Tbe legal propositions presented on tbis appeal arise on tbe facts set forth in a bill of exceptions. Tbe only question argued, and it is tbe only one we have considered, is, was tbe cause of action wbicb accrued in Seeley’s favor, by reason of tbe fraud and deceit practiced by tbe defendant, assignable under tbe laws of tbis State at the time tbe general assignment was delivered to tbe plaintiff. By tbe common law, causes of action classed as ex delieto did not survive tbe death of the person injured, nor that of the wrongdoer; neither, were they assignable. One of tbe reasons upon wbicb tbis rule, that they were not assignable was based, ivas, that tbe title to a cause of action could not vest in a person who could not prosecute the same after tbe death of tbe party who suffered tbe injury. Tbe injustice of tbe rule was manifest as to a class of actions founded in tort, and was long ago recognized in England, and its rigidity relaxed in a large number of cases by parliamentary enactments, authorizing suits to be maintained by executors and administrators for causes of action existing in tbe lifetime of tbe deceased. (Broome’s Legal Maxims, m. p. 704; "Williams on Executors, 668.) Tbe English courts gave to these statutes a wide construction, and in all cases where tbe cause of action survived by virtue of these statutes, the injured party might transfer tbe same in bis lifetime and vest in the assignee a complete title with the same effect as a transfer of a chose in action founded on contract.
Tbe Revised Statutes have proceeded upon tbe assumption that tbis rule of tbe common law was in force in tbis State, and without legislative sanction actions for a tort could not be maintained against tbe tort-feasor by tbe personal representatives of tbe deceased party.
We find several statutes relative to tbis subject, and one enactment is : “ Executors and administrators shall have actions of trespass against any person who shall have wasted, destroyed, taken or carried away, or converted to bis own use tbe goods of their testator or intestate in bis lifetime. They may also maintain actions for trespass committed on tbe real estate of tbe deceased in his lifetime.” *198(2 R. S.j 114, § 4.) Other provisions relative to the same subject are-found in chapter 8, part 3, title 3, article 1, entitled “of suits by and against executors and administrators.” (2 R. S., 447, et seg.) In section 1 it is enacted : “ For wrongs done to the property, rights or interests of another, for which an action might be maintained against, the wrong-doer, such action may be brought by the person in jured, or, after his death, by his executors or administrators against such wrongdoer, and after his death against his executors or administrators in the-same manner and with the like effect in all respects as actions founded on contracts.” The limits placed upon this section are distinctly defined in the next section, which is as follows : “ But the preceding section shall not extend to actions for slander, for libel, or to-actions of assault and battery or false imprisonment; nor to actions-on the case for injuries to the person of the plaintiff or to the person of the testator or intestate of any executor or administrator.” These provisions of the statute are in full force and effect. (Cregin v. Brooklyn Crosstown R. Co., 75 N. Y., 192; Murphy v. N. Y. C. and H. R. R. R. Co., 31 Hun, 358 ; Kelsey v. Jewett, 34 Hun, 11.)
Prior to the enactment of chapter 15 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which went into operation September 1, 1880, thei’o was no direct and affhnative provision in any of our statutes permitting the assignment of causes of action' based on a tort, in the lifetime of the injured person, so as to vest in the assignee a title thereto. But the courts have given to the several statutes above quoted a broad and equitable construction, and since their enactment it has been uniformly held that, in all cases where, by force of any statute, the right of action survived to the personal representatives of the injured party or against those of the wrong-doer, the same was the subject of an assignment inter vivos. No further reference to the law on this subject, as it existed prior to the adoption of the first Code (1848 and 1849), is necessary in considering the question now presented. By sections 111 and 112 of that enactment it was provided that “ every action must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest. * * * But this section shall not be deemed to authorize the assignment of any right of action not arising out of contract.”
