered to plaintiff free on board the dock in the city of New York, at the price of twenty-seven dollars per 1,000 feet, the plaintiff to pay- therefor by paying cash for the freight charges at the, time of delivery, and the balance by his promissory note payable in ninety days thereafter. On or about the 4th day of March, 1905, a carload of cypress lumber was shipped from Gibson, La., by the Gibson Cypress Lumber .Company, by way of the Morgan’s Louisiana and Texas Railroad and Steamship Company, consigned
With the title to the lumber thus vested in the plaintiff a complicating transaction took place, although we do- not see that it really made any particular difference with the merits of the case. On Monday evening, April 3,1905, three days after the delivery on the dock, and two days after notification of such delivery and the delivery of the bill of lading, representatives of the defendant went to the office of the plaintiff and the latter, requested Mr. Williams, secretary of the defendant, to loan him $214:50, the amount of the freight. An arrangement was entered into by which the plaintiff borrowed of Mr. Williams the above-mentioned amount, giving his" promissory note therefor, at the same time delivering his other promissory note for $538.12, the agreed amount of the bill for said lumber. At the same-time'the plaintiff gave a chattel mortgage upon certain machinery to secure the payment of these notes, it béing agreed that the chattel mortgage should not be recorded, and that it should be surrendered, together with the said note for $538.12 upon the payment of the smaller note and the delivery to the defendant of a new note for the larger amount, indorsed by one John Mulstein and payable in ninety days from the third day of April, which, it will be observed, is in accord with the contract of sale alleged and proved, except that there was originally no provision for an indorser of this note, and the plaintiff had agreed to pay the freight on the delivery. Defendant’s secretary delivered a check to the plaintiff for .the amount of the freight, and receipted the bill for the lumber, at the same time delivering the notice of the arrival of said lumber, indorsed by the International Mahogany Company,' with a direction to the said steamship company to deliver said lumber to the plaintiff. On April 4,1905, the plaintiff sent a truckman with Mr-. Williams’ check, the shipping papers, etc., and the truck-man delivered the check with such papers, but the steamship company refused to deliver the lumber, stating that it would not accept the check for the freight. On the following day the plaintiff made a second demand for the delivery of the lumber, tendering the check, and delivery was again refused, the steamship company returning the check and the shipping papers. On the sixth of April the
Whether we regard the note here involved as resting upon the ■ .original consideration, or as having vitality through the considera-, tion of the surrender of its predecessor, does, not seem important. The title to the lumber vested in the- plaintiff, as a matter of law, as early as April 1, 1905, if not on the thirty-first day of March. From that time forward he owed the purchase prick of the lumber to the defendant, and it remained in the possession of the steamship company at the risk of the plaintiff. If the plaintiff had secured the cash upon the check on the fourth day of April, and had tendered the same, with the shipping papers, there is no reason to believe that the lumber would not have been delivered. Certainly at that time the steamship company did not refuse delivery because of any stop orders, but because the plaintiff had tendered a check instead of cash. The plaintiff appears to have persisted in tendering a check on the fifth day of April, and it was "not until -the sixth day of April that, upon a tender of cash, the steamship company refused to deliver because of the alleged stop order*. There- is no question raised that- the plaintiff had a perfect right to' receive the lumber oh all of these days so far >as the defendant is concerned ; it had done everything that was required to vest title and possession in the plaintiff, and if the latter had paid the freight,' as he was
The judgment appealed from should be reversed.
Hirschberg, P. J., Jenks and Miller, JJ., concurred; Hooker, J., dissented.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs, to abide the final award of costs.