The declaration contains a count for goods sold and delivered, and upon an account stated. The plaintiff’s bill of particulars is as follows in substance.
Isaac A. Allen
Bought of A. R. Mitchell,
1869, September 30th, 42,500 cigars @ @30, @1275
Cr. ^
Note at Bank, @500
' @775
It appears that some time prior to September 30th, 1865, the plaintiff, being the owner of the cigars mentioned in the bill of particulars, deposited them in the defendant’s store in New York, and authorized him to sell them at @30 per thous- and, but with special instructions not to let the cigars go out of his store until he, the defendant, received pay for them. The defendant in violation of these instructions sold them on three days’ credit to one Baum, and delivered them without receiving pay. The defendant brought a suit in his own name against Baum for fraud in obtaining the cigars, in which suit he recovered judgment, and settled the judgment by taking the negotiable note of Baum payable to the defendant’s own order. In the mean time, after the arrest of Baum and before the judgment was obtained, the defendant promised the plaintiff to pay him for his cigars so sold, and to save him from any loss, and after this promise the defendant did pay to the plaintiff in part thereof by a negotiable note for @500 since paid.
Upon these facts the Superior Court charged the jury that the plaintiff was entitled to recover.
That upon these facts the plaintiff in some proper form of action might recover is not disputed; but the defendant argues that none of the counts of the declaration are appropriate to the case.
New trial not advised.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.