I am unable to find any adjudication which holds that these provisions had the effect to enlarge the class of cases in which an *199assignment might be made vesting the right of action in the assignee. But for the purpose of determining the cases which frequently came before the court involving the question, in whose name the action should be prosecuted under such requirement, it became necessary to consider whether the cause of action was transferable for the purpose of disposing of the question thus presented. One of the earliest cases on the subject, after the adoption of the Code, was Zabriskie v. Smith (13 N. Y., 322), and it was there held that an interest or claim to which the personal representatives of a deceased party would not succeed, was not the subject of an assignment by the injured party. In that case it was held that a cause of action arising from the fraud and deceit of the defendant in misrepresenting the financial condition of a third person, was not assignable, and the same was regarded as an injury purely personal, and could not be treated as an injury done to the personal estate of the deceived and injured party. This case has been frequently cited in subsequent, adjudications and much commented upon and sometimes criticised and doubted, yet the rule, as there laid down, has never been overruled in any case where the facts were no different from those there presented.
The learned counsel for the appellant stands upon the rule of law as stated in that case and other similar adjudications, and insists that the case at bar presents precisely the same legal propositions. If the facts in the case before us are not essentially different, then it must be admitted that Zabriskie v. Smith is an authority which supports the argument, and the judgment should be reversed. In that case the defendant’s false statements and misrepresentations were made directly to the merchants who were about to make a sale of goods to a customer who applied for a credit, and in consequence of the defendant’s false representations they were induced to make the sale and the purchaser being at that time insolvent, they suffered a loss. Smith, the defendant, did not share in any way in the goods purchased, nor derive any profit or advantage from the transaction. It was a case of fraud and deceit practiced upon the vendor of goods, who was induced thereby to part with his goods to another. In the case now before us, the facts are essentially and materially different, and brings it within the class of cases where the cause of action survives the death of the injured party as well *200as the wrong-doer, by the provisions of the Revised Statutes, as has been held in many cases.
¥e must assume that the jury found the facts which the bill of exceptions states the evidence tended to prove, and they support the verdict. It appears that while negotiations were jiending, Snow, the purchaser, referred Seeley to the defendant for information concerning his financial responsibility. This indicates that Snow and the defendant were acquaintances and that the latter knew, or assumed to know, as to his pecuniary responsibility, and the bill states that the defendant was to have one-fourth of the goods sold for recommending to the seller that Snow’s notes, indorsed by Clark, would be good; and that after the trade was concluded, the goods were delivered to the defendant at his store in Syracuse, and that he received a portion of the proceeds of the same. This is the effect of the statement in the bill of exceptions. This tends to establish that the defendant was an active participant in the fraud perpetrated upon Seeley, profited by the transaction and connected himself therewith before the sale was consummated. Seeley could have repudiated the sale and maintained an action in replevin against the defendant and recovered the goods which he received into his possession, having by means of his fraud gained possession of part of the goods in question and derived a profit therefrom, his act resulted in a direct injury to the property, rights and interests of Seeley, which gave him a right of action against the defendant, which would have survived to the personal representatives of Seeley, and was therefore assignable by him in his lifetime.
The distinction in principle between this case and Zabriskie v. Smith, arising out of the facts of the case, was observed and followed in Haight v. Hayt (19 N. Y., 464). There the vendor of lands was guilty of false representations as to an incumbrance, whereby the vendee suffered a loss, and it was held that the right of action survived to and against the personal representatives of the parties. There, as here, the party perpetrating the fraud gained a pecuniary advantage by means of his false and fraudulent representation.
In Dininny v. Fay (38 Barb., 18), the cause of action was against the defendant, a sheriff, for neglect of his duty in not serving a *201body execution delivered to bira for that purpose, and it was held that tbe cause of action arising out of tbe sheriff’s neglect of duty was assignable, for tbe reason that the omission to collect tbe execution was a wrong to tbe property, rights and interests of the plaintiff in tbe execution, and would survive to bis executor or administrator, and was therefore assignable. (See, also, Graves v. Spier, 58 Barb., 386; Byxbie v. Wood, 24 N. Y., 612; McKee v. Judd, 12 id., 622.)
We think it plain, beyond all argument, that tbe fraudulent acts •of tbe defendant worked a direct injury to the property and goods of tbe assignor, and the same was assignable within tbe provisions of tbe statute as interpreted by tbe cases we have referred to.
Tbe judgment should be affirmed.
Smith, P. J., and Bradley, J., concurred; Haight, J., not sitting.Judgment affirmed.