20 N.Y.S. 872 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1892
The action is for the purchase price of 15 cash carriers, sold and delivered by the plaintiff to the defendants. The answer, by not denying, admits the price and the sale and delivery of the cash carriers, and then proceeds to plead a counterclaim, as follows: That there was on the premises of the defendants a certain car system; that when the plaintiff placed its service in the store of the defendants it took to itself the old service of the defendants, and applied the same to its own use and benefit, without the knowledge
Defendants insist that the cause of action which they retort upon plaintiff arises out of the contract or transaction set forth in the complaint ás the foundation of the plaintiff’s claim, or, in any event, that it is “connected with the subject of the action.” Code Civil Proe. subd. 1, § 501. The contention is obviously untenable. The transaction set forth as the foundation of plaintiff’s claim is the sale of 15 cash carriers. The cause of action alleged in the answer is the conversion of the old car system. The sale of one eoinmodity to the defendants, and the conversion of another commodity by the plaintiff, are two totally different and independent transactions. Neither is the cause of action in the answer connected with the subject of the action in the complaint. The subject of action in the complaint is the sale of the 15 new cash carriers; the cause of action in the answer is the conversion of the old car system,—between which subsists no legal connection whatsoever. It is not apparent, therefore, on the face of the answer, that the cause of action it advances sustains to the claim in the complaint that common origin or relation which the Code exacts as the indispensable condition of a valid counterclaim. Edgerton v. Page, 20 N. Y. 281, 285; Boreel v. Lawton, 90 N. Y. 293, 297; Thorpe v. Philbin, (Com. Pl. N. Y.) 3 N. Y. Supp. 939. But, in an action on contract, any other cause of action on contract may be interposed as a counterclaim. Code, subd. 2, § 501. It is to be ascertained, therefore, whether the cause of action exhibited in the answer be a cause of action on contract.
Undoubtedly the facts stated in the answer constitute a cause of action for conversion. But “if, upon the facts alleged, a cause of action in tort, as well as one on contract, may be spelled out,” the pleader ínay elect to stand either upon tort or contract. People v. Wood, 121 N. Y. 522, 24 N. E. Rep. 952. Do the defendants in their answer rely upon tort or contract? Manifestly upon contract. Their claim is not damages for the conversion, but the specific value of the goods applied by the plaintiff to its use and benefit; and that value they plead as a counterclaim, which would be inadmissible were the claim of damages for a tort. Beyond all controversy, the defendants elect to treat their cause of action as a claim upon contract.
But it does not appear that the plaintiff has sold the thing taken,—the contrary, rather; and the question remains whether the owner of a chattel converted, but not parted with, for money or its equivalent, may waive the tort, and sue the wrongdoer in assumpsit as upon an implied contract of sale. It is conceded that in England, and in many states of the Union, the query must be answered in the negative. See cases collected by Mr. Freeman in his note to Webster v. Drinkwater, 17 Amer. Dec. 242. Nay, more, in this state the law was that trover could not be turned into assumpsit, for money had and received, until the thing converted was exchanged by the wrongdoer for money or money’s worth. McKnight v. Dunlop, 4 Barb. 36, 42; Harpending v. Shoemaker, 37 Barb. 270, 291; Osborn v. Bell, 5 Denio, 370; Tryon v. Baker, 7 Lans. 511, 514; McGoldrick v. Willits, 52 N. Y. 614, 620. “When the tort is waived, and assumpsit is brought, the receipt of the money on the sale of the goods gives the cause of action. ” Schroeppel v. Corning, 6 N. Y. 107,