Babbitt v. Gibbs

51 A.D. 387, 64 N.Y.S. 699
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 51 A.D. 387 (Babbitt v. Gibbs) 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
Babbitt v. Gibbs, 51 A.D. 387, 64 N.Y.S. 699 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Rumsey, J.:

In November, 1886, the defendant was the owner of a majority of the'stock and bonds of the Pennsylvania, Slatington and New England Railroad' Company, which was then under foreclosure. On the second day of that month he made a contract with John Weir, reciting that fact and that he was desirous of reorganizing the company and completing the road after the sale, and that he had invited Weir to join him in the enterprise, and fixing the terms upon which the reorganization should be undertaken. On the same day . Gibbs and Weir of the first part and the plaintiff of the second part made a contract, reciting the agreement between Gibbs and Weir, and securing the services of the plaintiff in connection with it, it being agreed that Babbitt should perform for Gibbs and Weir such legal and other services as he might be required by them to render in connection with the reorganization and construction of the railroad and about all matters concerning and mentioned in the agrees ment between Gibbs and Weir until the completion of the road, and it was further agreed that he should promote the interests of. the enterprise to the best of his ability. As his compensation therefor it was agreed that upon the completion. of said road there shall be delivered to said Babbitt, as consideration for such services* $25,000 of the first mortgage bonds and $75,000 par value of the stock of the said reorganized road, in full payment for the same.” This action is brought against Gibbs alone to recover the value of the bonds and stocks which were to be paid to Babbitt upon the completion of the road.

The contract between Gibbs and Weir contains a provision to the effect that if Weir should be unable to build the road or to prbeure the capital necessary therefor, Weir’s interest in it should cease, and it is alleged in the complaint that this contract was cam [389]*389cel eel and annulled and that all the rights and privileges of Weir thereunder were abandoned and surrendered to the defendant, and that Weir was released and discharged from all obligations thereunder, and that the defendant, upon the annullment of the contract with Weir, assumed entire control of all matters connected with the reorganization of the company and the construction of its road and the ownership and control of all the stocks and bonds and other interests of the company, or in the reorganized company, and was released, and discharged from the obligation of sharing such stocks and bonds with Weir, and assumed and bound himself to cany out all the obligations of Weir under the agreement with the plaintiff; and that the defendant undertook personally to carry out the reorganization and construction for his own benefit and in his own interest, and required of the plaintiff his professional services and advice under the agreement entered into between the plaintiff and Weir and Gibbs, and that the plaintiff performed for the defendant the services contemplated in the said agreement as he was required to do from time to time.

The complaint further alleges that the railroad company was reorganized and the road was completed, and that the defendant has received and become possessed of the bonds and stock of the railroad company so reorganized in excess of the number of the bonds and stock which were to be delivered to the plaintiff. It alleges a demand and a refusal to deliver them and asks as damages their value. The answer contains no general denial, but it does deny specifically each one of the allegations of the complaint before mentioned, except the allegation that the railroad mentioned in the agreement was completed. The answer also sets up as a separate defense the nonjoinder of Weir as a party defendant.

Upon the trial the plaintiff gave evidence tending to prove the allegations of his complaint, and at the close of his case a motion was made to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that he had failed to prove that the railroad was in fact completed, and upon the further ground that Weir, the joint obligor with Gibbs in the contract, was not made a party defendant, and that the facts pleaded in the complaint as an excuse for the failure to make him a party defendant had not been proven. The complaint was dismissed, and from the judgment entered upon that dismissal this appeal is taken.

[390]*390The, point that the plaintiff did not prove that the railroad was completed was not pressed upon the argument, and indeed there was no foundation for it, because the fact of the completion of the railroad not being denied or controverted in the answer must be deemed to have been admitted. . (Code Civ. Proc. § 522.) The only-question presented upon this appeal is whether it was necessary to make Weir a party defendant, or whether the facts alleged in the complaint as an excuse for omitting him were sufficient for that purpose, and whether there was proof which would warrant the' jury in finding these facts.

In the consideration of these questions the two contracts made at the same time and in the same matter must be construed together. (Babbitt v. Gibbs, 150 N. Y. 281.) The rule which requires parties: jointly liable upon a contract to be joined as defendants in an action for the breach of it cannot be questioned, but where it is necessary to determine in any case whether a person is a necessary party defendant, the question to be decided is whether that party has at the beginning of the action any interest in the matter, or whether the relations between himself and the other defendants are such that his presence is necessary to protect their rights. (Harris v. Elliott, 29 App. Div. 573 ; Code Civ. Proc. §447 ; Railroad Company v. Orr, 18 Wall. 475.) If a person has made himself jointly liable upon a contract he is of course by virtue of that fact a.necessary party defendant, unless by agreement of all the parties, or by reason of something that has occurred within the contemplation of the original contract, his obligations have ceased.

The plaintiff alleges that Weir has been released from all the obligations which he assumed in respect of this contract, and that, therefore, he. is no longer a necessary party defendant. By the terms of the contract between Gibbs and Weir it was provided that in case they should not be able to raise the capital necessary to complete the road within four months of the time the reorganization was effected, then that Weir’s interests in the contract should cease. This was understood by the plaintiff, and as his contract was necessarily dependent upon and is to be construed in connection with that contract between Gibbs and Weir, it must be assumed that he made it with reference to the possible happening of the event by reason of which Weir should cease to be interested in the reorgani[391]*391nation and construction of the road, and be relieved from any liability he might have under the contract.

The proof showed that during the year 1887 and after the foreclosure of the railroad a construction company was organized. When that came to the knowledge of the plaintiff, and on the 22d' of February, 1887, he wrote to the defendant that he had heard of the organization of the construction company and asking if it would affect his agreement with Gibbs and Weir, and whether he needed anything in the way of a ratification from that company, to which the defendant replied that the contract between himself and Weir •and Gibbs needed no ratification for the present, because the construction company was organized only for the purpose of building the road and for the ownership of certain connections.

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Bluebook (online)
51 A.D. 387, 64 N.Y.S. 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/babbitt-v-gibbs-nyappdiv-1900.