Anderson v. Lemon

6 Sandf. 552
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedMay 10, 1851
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Sandf. 552 (Anderson v. Lemon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Lemon, 6 Sandf. 552 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1851).

Opinion

By the Court.

Campbell, J.

The parties were copartners engaged in the manufacture and sale of tobacco. Their place of business for the sale of their tobacco was at No. 4 Wall-street, in the city of New York. These premises were occupied by the parties under a lease from a committee of the estate of a lunatic, which lease was to continue for five years, if not sooner terminated by the death of the lunatic. This lease was in the name of the complainant as lessee, though the advantages arising from it were enjoyed by the firm of [558]*558John Anderson & Co., composed of the parties to this suit. The lunatic had died before the expiration of the five years, but the heirs had extended the lease. Improvements had been made by the copartners upon the premises, but which would belong to the owners of the fee at the expiration of the lease.

In the summer of 1847, the copartnership term being about expiring, the parties entered into a negotiation for a renewal, and at the same time the heirs, owners of the fee of the premises above mentioned, offered the same for sale. The extended lease of the premises would expire in the following spring. Thereupon the complainant, with the' knowledge, and, as is charged, with the approbation of the defendant, opened an egotiation with the agent of the heirs for the purchase of the fee of the premises, and from time to time reported 'to the defendant the progress of such negotiation. But whether the complainant intended to purchase the premises for the copartnership and to be held as copartnership property, or whether he intended to purchase in his own name, and to be held as his individual property, simply giving to the copartnership the'benefit of the purchase during the existence of the new term, if one should be agreed upon, is a question in dispute between the parties. According to the agreement for the copartnership during the term which was about expiring, the parties were not equal copartners, the complainant receiving three-fourths and the defendant one-fourth of the profits. In the negotiation for the new term", the complainant insisted upon the same division of profits, and the defendant, on the other hand, insisted that in the new term he should become an equal copartner.

• Under this state of things the defendant obtained from the agent of the owners of the premises a promise not to sell to the complainant without notice to the defendant, and the defendant agreed to become a secret bidder against the complainant. Both of the negotiations, for the purchase of the premises and for the new copartnership, were continued for some time. The original term of copartnership had in the mean time expired, and the copartnership continued from day to day at the will of [559]*559.the parties. The defendant failing, as he owns, to make an arrangement satisfactory to him for a new copartnership, without the knowledge of the complainant, succeeded in effecting a purchase of the premises in question, and obtained a conveyance to himself individually. No new copartnership between the parties was ever formed. ■ The complainant now seeks to have the property in question decreed to be copartnership property, and asks that the same may be sold for the benefit of the original copartnership; and failing that, then that the defendant pay for the improvements erected upon the premises by the copartnership during the continuance of the lease.

It seems to me that two important questions present themselves in this case for our consideration.

1st. Whether the fee of real estate, where a portion of the business of a copartnership is carried on, purchased by one partner and paid for out of his individual property without the knowledge or consent of his copartner, can, at the election of his copartner, be decreed to be partnership property, it being no part of the ordinary business of such copartnership to engage in the purchase of real estate. 2d. Whether under the particular circumstances of this case, looking at the relation which these parties sustained to each other at the time of the commencement of the negotiation for the purchase by the complainant, and at the ■time of the actual purchase by the defendant, we may consider that the defendant acted fraudulently in making the purchase, and on the ground of fraud may decree the purchase made for the benefit of the copartnership.

In reference to the first question. In Norris v. Le Neve, (3 Atkyns, 26,) an effort was made to set aside the purchase of a reversion which had been made by a barrister while he was acting as executor and trustee under the will of the original owner. Lord Hardwicke says, “ The case which has been cited of Bumford Market and other cases of leases, (Pierson v. Shore, 1 Atkyns, 480,) are different from this, for there tenant right of renewals are rather a courtesy from the landlord, and cceteris paribus, the relations of the same family who took the original lease from bishops, deans, chapters, &c., are generally preferred, [560]*560and they have a natural expectation of it.” And he adds in another part of his opinion, “ This is primes impressionia, and no case has been cited in point, but only argued by way of analogy, to cases of leases which I have shown are very different.” And though he declined in that case to interfere, mainly on the ground of great lapse of time, yet the distinction there taken remains, and in many cases where a party from his previous confidential relations might be decreed to-stand as trustee in a renewal lease taken in his own name, he would not be so decreed where he had become the purchaser of the reversion.

Sir William Grant, in Randall v. Russell, 3 Merivale, 190, says truly: “ There never was a stronger case for turning the purchaser of a reversion into a trustee for those who had the antecedent interests in the estate, than that of Norris v. Le Neve. ” And yet he approved and enforced the .doctrine. There the defendant, who was tenant for life, under her husband’s will, of certain leasehold estates, purchased in her own name the reversion in fee, and the bill was filed, among other things, to have her declared a trustee of this estate for the benefit of the heirs of her husband. The Master of the Rolls remarks: “ It is not enough to say that Mrs. Russell’s situation as tenant for life gave her the opportunity of making the purchase. They must go on and show what right ’ or interest of theirs she acquired or defeated by making the purchase.”

So in the case before us, laying out of view all allegations of fraud and circumstances and facts to support them. Whose right or interest did the defendant acquire b.y this purchase ? Not that of the complainant,'for he had none, except a common right with every other man in the community to become the purchaser. The premises were not offered for lease, but for sale to the highest bidder, and there is no evidence going to show any favor to either complainant or defendant; on the contrary, the agent avowed his intention in availing himself of the relative position of these parties to procure as large a price as possible. The death of the original owner, and the descent of the estate, like the change of ownership of the fee in Randall [561]*561v. Russell, had altered the relation of these parties to the premises in question.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Sandf. 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-lemon-nysuperctnyc-1851.