49 N.Y. 583 | NY | 1872
At the close of the plaintiff's case, the defendants' counsel moved to dismiss the complaint upon the ground "that the plaintiff has not a cause of action." The motion was denied and the defendants excepted. The motion was too general. It should have specified the particular *585
defect in the complaint or in the evidence, so that the court could have passed upon it, and the other party have had the opportunity to supply the defect in the evidence, or move to amend the complaint. Such an exception is not in general available in this court. (Binsse v. Wood,
In Gompertz v. Bartlett (75 Eng. Com. Law, 849), an unstamped bill of exchange indorsed in blank, purporting to be a foreign bill, was sold without recourse. It proved to have been a domestic bill, and was unavailable without a stamp, although both vendor and vendee were ignorant of *586 the defect, and it was held that the purchaser was entitled to recover back the price from the vendor, on the ground that it did not answer the description by which it was sold. A similar decision was made upon the sale of forged paper as genuine. (Gurney v. Womersley, 82 Eng. Com. Law, 133; see also Benjamin on Sales, § 442 et seq., and cases there cited.) I am unable to see why this case does not fall within the principle of these authorities. It is claimed that, although the notes are declared void by the statute, they are only voidable at the election of the parties to them, and that the plaintiff may never be damaged in consequence of their usurious character. The answer to this is, that the defect essentially changes the nature of the article from that purchased. The defendants undertook to sell business paper which would be valid in the hands of the plaintiff, and transferred void paper. The difference is vital, and we cannot suppose that any person would advance money upon such paper. It is no answer to say that the parties to the paper might waive the defence and pay it. So the parties might have paid the unstamped bill or forged note, but there was no contract for such paper. Here the plaintiff purchased securities enforcible in the courts, and the seller delivered paper not enforcible, and possessing no legal character or value, and there was no valid consideration for the money paid. It is not material whether the defendants actually owned the notes or not. They admit the ownership of one of them, and there is evidence tending to prove that they owned all of them, but they sold them as their own, and as business paper. There is no valid exception in the case, and the judgment must be affirmed with costs.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed. *587