Wooster v. Sage

Taloott, J.:

This is an appeal from the judgment, and from an order of the Special Term denying a new trial. The plaintiff purchased from the defendant, in March, 1870, for the sum of $1,800, two bonds of the “ Des Moines Yalley R. R. Co.,” of the par value of $1,000 each, after certain representations of the defendant touching the value thereof, and upon the agreement by the defendant, that if at any time the plaintiff got sick of the bonds, he might redeliver them to the defendant who would return the purchase-money. The plaintiff immediately sold the bonds to two ladies, one to each, for the same price which he had given the defendant, and upon a statement to them of the representations which the defendant made concerning the bonds, and upon the same agreement to take them back if, and when, they should become dissatisfied with the bonds. The ladies held the bonds for nearly two years, and becoming dissatisfied, returned them to the plaintiff, who, in some manner *288reimbursed them for the amounts which they had paid, then took the bonds to the defendant, offered to return them and demanded a return of the purchase-money. The defendant insisted, that the sale of the bonds by the plaintiff to the ladies, put an end to the right of the plaintiff to return to the defendant. But the court ruled that the fact was immaterial. The defendant also claimed, that the contract to receive the bonds back was void by the statute of frauds; also, that no damages were alleged or proved, and that the plaintiff was at most entitled to recover only nominal damages, and that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to maintain an action. The plaintiff recovered on the trial, and the above is understood to be the substance of the legal objections to the recovery, which were made on the trial by the defendant, although they were stated in various forms. We do not think any of these objections were well taken. We understand the rule to be, that such a contract, being taken out of the statute by having been consummated by the delivery and receipt of the property and the payment of the price, the statute has no application to it. In White v. Knapp (41 Barb., 549), where the plaintiff in a similar action had been nonsuited on the ground of the statute of frauds, the nonsuit'was set aside on the ground, that the statute formed no objection to the recovery. It was held in Eno v. Woodworth (4 Comst., 249), that in such a case an action lay on the agreement, to recover back the purchase-money, and the plaintiff was not required to sue for damages for breach of the contract; and also that, since the Code, it was proper to state the facts and circumstances of the case, instead of suing for money had and received. (See, also, George v. Braden, 70 Penn. St., 56.) We do not think that the right of the plaintiff to return the bonds was divested by the circumstance that he made a sale of them to other parties on the same condition. If there had been any option or right of election to be exercised by the defendant, the disposition of the bonds by the plaintiff might have discharged the defendant from liability, inasmuch as it would have put it out of the power of the defendant to reclaim the bonds during the time they were held by the third parties, but since the option was vested solely in the plaintiff we do not see how the defendant could have been injured, or his rights in any way impaired by the temporary ownership of *289the third parties. There were various communications concerning the bonds, and their value and the probabilities and prospects in regard to them, passing between the plaintiff and the defendant, from a period soon after the plaintiff’s purchase, and it is claimed that the defendant treated the matter in such a way as to amount to a waiver, or furnish evidence of a waiver of an earlier exercise of the plaintiff’s option to return. It is argued that the right to return had ceased to be operative, upon the ground that there was no attempt to exercise that right within a reasonable time. This, as it seems to us, might have been, an important point, either as a question of law or fact, to be determined in the case, but we fail to discover that any such objection was taken on the trial, or that the attention of the court was in any manner called to the question, whether, the 'offer of a redelivery of the bonds and a demand for a return of the purchase-money was made within a reasonable time, or that any ruling of the court was made in reference to it. The defendant’s counsel, in his points on the argument of this appeal, claims that one of the objections to the recovery was, that the offer to return the bonds was not made within a reasonable time, but from a careful examination of the case we are compelled to consider this a mistake. If the objection had been distinctly taken on the trial, or the attention of the court in any manner called to it, perhaps additional proof on the subject might have appeared. (Henry v. Salina Bank, 1 N. Y., 83.)

It appears that from each of the bonds two coupons are missing, namely, one falling due on each bond October 1, 1870, for forty dollars, and one for. the same amount from each bond falling due April 1, 1871. This appears to have escaped attention on the trial, and no point was made on this account. It is, however, agreed that the amount of such coupons, with interest to the date of the judgment, ought to be deducted from the judgment. This appears to amount to the sum of $211.20, which amount will be deducted from the judgment, which must be affirmed for the residue.

Order denying new trial affirmed, and judgment affirmed, less the sum of $211.20 to be deducted therefrom.

Present — Tappen and Talcott, JJ.

*290Judgment, and order denying new trial, affirmed, with the modifidation reducing the judgment by the sum of $211.20, with costs to respondent.