Rider v. Pond

Mitchell, P. J.

The plaintiffs had entered into a contract with Roberts & Co., by which they were to execute a, mortgage on machinery, &c. to Roberts & Co., and assign a policy of insurance to the latter to the amount of $10,000, and Roberts & Co. were to advance to them this sum of $10,000. The two acts—the giving of the securities and the payment of the money— were to be contemporaneous: either party would fulfill his part of the contract, by being ready and offering to perform it, if the other would perform his part. If the plaintiffs had executed the mortgage, and assigned the policy, and given them to an agent and told him to go and complete the execution of the contract with Roberts & Co., the agent would be inexcusable if he delivered the securities without receiving the money. The plain*183tiffs assigned to Pond the property to be mortgaged, and a valuable contract made by Roberts & Co. with them, excepting for their own benefit the #10,000 to be paid by Roberts Co. The plaintiffs then requested Pond to execute to Roberts & Co. the mortgage on the machinery and assign to them the policy, to the amount or sum of #10,000, as security to Roberts & Co. for the sum of #10,000, to be advanced by Roberts Co,, as aforesaid. This is the whole allegation in the complaint, as to the nature of the request made to Pond. The complaint alleges that Pond refused, and that the plaintiffs have thereby lost #10,000.

It is plain that there was no express authority to Pond to execute the securities if Roberts & Co. did not pay the money; and if the complaint had alleged that under this authority Pond had delivered the securities without the money being paid, and so had caused damage to the plaintiffs, there would be some ground for the charge. The plaintiffs now say that they meant that the securities should be delivered without the money being paid. If that was what they meant, and if they had a. right to waive the payment, they have not expressed that meaning in the complaint. The contrary would be inferred, as the payment of the #10,000 was to be the only consideratipn fo.r the mortgage, and the payment of the money was the condition on which the securities were to be given ; and until some express direction to the contrary was given Pond would be bound tp know that he was not to deliver the securities until the money should be paid, to the -satisfaction of the plaintiffs. The waiver of this condition should have been averred by the plaintiffs, if they meant to waive it.

The defendant answers that he prepared the securities and gave notice to Roberts & Co. and to the plaintiffs that he was, ready to perform the contract on his part, and requested Roberts & Co. to pay the #10,000 and receive, the securities from him, but that Roberts & Co. failed to do so, and failed to perform any of the provisions of the contract incumbent on them to perform; and that for this reason the defendant did not deliver the, securities. The plaintiff demurred to this answer.

*184For the reasons before shown, the demurrer is bad; as the defendant offered to fulfill the contract and was ready to do so, and gave notice to Roberts & Go., and the plaintiffs to that effect. If the plaintiffs had replied that at or before the time of the tender by the defendant they notified him to deliver the securities without requiring the money to be paid, they might have supplied the omission in the complaint; which would perhaps have covered the difficulty: or, if they had gone to trial on the answer as it was, if a reply was not then necessary to an answer setting up new matter as a defense, the. court would have allowed them to amend their complaint and prove, the precise nature of the request. But they chose not to do so, and to demur. The court therefore can only decide whether to such a complaint the answer is not good. It is so considered. The judge at special term noticed that the pleadings were imperfect, and a very different question from the one now decided was principally argued before him. He suggested a correction of the pleadings; but the parties chose to leave them as they are and to enter an order sustaining the demurrer. It seemed to be the desire of both parties that the court should express its opinion on other questions. By the contract between Roberts <fc Go. and the plaintiffs, and which was assigned to Pond, (excepting to the plaintiffs the $10,000,) Roberts &■ Go. were to make advances to the plaintiffs of the full cost of oil to be manufactured by them and of expenses thereon, and take a share in the business, so that if it should be unprofitable no part of the $10,000 to be advanced by him should be returned to him, and if there were profits he was to share in them. He was also to receive commissions on sales, and on guaranty. All these obligations on his part were assigned to Pond, and the expected performance of them was the inducement to him to take the assignment and agree to allow the plaintiffs to have the $10,000. If Roberts & Co. were ready to fulfill all the engagements on their part, to Pond, and carry out the agreement faithfully, it was immaterial to Pond what arrangement Roberts & Co. and the plaintiffs made as to the payment of the $10,000. Those two parties might agree that after it was paid by Roberts & Co. to the plaintiffs, the plaintiffs should re*185turn it to Roberts & Co., if this were done in good faith to Pond. But a case might be supposed in which Pond would be under no obligation to pay the money, notwithstanding such an agreement. If the plaintiffs, as an inducement to Pond to take the assignment, had represented to Mm that the business was so profitable and safe that Roberts & Co. had agreed to advance the $10,000 and leave it at the risk of the business, and this had led Pond to take the assignment of the contract and expend a large sum of money in the improvement and extension of the assigned property, and’ if, as now intimated, Roberts & Co. had, by arrangement with the plaintiffs, escaped from the liability to make the advance, the misrepresentation would have discharged the defendant, at least to some extent. He would have been discharged in part, at least, although he should not return the assigned property, as, by the wrongful act of the plaintiffs, he had been led to expend a large sum on that property, which he would not be able to separate from it, and so Ms inability to restore it would arise from the act of the plaintiffs themselves. Something like this was barely intimated on one side. If this were all done in good faith, and with notice to Pond, before he made the bargain, he cannot complain. If it was done in such a way as to defraud him, he is not bound.

