60 N.Y.S. 432 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
This case has been treated by the parties and was tried and disposed of in the court below as an action at law brought to recover commissions on the sale of goods, to which the plaintiff claimed to be entitled, under the terms of a written agreement between himself and the defendant. The cause was tried by the court without a jury and decided in favor of the plaintiff. From the judgment entered upon that decision this appeal is taken.
A perusal of the record shows that if the plaintiff were entitled to
The defendant in its answer admitted the making of the agreement, the employment. of the plaintiff, its obligation, if it made sales in Great Britain, to pay plaintiff a commission, but it denied that tile plaintiff made sales prior to the expiration of six months
The principal matters in dispute between the parties arise upon ■counterclaims interposed by the defendant. Those counterclaims are pleaded, and the effort is made to sustain them as causes of action for the conversion of goods and the proceeds of goods belonging to the defendant. They are some of the same goods, or the proceeds of some of the same goods, as those upon the sale of which the plaintiff’s claim for commissions is founded. These •causes of.action, it is claimed, arise out of the following facts: Pursuant to the agreement, the defendant shipped to the plaintiff certain merchandise, which was received by him in England in August, 1891; he sold a portion of the merchandise so consigned, and received therefor a sum of about $3,000. • The defendant demanded from him the net proceeds of such sales after deducting his proper commissions, but the plaintiff has not complied with.such demand, from which it is claimed (and the allegations of the answer are distinctly, lhade) that the plaintiff received the goods and the proceeds thereof in a fiduciary capacity, and, not having complied with the demand fpr such proceeds, he has converted them to his ■own use and misapplied them while acting as agent and in such fiduciary capacity. The plaintiff did not sell all the goods consigned to him, but at the time at which lie commenced this action ■certain of those goods were still in London. After the action was brought, and before answer, the defendant caused a written notice or demand to be served ujion the plaintiff for the delivery of the unsold goods, and it is alleged in the second counterclaim that, while acting iu a fiduciary capacity, the plaintiff fraudulently misapplied such goods to his own use and converted them.
. If the plaintiff had sold the goods immediately upon arrival, he was not required to return those proceeds at once to the defendant. He might use them in his business or otherwise. He was only to-pay for them within four months. We are not concerned with any other questions of construction that might arise in the interpretation of this- contract,, but it is manifest that it never was intended that-the plaintiff should receive the proceeds of goods with the obligation to return those same proceeds and with an interdiction of their use for his own purposes. Therefore, there was no conversion of
The judgment appealed, from should be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., .Barrett, Rumsey and O’Brien, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.