49 N.Y. 571 | NY | 1872
The grounds of the objection to the admissibility of the judgment in Grundmun Co. against plaintiffs, rendered by the Superior Court of Appeals of the four free cities of Germany, stated, were: 1st. That the record was not properly authenticated. 2d. That it was irrelevant. The first ground was too general to raise any question for the consideration of an appellate court. It failed to call attention to any defect whatever in the authentication. If there was any defect, the counsel should have specified it so as to call the attention of the court and opposite party directly to it. The second ground was sufficient to raise the question whether the record was admissible for any purpose. The defendant was not a party to the action. Prima facie, he was not bound by the judgment, and to make it evidence against him in favor of the plaintiffs, they were bound to show aliunde that it was rendered against them in favor of Grundmun Co. upon a transaction against which the defendant was bound *574
to indemnify them. If it was, the record was competent evidence; otherwise not. (The Bridgeport Ins. Co. v. Wilson,
It is further insisted by the counsel, that the plaintiffs departed from the instructions of the defendant by undertaking to accept drafts at three or four months from the date of the invoice, instead of the receipt of the goods by them, as directed by the defendant. The answer to this is, that the undertaking by the plaintiffs related only to the time at which the bills were to bear date and time when the term of credit should begin to run, and not to the time of actual acceptance. The course pursued in regard to the fifty barrels of coarse chickory meal which were delivered, forwarded to the defendant and paid for, shows that there was a perfect understanding by all parties upon this point. A valid contract having been proved, there is nothing found in the vast amount of subsequent correspondence tending to show a release of any of the parties from its obligation. The fifty barrels of pure chickory flour were promptly delivered by Grundmun Co. and paid for in pursuance of the contract. Grundmun Co. proceeded with diligence to manufacture the mixture as ordered and notify the plaintiffs thereof and of their readiness to deliver the same pursuant to the contract. The plaintiffs refused to accept the same, and the correspondence shows that their refusal was pursuant to the directions of the defendant. He cannot, therefore, complain of this. The correspondence, instead of showing any release or modification of the original contract, shows that Grundmun Co. were at all times insisting upon its performance and endeavoring to arrange details so as to produce this result. It follows that the proof showed that the plaintiff, at the request of the defendant, had entered into *576 a valid contract to accept and pay bills as surety for him. That they had failed to perform this contract by direction of the defendant. That for this breach a suit was commenced against them in the Tribunal of Commerce of Bremen, in which, upon appeal to the Superior Court of Appeals of the four free German cities, the court of last resort, judgment was given in favor of Grundmun Co. against the plaintiffs, and they were thereby compelled to and did pay for the fifty barrels of mixture. When one party, at the request of another, enters into a contract as his surety, the law implies a promise of indemnity. The plaintiffs gave the defendant notice of the suit of Grundmun Co. against them. The record under these facts was competent evidence against the defendant in favor of the plaintiffs. A foreign judgment has the same effect in this respect as one of our own courts. (Note toAndrews v. Herriot, 4 Cow., 520.) The position of the counsel, that an underwriter is not bound by a suit brought against the party he is bound to indemnify, in the absence of a provision in his contract to that effect, cannot be sustained either upon principle or authority. The law is otherwise. (FireIns. Co. v. Wilson, supra.) The fact proved that one of the members of plaintiffs' firm died during the pendency of the action of Grundmun Co. and before the rendition of judgment therein, does not vitiate the judgment. By the common law, the entire legal liability survived against the surviving member who was a party, and against whom the judgment was given. Continuing the name of the deceased was a mere nullity, not vitiating the judgment against the survivor. Whether the law of Bremen is the same, it is not necessary to determine. It was proved that the interest of the deceased in the plaintiffs' firm passed to his widow, who still owned the same. She was, therefore, not only a proper, but necessary party to the action. The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed. *577