157 N.Y.S. 955 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1916
This action arises out of the purchase by plaintiff of a cable transfer of money to be paid in Genoa, Italy. All the facts were stipulated at the trial, and the cause was heard and determined upon that stipulation.
The plaintiff is a domestic business corporation. The defendant is a domestic corporation, organized under the Banking Corporation Laws of this State, engaged in the business of banking and, also, in the sale of foreign exchange. On October 23, 1914, the plaintiff instructed defendant to remit per cable to Tomaso Moro and Figli, Genoa, 75,000 lire, paying to defendant at the same time the sum of $14,423.08, being1 the price or value of a cable transfer of 75,000 lire at the current rate of exchange for such transfer in the city of New York on that day. The defendant accepted the order in writing, stating that payment would be effected by Crédito Italiano at Genoa. On the same day defendant delivered to the French Telegraph Cable Company, a company engaged in the transmission of cable messages to various parts of Europe, including Genoa, Italy, a cable message for transmission to Crédito
The plaintiff now seeks to recover and has been awarded as damages for the delay in the payment to its correspondent in Genoa the sum of $439.54, being the difference in the market values of a cable transfer of 75,000 lire on October 23, and November 11, 1914, as shown by the agreed statement of facts. It also claims and has been awarded twenty dollars and forty-two cents interest on the sum paid by it to defendant from said October 23, 1914, to November 11, 1914. This interest defendant tendered to plaintiff on June 14, 1915, but plaintiff refused to receive it. Except for the difference in exchange above stated plaintiff does not claim to have suffered any damage (beyond interest) by reason of the delay in payment to its Genoa
It is also stipulated that in its note or memorandum accepting plaintiff’s order to transfer the money by cable to Genoa, there was the following clause which the court found, and obviously correctly, constituted a part of the terms of sale of the cable exchange, to wit: “ In making a cable transfer it is fully understood and agreed that no liability shall attach to us nor to our correspondents for any loss or damage in consequence of any delay or mistake in transmitting the message, or for any cause beyond our control.”
There is nothing in the stipulation to indicate, nor is any claim made by plaintiff, that the delay or default in transmission was due to any negligence or fault on the part of defendant, and the bare and concrete question is whether the defendant is legally bound to pay to plaintiff the difference between the market price of a cable transfer on October twenty-third and the market price on November eleventh.
We are relieved from the necessity of undertaking to definé a cable transfer, for the parties have stipulated for the purpose? of this case that “ cable transfers mean a method of transmitting money by cable wherein the seller engages that he has the balance at the point on which the payment is ordered and that on receipt of the cable directing the transfer his correspondent at such point will make payment to the beneficiary described in the cable; and the seller of a cable transfer contracts that the cable directing the transfer will be delivered to the Cable Company upon the day of purchase unless otherwise indicated in the contract.”
It will be observed at the outset that the defendant admittedly complied with all the obligations imposed upon it by this definition. It is stipulated that it had a sufficient balance at the point at which the payment was ordered, and that, on receipt of the cable directing the payment its correspondent made such payment to the beneficiary named, and the cable directing the transfer was delivered to the cable company upon the day of purchase. The defendant, therefore,
The learned court from whose judgment this appeal is taken decided in favor of the plaintiff upon the theory that what defendant contracted to transmit was the identical money paid to it by the plaintiff, likening the case to one in which a common carrier had received ten trunks for transmission and delivered only nine of them. He was, therefore, of the opinion that the money paid to defendant remained the property of plaintiff until it or its equivalent had actually been paid over in Genoa, and that all plaintiff was entitled to retain was the value in New York on November eleventh, at the current rate of exchange for cable transfers, of 75,000 lire in Genoa. We are of opinion that this decision rests upon an erroneous view of the nature of a cable transfer, and that the supposed analogy of a common carrier transmitting merchandise is not appropriate, for there was here no failure to deliver in Genoa the 75,000 lire contracted for, but only a delay in making such delivery. Technically speaking, there is a marked distinction between issuing a draft, or traveler’s check, or transferring-money by cable and receiving money for actual transmission. (Musco v. United Surety Co., 132 App. Div. 300.) The very term “ cable transfer ” precludes the idea that an actual transmission of money is contemplated. What the seller of a cable transfer does is to sell a sum of money, or a credit for a sum of money, payable at the place indicated in the contra,ct. What the buyer does is to purchase a credit available at such place. In the present case the plaintiff bought 75,000 lire to be paid in Genoa. The transaction was a completed one, and plaintiff or its correspondent ultimately received precisely what defendant engaged should be received, to wit, 75,000 lire in Genoa. The inequity of plaintiff’s claim can be appreciated by considering what would have been the rights of the parties if the fluctuations of exchange had been such that on November eleventh the value of one dollar in Italian lire had been more than five and two-tenths instead of less, and that, as in the present case, the delay in transmission had been due to no fault of the defendant. In such a case it is evident that defendant
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Smith and Page, JJ., concurred.
Judgment modified as directed in opinion and as modified affirmed, with costs to appellant in all courts. Order to be settled on notice.