
    FERRARI, Respondent, v. KIENZLER, Appellant.
    (City Court of New York, General Term.
    October 26, 1897.)
    Action by F. Ferrari against Herman Kienzler.
    Jacob Fromme, for appellant.
    Dulon & Roe, for respondent
   PER CURIAM.

The direction of a verdict in ravor of the plaintiff by the trial justice, in our opinion, was right. The acceptance of the draft by the defendant bound him to pay the same upon maturity, unless the acceptance was procured by fraud. We find nothing in the case which would justify us in declaring that the acceptance ’.vas procured by fraud, even accepting the defendant’s statement as true, concerning the statements made to him, and which he claims induced him to accept the draft. We cannot find that any fraudulent statement was made to him. The most that happened, it appears, is that the person who presented the draft said that the ship, upon which were the goods, was in sight, and would shortly arrive, whereas, as a matter of fact, the goods had already arrived, and were in the public storehouse, wherefrom they could have been obtained by the defendant’s brokers upon the payment of the legal charges, wjiich plaintiff directed to he paid the defendant by his bankers ‘here. Of course, the defendant was noi required to have his brokers have the goods re-° leased in the way just suggested, but, if that way was not satisfactory to him, he was certainly bound to rescind the contract of sale of the goods to him within a reasonable time, and his failure to do so would make him liable on the draft sued upon. He did not attempt to rescind the sale until many months thereafter, when he returned the invoices and the other documents left him by the plaintiff’s agents; and then it was, in our opinion, too late for him to disaffirm or disclaim the purchase, and consequently his liability upon the draft was complete. Judgment affirmed, with costs.  