45 Barb. 490 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1866
The contract in question in this action was needlessly under seal. It was such a contract as the defendant Fox, if he and the other defendants were partners or jointly interested in the subject matter of the agreement, might properly make, like any simple contract, without seal or any express authority. But there is abundant evidence, I think, to support the finding of the referee that the defendant Denison, if he did not authorize Fox to make such contract and sign it for him, afterwards knew of the contract or that Fox had made a contract with the plaintiff for the purchase and delivery of the stone for which the action was brought. He ordered and received some of the stone delivered, and made payments for them, distinctly recognizing and ratifying a contract therefor as made by the defendant Fox. The other defendants do not defend, and -it is immaterial whether there is sufficient evidence to make the contract a valid and joint contract as
But the referee, I think, erred in not giving proper legal force and effect to the account rendered by the plaintiff to the defendant in the letter dated the 10th of March, 1855. This was the second account rendered by the plaintiff to the defendant professing to be an account of the quantity of the stone delivered. The previous account was delivered on the 23d of January previously, and this account, rendered on the 10th of March, purports to be a corrected account. It is a full account of the quantity of the stone delivered, with credits for the money received on such account, and states and claims at the foot that a balance was due the plaintiff corresponding with the footings of such account, of $52.46, for which he asks payment. This account the defendant Denison received at about its date, and never, it appears, objected to it. He must therefore be deemed to have acquiesced in its correctness. The account stood thus nearly six years before this suit was commenced; no controversy, so far as the evidence discloses, having ever existed in regard to the correctness of such account before the commencement of this action. It seems to me that the said account must therefore have the force of a stated account between these parties,
For this error of the referee I think there should he a new trial, with costs to abide the event, unless the plaintiff is willing to reduce the judgment, so that the balance as stated in said account of $52.46, with interest thereon from the 10th of March, 1855, shall constitute the judgment, and if so, it should he affirmed for that amount.
Johnson, Welles and E. D. Smith, Justices.]