120 Misc. 601 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1923
The action is brought to recover the purchase price of six dozen near-seal skins, to wit," $324. The defendants’ answer does not deny the sale, but sets up as a defense the fact that the merchandise mentioned in the complaint was the subject-matter of a larceny prior to the plaintiffs’ obtaining possession and that, while defendants had possession of the merchandise, the police authorities duly seized same and still have the goods; that as the title to the gooods has failed, so the defendants’ promise to pay for the goods has failed for lack of consideration; that defendants
In the Sweetman case it was held that if a valid claim is made by a third person under a title paramount, the vendee may voluntarily yield up possession, assuming the burden of proving that the person so claiming the property had title paramount.
The O’Brien v. Jones case likewise holds that if the vendee yield the property to a third person claiming paramount title, the onus is on him to establish that the claimant was the true owner.
It is not a necessary precedent that the purchaser should be deprived of the goods, or their value, by the real owner, by judicial proceedings before he has a claim against his vendor. On the contrary, as was said in the case of O’Brien v. Jones, supra: “ This covenant in the sale of chattels is likened to the covenant for quiet enjoyment of land (Bordwell v. Collie, 45 N. Y. 494; Delaware Bank v. Jarvis, 20 id. 226; Burt v. Dewey, 40 id. 283), and when the vendee relies upon it he must either restore to the true owner the property in question, or be prepared to prove its loss under compulsory proceedings, or the payment of money through judgment obtained against him, or voluntarily, in answer to a claim made, and in that case must also affirmatively establish that the claimant was the true owner and that his vendor was without title. This rule has been sustained by authority and is now to be deemed well settled. (Case v. Hall, 24 Wend. 102; Delaware Bank v. Jarvis, supra; Burt v. Dewey, supra; Bordwell v. Collie, supra; McGiffin v. Baird, 62 N. Y. 329.) ”
According to the defendants’ allegations in their separate defense, the goods in question were seized by the police authorities, and by the provisions of the Greater New York charter the police
The answer does not properly allege that the plaintiffs had no title or that they purchased the goods from or through the thief, but the defendants should have been given leave to plead over.
Order modified by giving defendants leave to serve an amended answer within five days after service of order entered hereon and payment of ten dollars costs; and order as so modified affirmed; and on compliance with conditions judgment vacated.
Lehman and Btjbr, JJ., concur.
Order modified.