Court Opinion

ID: 3632612
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 00:11:42.165421+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:45:11.308839
License: Public Domain

This case was submitted to the Appellate Division upon an agreed statement of facts. Plaintiff is engaged in the jewelry business. The defendant is a pawnbroker. Plaintiff intrusted to an employee a diamond ring to sell to one Doctor Chiaramonte for $750. At the time the employee did not intend to sell the ring, but had a preconceived design to steal it and to convert the proceeds to his own use. Thereafter the employee pledged the ring with the defendant, which in good faith loaned him $225 on it. The Appellate Division has decided that the Factors' Act does not apply in such circumstances and that the plaintiff is entitled to recover possession of the ring without paying to the defendant the amount advanced.
The Factors' Act (Pers. Prop. Law; Cons. Laws, ch. 41, § 43) provides: "Every factor or other agent, intrusted *Page 544 
with the possession of any bill of lading * * * and every such factor or agent not having the documentary evidence of title, who shall be intrusted with the possession of any merchandise for the purpose of sale * * * shall be deemed to be the true owner thereof, so far as to give validity to any contract made by such agent with any other person, for the sale or disposition of * * * such merchandise, for any money advanced * * * by such other person upon the faith thereof." The employee of the plaintiff, in obtaining possession of the ring, was guilty of common law larceny by trick and device. (People v. Miller, 169 N.Y. 339,354.) It is so agreed in the statement of facts. Concededly, if the employee had been guilty of embezzlement the Factors' Act would apply, as in those circumstances the employee would have rightfully obtained possession. The test seems to be whether at the time of obtaining possession, such possession was obtained with the preconceived intention of committing the crime of common law larceny by trick and device. If so, the Factors' Act does not apply. If, however, the intent was conceived after obtaining possession, then the act applies. For over a hundred years that has been the law in this State. In Soltau v. Gerdau (119 N.Y. 380,390) this court said: "Statutes similar to this have for many years existed in England, and in most, if not all, the States of the Union, and it has never yet been held, nor, so far as we can discover, claimed in any reported case that the Factors' Act can have any operation whatever in the case of goods taken by common law larceny from the true owner." The same principle was applied in the case of Schmidt v. Simpson
(204 N.Y. 434) and as late as the case of Stone, Inc., v. ProvidentLoan Society (260 N.Y. 536).
It is earnestly urged by counsel for appellant that the rule which places upon the owner the risk that his agent may decide to commit a fraud after the delivery of the article to be sold and protects the pledgee for money *Page 545 
advanced in good faith, but in cases where the agent had decided to commit common law larceny by trick and device before delivery of the article to him, then that a pledgee in good faith is not protected, is an unreasonable rule not justified by the terms of the statute. We recognize the force of appellant's argument. Nevertheless we feel constrained to follow an unbroken line of decisions of this court extending over many years. If a change is to be made it must be made by the Legislature.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
CRANE, Ch. J., LEHMAN, O'BRIEN, LOUGHRAN, FINCH and RIPPEY, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed.