32 Barb. 171 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1860
By the Court,
Upon the ground on which the nonsuit in this action was put, at the circuit, I think it cannot be sustained. Assuming that the plaintiffs had sufficiently established the fraudulent representations alleged in their complaint, to entitle them to recover, to go to the jury upon that question, it was error, I think, to hold that they had not made a sufficient tender before suit brought, to entitle them to rescind the sale and maintain the action. So far as related to the notes of Joslin, received on the purchase, it was sufficient to produce and cancel them on the trial. (22 Pick. 18. 1 Metc. 558. 3 Sandf. 589. 1 id. 560.) The rescission of the contract of sale necessarily canceled the notes, if they had not been negotiated by the plaintiff. (Thurston v. Blanchard, 22 Pick. 20.) But the goods being in the possession of Hyde, at Rochester, who was about to sell them under a general assignment made by Joslin, the tender, we think, might properly be made to him as one of the assignees. Joslin lived at Utica, and by the assignment be had parted with the control, as he had also with the pos
But it is now claimed by the counsel for the plaintiffs that such tender was unnecessary, and that it was only made for greater caution; that the goods for which this action was brought having been obtained by fraud, the title never passed, and they were entitled to reclaim them wherever they could find them. Such is undoubtedly the rule in respect to property tortiously or feloniously taken. In such cases no title can be acquired or imparted. But I think this rule does not apply to cases where the possession of property has been ac-^ quired by purchase and delivery. We are cited to quite a number of cases which seem to assert a contrary rule, and there is a great degree of looseness of expression and careless
In Cary v. Hotailing, (1 Hill, 311,) and Olmstead v. Hotailing, (Id. 317,) the same doctrine is reasserted. In these cases in Hill, Judge Oowen holds that a sale procured by fraud does not divest the title or possession, so as to deprive the vendor of the right to bring trespass. In the case of Ash v. Putnam, he held that trespass lay against the sheriff who had levied on such property on execution against the fraudulent vendee. In Cary v. Hotailing, he held that replevin in the cepit lay, and also in the case of Olmstead v. Hotailing. In Masson v. Bovet, (1 Denio, 73,) Judge Beardsley says: “ Fraud destroys the contract ab initia, and the fraudulent purchaser has no titleand cites Chit. on Cont. 406, 678 and 681, Am. ed. This same reference to Chitty I find in many other cases. There is running through the cases, quite generally, such expressions as that used in the text in Chitty, 678. “Fraud avoids a contract ab initia, both at law and in equity.” “ Fraud would vitiate and avoid the sale.” (3 John. 237.) “Fraud vitiates all contracts.” “ Fraud invalidates every transaction, as well in- law as in equity.” (1 Chip. 63.) “It avoids a contract ab initia, even when a credit was stipulated for and given.” (9 Barn. & Cress. 59.) These expressions are all well enough, and are true, rightly understood. But they are obviously not unqualifiedly trac. They embrace as much truth as can be compressed into so few words, but they show the insufficiency of human language to express in short aphorisms all of truth. These expressions are simply relatively true. Fraud does vitiate ab initia all contracts, at the instance and election of
This election, when distinctly and definitely made, cancels the contract in toto, (if the plaintiff was right in his assumption of the fraud) and restores the plaintiff to his original title as general owner of the property. It puts an entire and absolute end to the contract, to the same effect as if no contract had been made, and leaves the parties in their original position in respect to the title. If nothing had been received by the plaintiff in this action towards the purchase of the goods in question, the case would be free from difficulty. In such case notice of the election to rescind the contract and sale, with a demand of the property, would have entitled them to reclaim it of any person who might have it in possession; but he cannot reclaim it without such notice and demand. In Tallman v. Turck, (26 Barb. 167,) it was held that replevin lay against an assignee, without a demand. The case is not fully reported, and it may in its facts have presented a case of a tortious taking; if so, it was rightly decided. But it is a fundamental mistake, in my opinion, to hold that there is a tortious taking in these cases of fraud where the property is absolutely delivered, freely and intentionally, in pursuance of an express contract of sale; and much more so that an assignee or innocent bailee, or other person receiving such property by delivery, without personal complicity with the fraud, can be liable to an action for such property as for a conversion thereof, without a demand. I think the rule is clearly otherwise, and that it may be stated as a proposition universally true, that no man can be subjected to an action in respect to personal property in his possession, received by delivery, without personal wrong on his part, until he has refused to deliver it, upon a lawful demand, to the true owner. (Morris v. Rexford, 18 N. Y. Rep. 552. Ely v. Elite, 3 Hill, 348 and 350. 3 Comst. 506. Fuller v. Lewis, 13 How. 219.) But in this case a rescission of the contract could not be made upon such
If we are right in the view that a tender to J oslin, or to his assignee, was necessary in this case, to effectuate a rescission of the contract, I cannot see upon what principle it can be maintained that the plaintiff need not keep the tender good, and was not obliged to produce the notes and money received, on the trial. I think they might have brought them into court before trial, as was done in Stewart v. Austin, (1 Metc. 557,) but when they refused to produce them at the trial, I do not see how the action could be further maintained. In these cases of the rescission of contracts by the acts of the parties, the party seeking to rescind acts upon his strict legal rights, and there is, as we have seen, no rule which allows him to keep back any part of the consideration received. It may be that J oslin, in this case, had sold more of these goods in value than the amount of the money received by the plaintiff, but on the rescission of the contract the title of the goods unsold became and was reinvested in the plaintiff and the title to the money in the defendants or Joslin; and I know of no way of adjusting the equities between the parties, on the trial of an action at law, or of making equitable terms at the circuit, on the trial of an action of replevin for the goods. If the action had been one in equity, the plaintiff seeking a rescission through the action of the court and offering to do equity, the court would be called upon to take into consideration the situation of the property, the amount thereof sold by Joslin, and the amount of consideration received by the plaintiff, and could have done complete justice to the parties upon the whole case and in view of all its circumstances. But I can see no way to adjust such equities at law, or to do complete justice to parties in a case like this, when part of the goods
Welles, Smith and Johnson, Justices.]
A new trial should therefore he denied.