Amsterdam v. Apfel

178 A.D. 71, 165 N.Y.S. 60, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6445
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 18, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 178 A.D. 71 (Amsterdam v. Apfel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amsterdam v. Apfel, 178 A.D. 71, 165 N.Y.S. 60, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6445 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinions

Davis, J.:

Plaintiff sued in this action to recover $1,697.74, $1,500 of which she alleges she delivered to the defendant for the specific purpose of purchasing premises 505 and 507 Lafayette avenue, in the borough of Brooklyn, New York city, and which moneys she alleges were converted by the defendant. The circumstances surrounding the alleged conversion of the remaining $197.74 will appear later1 in this opinion.

[72]*72The complaint alleges that while the defendant was acting as plaintiff’s attorney, on or about June 27, 1912, upon his representation that premises 505 and 507 Lafayette avenue, Brooklyn, could be purchased for §1,500, subject to a mortgage then upon the premises or thereafter to be placed thereon, and could be resold at a profit, entered into an agreement with defendant whereby it was mutually agreed that the plaintiff should furnish to the defendant the sum of $1,500, and should pay one-half of any necessary expenses for mortgage and closing of title, etc., incident thereto; that the defendant would undertake to purchase the said property 505 and 507 Lafayette avenue, and 20 and 22 Kosciusko street, in the borough of Brooklyn, city of New York, and that the plaintiff should have a one-half ownership therein, and that the defendant would have the other one-half ownership, and that the defendant would take charge of the property, and that the profits arising from its resale should be equally divided between the plaintiff and the defendant.

The complaint further alleges that under the agreement defendant was to act as her attorney in said purchase, and that between June 27, 1912, and July 2, 1912, in compliance with the agreement she paid defendant §1,500, and that later, and in October, 1912, she paid him the further sum of $197.74 upon his representation that the latter was her share of the necessary expenses of getting the mortgage, examining title, etc. And there is the further allegation that the defendant has not purchased the said property above referred to, nor caused them to be conveyed to the plaintiff; that the said sum of §1,500 paid by the plaintiff to the defendant aforesaid was not used by defendant to purchase the property in question, nor any part' thereof, but, on the contrary, the defendant has fraudulently converted the money to his own use; that the defendant’s statement regarding the expenses of said premises was false and untrue and the plaintiff was not indebted to the defendant in the said sum of §197.74, paid to the defendant as aforesaid, nor any part thereof, and the defendant has converted the same to his own use.

The answer denies all of the material allegations of the complaint except that it admits that plaintiff paid him §197.74, and [73]*73that he did not cause the property to be conveyed to the plaintiff and that the $1,500 was not used by him to purchase the property.

The jury rendered a verdict for the full amount claimed.

It appears that originally the plaintiff with the other members of her family owned the Lafayette street premises in question. They entered into an agreement with Brown & Weiss to exchange it for certain property on Madison avenue, and the exchange was made. The defendant was plaintiff’s attorney in this transaction. He induced Brown & Weiss to exchange the Lafayette street premises for defendant’s premises on Cortlandt street. This gave to the defendant the control of the Lafayette street premises. He thereupon conveyed the Lafayette street premises to B. S. S. Company for $8,000 using for that purpose a deed which had been executed by the plaintiff and her family, but from which the vendee’s name had been omitted. He afterwards wrote in the name of B. S. S. Company. As part of the transaction with B. S. S. Company defendant took back a lease from B. S. S. Company for the term of one year and ten months from the date of the lease June 28, 1912, with a privilege to purchase the premises any time prior to the expiration of the lease on May 1,1914, for the sum of $8,500 cash, or $9,000 by paying $2,000 cash and $7,000 in a mortgage. The deed and lease referred to really constituted a mortgage. The various transactions took place between June 11, 1912, and June 28, 1912.

The defendant asserts that the plaintiff was cognizant of every step he took; that she paid him the $1,500 for a one-half interest in his transaction in return for which he agreed to give her one-half of any profits he made on a sale of the property, first repaying to her out of the proceeds the $1,500 she had paid him. On the other hand, the plaintiff denies that she knew anything about defendant’s transactions as testified to by him, but asserts that she gave him the $1,500 to buy the property for her in return for which she agreed to give him one-half of the profits on a sale of the property after she had taken out the $1,500 paid by her. Plaintiff testified that defendant first broached the subject to her on the 21st or 22d of June, 1912. She thus describes the interview: “He called me away after [74]*74the dinner, before the dance, and he asked me if I had $1,500. I said, ‘ yes.’ He said, how would you like to invest it in buying back your old property at 505 and 507 Lafayette Avenue ? You know the value of the property, you don’t have to go into it; we will buy that back if you will put up $1,500, and I will go to the Lawyers’ Guarantee Trust Company,’ I believe he said, •' and get a mortgage for $8,000, or I will sell the property which I expect to do within the next three or four months, and I will give you back your $1,500 and give you half of the profits.’ ”

She next saw defendant on June 27, 1912, when at his request she gave him a check for $100 on account and he gave her the following receipt:

“Received from Rose Amsterdam check for One hundred Dollars on account of Fifteen hundred Dollars to be paid by her for the purchase of 505-7 Lafayette avenue, Brooklyn, 40x200, for said sum plus % of any necessary expenses for mortgage closing of title, etc. Miss Amsterdam to have one-half interest in said property, I. I. Apfel to take charge of property and profits are to be divided equally. Balance of ($1400.00/100) Fourteen hundred Dollars to be paid by July 2nd, 1912.
“June With, 1912.
“IGNACE I. APFEL.”

She further testified that defendant said that she would have the additional expenses of taking title, and that he would buy the property before the second of July, and dispose of it during that summer. On July 1, 1912, plaintiff gave defendant the remaining $1,400. She sailed for Europe the next morning. On her return she saw defendant many times and upon his demand paid him $197.79 as part of the expenses in connection with the property. She testified that she often asked defendant' why he did not sell the property and that he always answered that he was waiting for a better market.

There was thus a sharp conflict between the plaintiff and defendant as to the nature and character of the transaction. Defendant denies the making- of the agreement set up in the complaint, and claims that the $1,500 was the purchase price of one-half of his interest in the property. If such be the fact, [75]*75this judgment is wrong. In support of his contention defendant introduced in evidence an agreement between the plaintiff and himself dated July 1, 1912, concededly signed by the plaintiff. The agreement is as follows:

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Related

In re the Estate of Below
162 F. Supp. 88 (Virgin Islands, 1958)
In Re the Estate of Rothchild
283 P. 598 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1929)
Amsterdam v. . Apfel
123 N.E. 69 (New York Court of Appeals, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
178 A.D. 71, 165 N.Y.S. 60, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amsterdam-v-apfel-nyappdiv-1917.