179 A.D. 845 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1917
Lead Opinion
This action was brought to recover the sum of $1,000 paid on account of the purchase price of an automobile. The contract, dated July 29, 1914, was in writing and with
Applying the rule laid down in Andrews v. Reiners (supra), that the test of interest in a witness under section 829 of the Code is the old common-law rule of interest, we find that officers of business corporations holding no stock interest therein, at common law, w.ere not disqualified as witnesses. (Stall v. Catskill Bank, supra, 473.) The officer who was permitted to testify in Stall v. Catskill Bank (supra) was the cashier of a banking corporation — an official whose relation to the corporation and whose responsibility in its management are much more important than the usual role of a secretary or that of a dummy director who has no stock interest in the corporation.
In 1848 the common-law rule relating to the competency of witnesses was changed by statute and all persons not
The same conclusion is reached by applying the test of interest under section 829 of the Code as defined in a number of cases where the question arose in cases other than those
It is strongly urged that, considering the great multiplication of corporations and the increasing tendency to do business through the medium of corporations, it is subversive of the spirit of the statute and dangerous to permit a corporation to introduce in evidence conversations that cannot be denied, taking place between a deceased person and officers, agents and employees of the corporation. But that is an argument that must be addressed to the Legislature, which has the power to legislate and correct abuses whereas the court merely has power to interpret, apply and enforce existing' law. It must be held, therefore, that the court erred in excluding the testimony in question.
Numerous other questions are raised on this appeal which require consideration. Defendant insists that the complaint should have been dismissed because, as it claims, plaintiffs failed to make the necessary proof. It is said that if plaintiffs relied upon defendant’s refusal to perform the contract, as alleged in paragraph 7 of the complaint, it was necessary to show not only the refusal but that plaintiffs were ready and willing to perform the contract on their part. But plaintiffs did not rely solely upon a refusal to perform; and if they had the readiness of the plaintiffs’ intestate to perform could readily be inferred from the circumstances of the case (Howard v. Daly, 61 N. Y. 362, 370), as developed during the trial, with which defendant proceeded without resting on its motion to dismiss.
A more troublesome point is that the complaint should have been dismissed because, the time of performance stipulated in the contract having been waived by the parties, plaintiffs could not thereafter rescind without notice to defendant requiring performance within a reasonable time and there was no proof of such notice. We think, however, that this rule does not apply because the contract of sale entitles the purchaser to a return of the deposit paid on non-delivery of the car. True that is coupled with non-delivery within thirty days from the date agreed upon, but we think this, fairly interpreted, amounts to an undertaking on the part of the defendant to return the deposit after cancellation of the order for failure to deliver within a reasonable time, the original date specified for delivery having been waived. There was no proof of any cancellation of the order in terms but the cancellation could readily be inferred from the demand for the deposit. Assuming that there was no modification of the contract as claimed by the defendant, there can be no question about the lapse of a reasonable time in a case where the defendant was nearly two years in default and concededly was unable to deliver the car.
The answer sets up as a special defense that the alleged modified contract was broken and repudiated by the plaintiffs and that'as the same defense was set up in defendant’s answer in a former action between the parties upon the same cause of action, in which a general verdict was rendered in defendant’s favor upon the court’s direction because of plaintiffs’ failure in that case to prove a demand for the return of the deposit, the former judgment was res adjudicóla between the parties that the contract sued upon was modified and that adjudication estopped the plaintiffs from suing again on the
It is claimed that by bringing the former action, when defendant was not in default, plaintiffs repudiated the contract and put themselves in default, and for that reason cannot recover in this action. ■ But unless the contract was modified, as alleged by the defendant, when the former action was brought the defendant was in default for non-delivery within a reasonable time after November, 1914, and the only reason why plaintiffs failed to recover in the former action was because they had omitted the technical demand for a return of the deposit. Plaintiffs have not repudiated the original contract but are standing upon it and asking for the return of the deposit pursuant to agreement.
On the other hand, it is contended on behalf of the plaintiffs that the judgment in the former action is a bar to the defendant’s counterclaim in this action, which is based upon the alleged modification agreement and repudiation thereof by the plaintiffs, for the reason that on the former trial evidence was received in support of this counterclaim and at the conclusion of the entire case judgment was directed generally in favor of the defendant.- The defendant resists this contention upon the claim that it withdrew its counterclaim during the trial because of inability to prove damages on account of the absence of a witness. We do not think that would be a sufficient answer to plaintiffs’ contention, for when sued upon the contract that was the time when the defendant was compelled to come forward with any counterclaim growing out of the cause of action relied upon by the plaintiffs. It could not wait and litigate at some other time a claim growing out of the breach of that contract or breach
There is no merit in plaintiffs’ contention that defendant’s counterclaim is insufficient under section 506 of the Code since there was no breach during the lifetime of the deceased, because the plaintiffs’ cause of action is likewise not founded upon a breach during the lifetime of the deceased but accrued subsequently.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Clarke, P. J., and Davis, J., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I entirely agree with Mr. Justice Shearn that the evidence of defendant’s secretary as to the new contract, or modification of the former contract, should have been received.
If that- evidence were in the case and was believed it would, I think, be necessary for plaintiffs to show that either they or their intestate had selected the maker for the body, had notified defendant of their choice and had allowed a reasonable time for the building of the body and the delivery of the automobile. That is what the intestate would have been obliged to do if she had lived, and the plaintiffs stand in her shoes. On the other hand, if the secretary’s evidence be not believed, the state of the case would be that defendant defaulted in making delivery within the time specified in the contract and was so in default when Mrs. Nichols died, and that she had never waived performance, although she had not demanded the return of the down payment. Mere omission to claim the results of a default does not excuse the default, although it may render necessary a new demand.
I, therefore, agree that the judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur with Mr. Justice Shearn that it was error to exclude the evidence of the defendant’s secretary, and that if the defendant failed to show a modification of the contract the plaintiffs’ right to recover would follow. If the contract be deemed modified, as claimed by the defendant, however, it became a contract to supply to the plaintiffs’ intestate an automobile with a body of a certain design to be built by one of two builders to be selected by the plaintiffs’ intestate. There is no allegation in the complaint that the plaintiffs’ intestate negligently or unreasonably delayed in making her relection. She died, however, in September, 1915, before making such selection. Whether after the death of Lizzie G. Nichols, her administrators might have selected a body builder and demanded performance of the contract is not necessary here to decide. It would seem clear that without such action the administrators could not recover the $1,000 paid, because the same was to be repayable only upon the defendant’s default upon the contract, and defendant is not in default under the modified contract until it is notified of the body builder so selected.
Nor, in my judgment, can the defendant insist that the executors select a body builder, and for their refusal so to do recover as upon a broken contract. The automobile contracted for was presumably for personal use. The body to be furnished, although specified in detail, was to be built by certain makers whom plaintiffs’ intestate might personally select. In view of the use to which the body was presumably to have been put, under the reservation by plaintiffs’ intestate
I, therefore, concur in the conclusion reached by Mr. Justice Shearn for reversal and a new trial.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.