154 N.Y.S. 786 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1915
The plaintiff claims that she purchased of the defendants in April, 1904, furniture for which she agreed to pay upwards of $900, in payments of $20 per month, and that until the full payment of the purchase price the title to the furniture was to remain in the defendants; that up to January, 1907, she had paid thereon the sum of $492. It appears that in 1904 there was some paper writing executed by the parties, the plaintiff claiming that it embodied the terms of the conditional sale above specified. The defendants deny that they sold the furniture to the plaintiff, asserting that they simply leased the same to her and that the monthly payment was not to apply on a purchase price, but was simply rental for the use of the furniture, and that the plaintiff was not to become owner of the furniture in any event. Unfortunately the paper was not produced upon the argument of "the appeal — although it was used upon the trial .in the court below — it having been lost since the trial and
Section 65 of the Personal Property Law reads as follows:
“Whenever articles are sold upon the condition that the title thereto shall remain in the vendor, or in some other person than the vendee, until the payment of the purchase price, or until the occurrence of. a future event or contingency, and the same are retaken by the vendor, or his successor in interest, they shall
Plaintiff’s right to recover depends upon two important conditions, viz.: First, that she purchased the furniture and was to have title when she paid $946, and, second, that the defendants or their successor in interest retook possession thereof under the contract of sale. It was established that no sale of the furniture was had by public auction as provided by statute.
The testimony on the trial will warrant no other conclusion than that the furniture was to become the property of the plaintiff when she paid the full purchase price. Treating the moneys paid, either as being payments on the purchase price or as being rent for the use of the furniture, the transaction must be construed as a conditional sale if upon full payment of the amount agreed to be the purchase price title to the furniture was to vest in the vendee. Hoffman v. White Sewing Machine Co., 123 App. Div. 166; Hurley v. Allman Gas Engine, 144 id. 300; Monroe v. Bloomingdale, 126 N. Y. Supp. 126; Plumiera v. Bricka, 79 Misc. Rep. 468; Lefkoff v. Bauch, 90 id. 294.
Upon the trial the defendants ’ bookkeeper identified the paper writing, then produced and shown him, as a
When the assignment of the lease was introduced in evidence the trial court remarked that the assignment put the plaintiff out of court, that the defendants had a right to assign the lease. As the complaint could not have been dismissed on the ground that plaintiff had not proved a conditional sale, it must be assumed that the complaint was dismissed for the reason that the assignment was not proof of a retaking of the furniture by the vendors within section 65 of the Personal Property Law.
The statute above quoted provides that if the articles sold on condition are “ retaken by the vendor, or his successor in interest,” and not sold at public auction within sixty days that then “ the vendee or his successor in interest may recover of the vendor the amount paid on such articles- by such vendee or his successor in interest under the contract for the conditional sale thereof.” It is asserted by the defendants that the furniture was not retaken by them or their successor in interest, Jennie L. Pierce, within the meaning of this statute; that while they assigned the contract to Jennie L. Pierce they did not sell the furniture to her. The plaintiff asserts that an assignment of the lease or contract carried with it the title to the furniture, and that within Crowe v. Liquid Carbonic
These conclusions lead to a reversal of the judgment, and as the amounts of the payments are so uncertain from the record that a final judgment can not be safely directed, a new trial is ordered in the city court, with costs to the plaintiff.
Judgment reversed, and new trial ordered, with costs to plaintiff.