22 N.Y.S. 260 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
Upon this appeal, questions of law are alone to be considered, bringing up, as it does, for review only the judgment roll and exceptions. The case contains no evidence, but we must presume that there was sufficient to support the findings of fact; and, upon such findings, the questions presented are as to whether the conclusions of law from such facts were right. The complaint alleges that in April, 1890, the defendants, with intent to deceive and defraud plaintiffs, by inducing the latter to sell them goods on credit, falsely and fraudulently represented to them that they, (defendants,) were solvent; that the de
Upon the former appeal in this case, taken from a judgment upon a verdict directed in favor of the plaintiffs, and in which the facts were that the offer to return the note had not been made either before or at the time of trial, the judgment was on this ground reversed, for the reasons stated in the opinion of this court, to be found in 19 N. Y. Supp. 601. As therein said:
“A person defrauded by another may resort to one of three remedies: First, he may. before suing, restore or offer to restore what he has received from the other party, elect to rescind the contract, and sue at law for whatever he has parted with; or he may, secondly, without restoring or offering to restore what he has received, sue in equity for a rescission, in which case he must allege in his complaint his willingness to restore, as a condition for being permitted to rescind, and must in fact restore or offer to restore before or at the trial; or he may, in the third place, stand upon the contract, making no offer to rescind it, and sue for the damages which lie has suffered by the fraud of the other party in inducing him to enter into the contract; arid this latter remedy is that which the plaintiffs claim to have pursued. But the difficulty with the plaintiffs’ case is that, until it is ascertained whether or not the note in question which has been given in payment of the goods will be paid, it cannot be ascertained as to whether the plaintiffs have or will suffer any damage by reason of the alleged false representations; and the further principle is lost sight of that the holder of the note is the only one who can enforce any liability against the defendants. If the plaintiffs have transferred the note, and it is in the hands of a third person, they certainly have sustained no damage by reason of the false representations. If any cause of action exists, it is in favor of the holder of the notes, and not the plaintiffs, unless they are such holders; and it is because of this principle that the rule has obtained that no matter what the action is, whether for rescission of the contract or for damages because of the fraud of the other party in inducing them to enter into the contract, if a note has been given it must tie returned, as the defendants are not required'to pay damages for the fraud and pay the debt also. ”
Other language is used in the opinion relating to plaintiffs’ right to maintain an action of this kind, in effect holding that, until it was as
The question now presented is, was this action prematurely brought, or was it essential for the maintenance of the action that the plaintiffs should have waited until the maturity of the note? This is to be determined b_y consideration of what plaintiffs’ right of action was, and when it accrued, without regard for the present to the question of damages. The fraud was committed when the defendants, upon false representations, obtained the plaintiffs’ goods, in April, 1890, and we think that the plaintiffs’ cause of action then accrued. It is true that a note had been given, upon which the defendants were liable, and until the maturity of the note the plaintiffs could not in any event have recovered more than nominal damages. The question whether they should have recovered more than nominal damages would necessarily depend upon the evidence presented on the trial. This is illustrated by what occurred upon the first trial of this case, where, it appearing that the note was outstanding, a direction in plaintiffs’ favor for the full amount of the goods delivered was properly reversed. Or, to take another illustration, let us assume that a four-months open credit had been given, not evidenced by any note or writing; would the right to maintain the action for fraud be premature if brought before the expiration of the credit? We think, under all the authorities, that such a view cannot prevail; for it must be kept in mind that the cause of action is for the fraud, and it arose immediately upon the perpetration thereof, and that the cause of action itself for the fraud is something separate and distinct from the amount of damages that may be recovered by reason thereof. It is true that the
“When the attorney was chargeable with negligence, his contract was violated, and the action might have been sustained immediately. Perhaps in that event no more than nominal damages may be proved, and no more recovered; but. on the other hand, it is perfectly clear that the proof of actual damages may extend to facts that occur and grow out of the injury, even up to the day of the verdict. ” Wilcox v. Plummer’s Ex’rs, 4 Pet. 172, 180.
See, also, Sedg. Dam. (Ed. 1891,) § 85.
In Everson v. Powers, 89 N. Y. 527, which was an action brought by an employe for damages for his wrongful discharge, wherein the point was made that the plaintiff could recover only damages which had accrued at the commencement of the action, the court said:
“The plaintiff’s cause of action arose at the time of the breach of the contract, and he was then entitled to sue and recover such actual damages as the evidence upon the trial showed he had sustained by the defendant’s breach. It is the breach, and not the time of complaining of it, which gives the damage. ”
And in Behrman v. Linde, (Sup.) 5 N. Y. Supp. 900, which was an action for breach of contract, the presiding justice of this court, writing the opinion, says:
“It was further claimed that the plaintiffs could not recover damages that had not been sustained at the time of the commencement of this action. It is clear that this objection is not well taken. The contract having been broken at the time of the commencement of the action, the plaintiffs had a right to recover all the damages which they had sustained up to the time of trial. ”
So with respect to the fraud here, upon its perpetration, and the receipt of the plaintiffs’ property as the result thereof, a cause of action, at least for nominal damages, arose; and this right was not impaired or destroyed by the plaintiffs’ taking, under the facts here appearing, the note of the defendants, because it was found as a fact that, relying upon the false representations, they were induced to receive the note from the defendants. The credit extended, as evidenced by the note, was therefore abrogated; and while it is true that as long as the note was outstanding, and before it was returned to the defendants, no recovery for the value of the goods could be had in an action such as this, still, where, as here, upon the trial, proof was offered showing that subsequent to the commencement of the action the note was not paid, and was offered to be returned upon the trial, we think that this entitled the plaintiffs to recover as damages for the fraud the value of the goods obtained by the defendants. Our decision upon the former appeal was placed upon the ground that no recovery for the value of the goods thus obtained could be had without producing and tendering back the note upon or before the trial; and a reading of the opinion will show that our attention was