195 A.D. 845 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1921
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff purchased from the defendant, a dealer in furniture, certain household furniture for the purchase price of $909.25 of which $100 was paid on account and two chattel mortgages given to the defendant to secure payment of the balance which was to be paid in monthly installments. The plaintiff had paid in all $295 including the May installment. In May, 1918, the plaintiff, desiring to remove from the city for the summer months, applied to the defendant for leave to remove and store the furniture pursuant to the requirements of agreement of sale. He saw McGrath, the defendant’s credit man, through whom the plaintiff had purchased the furniture. McGrath arranged with the plaintiff to store the furniture in the defendant’s warehouse, and agreed to store it free of charge. The furniture was removed to the defendant’s warehouse and on June 15, 1918, was destroyed by fire. This action was brought to recover the sum of $295, the value of plaintiff’s interest in the furniture over and above the unpaid amount of the chattel mortgages of the defendant upon an alleged agreement of the defendant to obtain insurance on the furniture against loss by fire, which defendant failed to perform. The defendant denied the making of such agreement and upon trial denied McGrath’s authority to make the agreement to obtain insurance on the furniture. It is further argued on this appeal that such agreement was without consideration.
McGrath made the agreement to store the furniture, as agent for the defendant, and the defendant accepted the goods and stored them without compensation and did not suggest that he did not have power to make that agreement. It was within the apparent scope of his authority to make any agreement that might relate to such storage. The insurance of the property during storage was suggested by him. Plaintiff’s evidence, which was accepted by the jury, was that when the plaintiff said he would have the furniture insured by an agent of his acquaintance, McGrath offered to take out the insur
The determination of the Appellate Term should be affirmed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., and Greenbaum, J., concur; Dowling and Smith, JJ., dissent.
Dissenting Opinion
I am unable to find any consideration for the promise upon which plaintiff has recovered. In the prevailing opinion
In Story on Contracts (5th ed. § 548) the rule is stated: “But in order to render an injury to the promisee a'good consideration, it must be an injury upon entering into the contract and not from the breach of it.” (See Ridgway v. Grace, 2 Misc. Rep. 293; Korn v. Weir, 88 N. Y. Supp. 976.)
The plaintiff was abandoning his apartment. The defendant stored the goods upon which it had a chattel mortgage as a gratuitous bailee, for which it was to charge no compensar
In the prevailing opinion further consideration is found in the fact that both the plaintiff and defendant were jointly interested in the property. Neither in the bill of sale nor in the chattel mortgage was there any agreement of the plaintiff to insure the property for the benefit of the defendant and the suggestion contained in the bill of sale was that the plaintiff insure the property for his own benefit alone. The defendant apparently relied upon the responsibility of the plaintiff and was satisfied therewith. The defendant had the right to insure its own interest in the property independently of any interest of the plaintiff. To promise to insure, therefore, as alleged and proven gives no benefit to the defendant, nor was there any legal detriment to the plaintiff requested as “ the price of the promise.” The promise, therefore, made without price, created no legal obligation on the part of the defendant and for the violation thereof the plaintiff has no right of action.
The judgment should be reversed and judgment directed for the defendant upon its counterclaim.
Concurrence Opinion
concurs.
Determination affirmed, with costs.