Although questions somewhat of this nature were discussed on both sides, the pleadings do not present them, and they would not have been noticed, except for the urgent desire of one side that the court should not pass them by.

The judgment of the special term is reversed, but without costs, as the decision is not on the points mainly discussed. Either party may amend his pleadings, without costs.

Clerke, J., concurred.

Roosevelt, J.

As between Pond and the Riders it was expressly agreed that the $10,000 was to be paid to the latter “ to be used by them for their own use and benefit and without any account to Pond.” They had a perfect right therefore to accept it in notes or checks, or in any form they saw fit ;• or, if so *186disposed, to waive it altogether. Pond, therefore, if they requested it, was bound to execute and deliver the -mortgage, whether the money was paid or not. It was their money and not his ; and the payment was to be made to them and not to him, and for their use and their use alone, and not his. The averment in the complaint that he was requested to execute and deliver a mortgage as security for the sum “to be advanced as aforesaid,” is, on this point, merely descriptive of the sum intended, and in no way implies a conditional request. The words quoted are used not to imply that he was to deliver the'mortgage Only in the event of the money being advanced, but to indicate that the $10,000 for which it was to be given was not any sum of that amount, but the particular $10,000 spoken of in the previous agreement as the sum which Roberts & Co. were to advance.

If the plaintiffs then absolutely and unconditionally requested Pond to execute and deliver to Roberts &- Co. a mortgage for the $10,000, is it any answer for Pond to say that he “ gave notice that he was ready to perform, and requested Roberts &• Co. to pay the plaintiffs the $10,000 and receive the securities, and that Roberts & Co. neglected to pay the plaintiffs ?” It seems to me that such an answer by not denying admits that he refused to do what the plaintiffs requested, and what they had a right to request him to do. And as the plaintiffs, by the agreement, were to receive $10,000 as a consideration for their property sold to the defendant, to be raised by a mortgage to be executed by him on the property sold, and as he has refused to execute the mortgage which would enable them to get the money from others, he must, as the only and the just alternative, pay the money himself.

Demurrers, however, unless in very clear cases, are not encouraged by the new code ; and the party demurring, therefore, to the insufficiency of his adversary’s pleading, should be particularly careful not himself to commit the first fault. In this case the language of the complaint, it must be admitted, is not as distinct and certain as it might be. The plaintiffs, strictly, should have averred in precise terms that they requested the defendant to execute and deliver the securities, whether the $10,000 was *187simultaneously paid or not. However the complaint, in that respect, after some labor of construing, may strike my mind, it is manifest from the different impression produced on the minds of my colleagues, that it is not free from ambiguity. Under these circumstances I am inclined to concur with them in the cqnclusion that the plaintiffs’ objections, in the form of demurrer to the defendant’s answer, should not be allowed, but that the pleadings on both sides should be made more definite and certain, as suggested by the judge at special term; or that the parties should go to trial on the complaint and answer as they stand, postponing all amendments till the evidence shall have shown the actual truth of the Case.

[New-York General Term, June 1, 1854.

Judgment reversed.

Mitchell, Roosevelt and Clerke, Justices.]