221 A.D. 360 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1927
The following is the opinion of the court below:
This is an action on a check for $500. It is brought by the payee against the maker. On May 21, 1924, plaintiff and defendant entered into a written contract by the terms of which plaintiff agreed to sell and defendant to purchase lands in the city of Mechanicville for the sum of $9,750. The instrument provides that the sum of $500 was to e paid on the execution of the contract, $2,500 on the delivery oi the deed and the balance to be secured by a mortgage. The che k in question was given as the initial payment. When the plaintiff presented the check at the bank upon which it was drawn she ascertained that the defendant had countermanded its payment. She has repudiated the contract and has refused to complete the transaction, basing her declination on the ground that she was mentally irresponsible at the time she signed the agreement; that the check was given on a contract void under the Statute of Frauds and that there was a failure of consideration. The defendant’s claim is that having breached her agreement the plaintiff may, at her election, maintain an action for the specific performance of the contract or for the recovery of such damages as she may have suffered by the breach, but that she cannot sue to recover any part of the contract price whether represented by a negotiable instrument or otherwise.
At the conclusion of the testimony both sides moved for the direc
The defendant’s position that the Statute of Frauds furnishes her any defense is wholly untenable. Here the contract is in writing, properly acknowledged.
It is not disputed that the check was intended to operate as a payment on the purchase price. It is true that the check is not money. It is an order for the payment of money and stands in substitution of the cash deposit contemplated in the contract. If, instead of giving her check, the defendant had paid cash she could not, upon her own default, recover the money. One is not permitted, either at law or in equity, to recover money paid on an executory contract which he has refused or neglected to perform. (Lawrence v. Miller, 86 N. Y. 131.) In principle there is no legal difference between the check and cash. The execution and delivery of the contract by the plaintiff was a sufficient consideration to support the check. (Tradesmen's National Bank v. Curtis, 167 N. Y. 194; Caren v. Liebovitz, 113 App. Div. 674.)
The specious view presented by the defendant that the plaintiff is limited to an award of damages in satisfaction of the broken contract, and where, as in this case, the evidence fails to disclose the value of plaintiff’s bargain, that there can be no recovery, does not commend itself to me. The fallacy of that reasoning is obvious. If the defendant had kept her contract the money represented by the check would be the plaintiff’s as of right. The provisions of that contract would have been observed but for the defendant’s breach. She may not willfully violate her agreement and successfully resist thi payment of a negotiable instrument given to apply on the purch se price. Neither precedent nor justice demands, under such circumstances, that the plaintiff should be limited to an action for damages or a suit for specific performance. Under similar conditions the right to recover on a check is recognized in Raubitschek v. Blank (80 N. Y. 478). In that case the parties orally agreed to exchange certain real estate. The defendant gave his check for $500 as the initial payment. Thereafter he stopped payment on the check and refused to complete the exchange. In that case, although not discussed in the court’s opinion, the right to recover was distinctly involved. It is true that the principal question to which the court addressed itself in that case was the application of the Statute of Frauds. Nevertheless, a recovery was upheld and it seems to me that the principle applies here. (Fleischman v. Plock, 19 Misc. 649; Murman v. Manning, 125 id. 830.)
In the case at bar the plaintiff has done no wrong. She respected her agreement. She was ready and willing to convey and the transaction would have been consummated except for the defendant’s breach. The question presented here is quite different from that which existed in the cases cited by the defendant and consequently those authorities have no application. Courts of repute in other jurisdictions have upheld a recovery under circumstances identical to those disclosed in the case at bar. (Mulcahy v. Gagliardo, 39 Cal. App. 458; Thompson v. Killheffer, 98 N. J. L. 359; 119 Atl. 770.)
In Mulcahy v. Gagliardo (supra) the vendee, instead of making
The defendant insists that because plaintiff made no tender of the deed she is not entitled to recover and cites Ewing v. Wightman (167 N. Y. 107) as a controlling authority. That case is authority for the proposition that in a contract for the purchase of lands or for the sale of chattels the covenant to convey or to deliver possession and the covenant to pay the purchase money when concurrent in time are dependent; and that even in case the purchase money is payable in installments, if the vendor awaits the maturity of the last installment upon the payment of which a conveyance is due, he cannot maintain an action to recover any installment without first putting the vendee in default by tendering him a deed. There can be no question about the correctness of that rule.
In this case the plaintiff had the ability to perform. No tender of the deed was necessary since the defendant repudiated the contract. (Eddy v. Davis, 116 N. Y. 247.) It is not the policy of the law to require the performance of a vain and useless act.
It follows from this discussion that the plaintiff is entitled to the direction of a verdict in her favor for the sum of $500, with interest from May 21, 1924. Judgment is hereby directed accordingly.