Citation Numbers: 12 Barb. 667, 1852 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 41
Judges: Strong
Filed Date: 6/7/1852
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/2/2024
By the Court,
The contract between the parties when made, was clearly within the statute of frauds, and .void; and the taking of a portion of the wheat in the warehouse by the defendant, without the consent of the plaintiffs, did not, independent of the subsequent acts of the parties, relieve the contract from the operation of the statute. It is claimed, however, on the part of the plaintiffs, that the request afterwards made by them to the .defendant, to take away the balance of the wheat and pay them, and his promise to do so, had the effect to convert the act of the defendant in taking the wheat wrongfully obtained by him, into a delivery by the plaintiffs and an acceptance
To constitute such a receipt and acceptance of goods as will take a case out of the statute of frauds, “ there must be a delivery of the goods by the vendor, with the intention of vesting the right of possession in the vendee, and there must be an actual acceptance by the latter with the intention of taking the possession as owner.” (Phillips v. Bistolli, 2 Barn. & Cress. 511.) “ Acceptance is an act done by two parties, one of whom is content to deliver, and the other to receive the subject matter of the contract.” (Acraman v. Swift, 8 Man. Gr. & Scott, 449, 459.) In Shindler v. Houston, (1 Comst. 261, 265,) Gardiner, justice, says, the language of the statute is “ unequivocal, and demands the action of both parties; for acceptance implies delivery, and there can be no complete delivery without acceptance.” It is manifest the same rule must prevail in respect to a receipt and acceptance of part, so far as that part is concerned, as in respect to the whole. When the acceptance of part is relied on, it must be a part of the goods contracted to be sold. (2 R. S. 136, § 3, sub. 2.)
The defendant in the present case, in taking the wheat, which it is now contended must, by the subsequent mutual assent of the parties be regarded as having been delivered and accepted on the contract, was a trespasser. The plaintiffs might have sued him as such, and recovered the wheat, or the value of it, without regard to the contract. (Acraman v. Swift, supra.) Perhaps also, inasmuch as the defendant in taking the wheat claimed a right to do so under the contract, the plaintiffs might,
There is plausibility, and perhaps force, in' the position that the wheat actually taken was not part of the wheat agreed to be sold. The contract related to the wheat which should remain in the warehouse after the 800 bushels sold by contract should be removed; that taken was from the bulk in the warehouse before the removal of the 800 bushels. An agreement to regard the receipt of other wheat than was contracted for, made subsequent to the receipt, as delivered and accepted on the contract, obviously would not satisfy the statute. But aside from this objection,.! am unable to bring my mind to the conclusion that any act which was rightfully treated by one of the parties to a contract as a trespass, can, by a subsequent understanding, be made a sufficient partial delivery and acceptance to take a case out of the statute of frauds. Some further act of the parties is in my opinion necessary. (See Shindler v. Houston, supra.)
The view taken of the question considered, renders it unnecessary to pass upon other questions in the cause.
The report must be set aside; costs to abide the event.
Selden, Johnson and T. R. Strong, Justices.]