99 N.Y.S. 669 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
When this case came on for trial before a jury, and counsel for the plaintiff having opened the case, the defendants united in a motion to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that the causes of action set out in the complaint were not assignable, the plaintiff suing as assignee of the various causes of action set forth. This motion the court granted, to which the plaintiff excepted, and that exception was ordered to be heard by this court in the first instance.
The causes of action thus alleged are for deceit. The ground upon which the complaint was dismissed was, that these causes of action, being in tort, were not assignable, and that is the ground upon which the dismissal is sought to be sustained. Section 1909 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that “ Where a claim or demand can be transferred, the transfer thereof passes an interest which the transferee may enforce by an action or special proceeding * * in his 'own name as the transferor might have done.” Section 1910 provides that “ Any claim or demand can be transferred, except in one of the following cases: 1. Where it is to recover damages for a personal injury, or for a breach of promise to many.” Subdivisions 2 and 3 have no application. This claim may, therefore, be transferred and the transferee may sue in his own name as the transferor might have done, unless the claim was -to recover damages for a personal injury or for a breach of promise to marry. Personal injuries are defined by subdivision 9 of section 3343 of the Code of Civil Procedure as follows: “ A ‘ personal injury’ includes libel, slander, criminal conversation, seduction and malicious prosecution ; also an assault, battery, false imprisonment or other actionable injury to the person either of the plaintiff or of another.” Subdivision 10 of the same section provides: “An ‘injury to property’ is an actionable act whereby the estate of another is lessened, other than a personal injury or the breach of a contract.”
It would seem, from the language used in these sections of the Code, that this is not an action for a personal injury, and is, therefore, assignable. The assignability of a. cause of action is not made to depend, by these provisions of the Code, upon the survival of a cause of action upon the death of a decedent. Section 1910 was substituted for sections 111 and 112 of the Code of Procedure.
In Moore v. McKinstry (37 Hun, 194) section 1910 of the Code of Civil Procedure was but incidentally mentioned, and the decision seems to have been based upon the Code of Procedure, as the assignment appears to have been executed on the 19th day of August, 1880, before the second part of the Code of Civil Procedure took effect. We think, however, that this question was in substance determined in Benedict v. Guardian Trust Co. (58 App. Div. 302), when the case was before this court upon a demurrer, and again on appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs (91 id. 103; affd., without opinion, 180 N. Y. 558).
The learned counsel for the defendants seek to distinguish this case upon the ground that it -there appeared that the defendant's obtained some benefit from the fraud, while there is no such allegation in this case. But neither the assignability of a cause of action nor its survival depends upon the defendants’ obtaining a benefit, but rather depends upon the nature of the wrong done to the plaintiff who seeks to recover. If the representations made by the defendants had been true, the plaintiff would have been the owner of shares of stock of a corporation which had earned one per cent per month. As a fact, he was the owner of shares of stock which earned little or nothing, and it is to recover the damages which he sustained in consequence of the stock being worthless, instead of earning twelve per cent a year*, that- he brings this action. ' As was said by Hr. Justice Hatch in Benedict v. Guardian Trust Co. (91 App. Div. 108): “ When restitution was demanded of the defendant it made absolute refusal, and thereupon, for the purpose of redressing the wrong with the least possible complication, the several
The defendants also seek to sustain this demurrer upon the ground that no cause of action is alleged, as no fraud is alleged. Leaving _out the allegations of the complaint in regard to the declaration of the dividends, the complaint alleges that at the time of the declaration the directors of the corporation, including the defendant Dun-ham, and with the concurrence and co-operation of the defendant Seaman, caused a statement to be circulated against the public to the effect that this corporation had paid seventeen consecutive monthly cash dividends of $8,000 each; that the defendants authorized the brokers who sold the stock for the corporation to state to intending purchasers that the net earnings of the corporation amounted to more than one per cent per month, and that such statements were made by the brokers to the plaintiff’s assignors. The falsity of this statement and scienter are then alleged, and that plaintiff’s assignors purchased said stock relying on this statement so made by the directors and believing it to be true, and that the dividends so declared were made and paid from surplus profits arising from the business of the corporation. I think this is a sufficient allegation to sustain the action for deceit against both defendants.'
The exceptions should, therefore, be sustained and a new trial ordered, with costs to the exceptant to abide the event.
O’Brien, P. J., McLaughlin, Clarke and Houghton, JJ., concurred.
Exceptions sustained, new trial ordered, costs to exceptant to abide event. Settle order on notice.