144 Misc. 146 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1932
The plaintiff, in June, 1928, contracted to buy and the defendant to sell when, as and if issued, thirty-six $1,000 five and one-half per cent gold bond certificates secured by a first mortgage on specific real property and maturing in 1933. The
The defendant’s refusal to return the purchase price rests upon two claims: First, that the plaintiff waived any right to rescind by receiving the bonds offered and failing to raise any objection for more than four months thereafter; second, that the change in maturity date, though it may give rise to an action for breach of warranty, is not a ground for rescission.
Undoubtedly the plaintiff was remiss in failing to note the maturity date printed on the face of the bond when he received the certificates. Ordinarily a four months’ delay in objecting to a breach would preclude rescission. But no hard and fast rule can be laid down as to what constitutes a reasonable time for rescission, and in the instant case the plaintiff’s delay must be laid at the door of the defendant. • The defendant knew of the discrepancy, but said nothing about it in its correspondence with the plaintiff, although it did see fit to mention a change in the dates at which interest was to be paid. There is no reason why a seller should be permitted to complain of a delay which he could have avoided by calling the attention of the purchaser to a known defect. (2 Williston Sales [2d ed.], p. 1522.) Finally, the buyer’s delay cannot here be said to have affected the seller’s opportunity to correct his tender, as the bonds contracted for were never issued.
The continued negotiations of the plaintiff after his first notice
The plaintiff is, therefore, entitled to recover the purchase price of the bonds, having tendered the interest received, if the change of maturity date was such a breach as will justify a rescission.
Apart from statute, it has long been the law of this State that not every breach of contractual provisions by a seller will justify a rescission by the buyer. As was said in the case of Rosenwasser v. Blyn Shoes, Inc. (246 N. Y. 340, 346), involving a sale of Stocks, “ the default must be such that it destroys the essential objects of the contract.” The severity of this rule is somewhat relaxed where the default is deliberate. Thus in the case of Callanan v. K., A. C. & L. C. R. R. Co. (199 N. Y. 268, 284), cited with approval in the Rosenwasser case, it is said that the right of rescission “ is not permitted for a slight, casual or technical breach, but, as a general rule, only for such as are material and willful, or, if not willful, so substantial and fundamental as to strongly tend to defeat the object of the parties in making the contract.”
In the instant case it is a fair inference, in the absence of rebutting evidence, that a discrepancy of two years in the maturity date of a short term bond constitutes a material and substantial breach of the seller’s obligation. The evidence shows that notice of this discrepancy was intentionally withheld from the plaintiff. Caveat emptor is no longer the sum of economic morality. The seller in default, no less than the buyer who fails to express his objections, must heed the warning: “ A duty to speak is imperative as matter of law where conduct, accompanied by silence, would be deceptive and beguiling.” (Brennan v. Nat. Equitable Investment Co., 247 N. Y. 486, 490.) Under the circumstances of this case, the plaintiff has brought himself within the reason of the rule permitting rescission for a material and willful breach of contract.
Of course, if the Sales of Goods Act (Pers. Prop. Law, art. 5, added by Laws of 1911, chap. 571) applies to a sale of bonds the plaintiff is entitled to rescind regardless of the importance or willfulness of the defendant’s breach. (Pers. Prop. Law, § 150.) The case of Walker v. Northern & Western Finance & T. Co. (199 App. Div. 471) is not authority for the proposition that corporate bonds are “ goods ” within the definition of the Sales of Goods Act,
Judgment is accordingly directed in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $36,000 and interest (less interest payments received and interest thereon from the respective dates of receipt). Twenty days’ stay of execution and sixty days to make a case. Settle order.