53 N.Y. 307 | NY | 1873
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The plaintiff puts his right of action upon the ground, that the defendants sold to his assignor these instruments, being personal property, without having any title thereto, and that hence they are liable upon their implied warranty of title. It is not to be disputed that, if these papers are other than negotiable instruments, there was in the sale of them by the defendants an implied warranty of their title to them, and that on a failure of title they are liable. The defendants insist, however, that they only impliedly warrant the genuineness of the execution of the instrument. In this they err. (Murray v.Judah, 6 Cow., 484.) The seller warrants the genuineness of the instrument, and that it is what it purports to be. (Gurney v. *313 Womersley, 28 Eng. L. Eq., 256; see Thrall v. Newell,
It is established by the proofs and verdict, that the instruments were stolen from the railroad corporation, whose obligations they purport to be. It follows that the defendants could acquire no title to them, unless they bring them and bring themselves, within the rules which protect the bona fide holder for value of commercial paper. The bonds of a railroad corporation, if they possess the requisites for negotiable paper, fall into that class of instruments, and are to be dealt with and disposed of by an application of the same legal principles. But a negotiable instrument must be a complete and perfect instrument when it is issued, or there must be authority reposed in some one, afterward to supply anything needed to make it perfect. (The Norwich Bank v. Hyde,
The liability of the maker of the instrument is put upon his act in sending it into the world in its imperfect form (Cruchley v. Clarance, 2 M. S., 90), or upon an authority given or confidence reposed in the one put in possession of the instrument, that he should do that with it which should set it afloat on the currents of business. (Van Duzer v. Howe,
The defendants claim that there was a failure of the proof to sustain the allegations of the complaint, and that their motion to dismiss the complaint should have been granted. The complaint, they say, substantially averred a cause of action arising from false representations, which is an action ex delicto; and that proof of a breach of an implied warranty of title, being matter of contract, will not sustain a complaint for the cause averred. It is true that the complaint avers that the defendants represented these instruments to be the bonds of the railroad corporation, issued by and binding upon it, and that the plaintiff's assignor relied upon these representations. But the summons is not for relief. It is for money. The complaint avers the facts which were proven and which make out a cause of action in contract. The presence of the averment as to the representations, even were they averred to have been false and fraudulent, do not make the action one ex delicto. (SeeConaughty v. Nichols,
The defendants also moved to dismiss the complaint, on the ground that no damages had been proven to have been sustained by the plaintiff. Whatever other answer might be made to this motion, it did appear that the mortgage, given by the railroad company as a security for the bonds of which these instruments were supposed to be a part, had been foreclosed, and the property covered by it sold and moneys realized thereon. If these instruments had been genuine, the *317
plaintiff or his assignor would have had a right to share in a division of this sum among the bondholders. It would doubtless have been a small dividend which would have been received; but however small, if appreciable, the plaintiff was entitled to it, and entitled to a verdict for that amount. So that a motion to dismiss, for the reason stated, was properly denied. And whatever the damages were, the plaintiff had a right to them, as assignee (see Bordwell v. Collie,
The defendants offered to read in evidence, certain papers which it was claimed would show a submission of this controversy to arbitration, and an award in favor of the defendants. These were not competent to be admitted in bar of the plaintiff's action. The jury have found, upon the question being submitted to them, that the plaintiff's assignor bought the instruments for himself. As it was not claimed that he was a party to the submission, the papers were not competent evidence against him in direct bar of his action. They were not competent as admissions of a party in interest, until it was established that he by whom they were made was such; nor could they until then be received to assist in establishing the fact of his interest. The immediate issue was, what were the mutual rights of the plaintiff's assignor and of Zarega Co. at the time of the purchase by the former of these instruments, neither of them being parties on the record in this action. The rule is, that this inquiry lets in such evidence as would have been receivable between those persons. (1 Phil. on Ev., 465, [490], chap. 8, § 10.) The declarations of Zarega would not have been competent in his favor against the plaintiff's assignor, and were not admissible.
But it is claimed that, if not competent in bar of the plaintiff's action, they were admissible on the collateral issue of the credibility of the witness Zarega. He had testified that his house did *318 not buy the bonds from the defendants, but did buy them of Scranton, the plaintiff's assignor. One defence set up in the answer was that the bonds were sold by the defendants to that house, and that afterward, on claim by it, there was a submission to arbitrators and award in the defendants' favor. It was material to this issue, the testimony he had given, and it was on a material point that the defendants now claim that they sought to contradict him. And the papers offered, if shown to have been signed by or with the knowledge of Zarega, or to have come to his knowledge, were pertinent for that purpose; but there was no proof of this.
The defendants' request to charge, it was not error for the court to refuse. There was testimony by Scranton from which the jury could find that he tendered a return to the defendants of the same instruments purchased of them.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs to the respondent.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.