Bankers Trust Co. v. Dennis

256 A.D. 495, 10 N.Y.S.2d 710, 1939 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4765
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 17, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 256 A.D. 495 (Bankers Trust Co. v. Dennis) 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
Bankers Trust Co. v. Dennis, 256 A.D. 495, 10 N.Y.S.2d 710, 1939 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4765 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Dore, J.

Plaintiffs, executors of Edgar L. Marston, deceased, former member of a partnership dissolved in 1920, instituted this action in 1936 for an accounting by defendant, one of the other two former partners of the dissolved firm. The third partner was not joined as a party to the action as he had made settlements with defendant and plaintiffs’ testator. The transactions were multifarious, involving large sums of money, but the ultimate issue for our determination is whether plaintiffs’ cause of action is barred by the Statute of Limitations.

The former partnership, Blair & Co., composed of C. Ledyard Blair, defendant John B. Dennis, and plaintiffs’ testator, Edgar L. Marston, had been engaged for some years prior to April, 1920, in an investment and banking business. Under the partnership agreement the shares of the three partners in capital, profits and losses were: Blair, forty-eight per cent; Dennis, thirty per cent; Marston, twenty-two per cent. On April 5, 1920, the partnership ceased doing business and was dissolved by mutual consent of the partners.

On that date, by written agreement between the partners and a new corporation called Blair & Co., Inc., the going business (other than the banking business) theretofore conducted by the partners was transferred to Blair & Co., Inc., which acquired the old firm’s office building at 24 Broad street, its business, good will, employees’ contracts, certain deposit accounts, customers’ accounts and securities. In return, Blair & Co., Inc., agreed to pay the partners $2,000,000 cash and additional substantial sums for certain specified securities and bills receivable and to assume liability on the deposit accounts taken over. A memorandum, dated April 5, 1920, showed performance of this agreement and the partners’ paid stock subscription of $2,000,000 for fhe preferred stock of Blair & Co., Inc:

At the saíne time another corporation was organized under the name Blair Securities Corporation, and the partners, on April 12, 1920, transferred to it cash, certain securities and other assets totaling $11,642,769.71. The securities' included the $2,000,000 of preferred stock in Blair & Co:,. Inc":, subscribed for by the partners and. received on April fifth. The "cohsideration for the transfer was the assumption by the corporation'of various liabilities amounting to $4,677,49-3.19; plus incidental'liabilities arising out of liquidation not to exceed $25,000, and the corporation’s agreement to [497]*497issue its capital stock to the partners or .their order. On April 12, 1920, the 100,000 shares of common stock of Blair Securities Corporation was distributed among the partners as follows: Forty-eight per cent to Blair, thirty per cent to Dennis, twenty-two per cent to Marston; the preferred stock was distributed as follows: 38,150 shares to the holders of certificates of deposit in the sum of $3,815,000 in the old firm of Blair & Co. (the holders being the partners, members of their families or former partners); 11,150 shares to Securities Investing Fund, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of the old partnership, the stock of which was transferred in April, 1920, to Blair Securities Corporation.

Fifty thousand shares of the stock of International Coal Products Corporation owned by the partners were not included in the securities transferred to Blair Securities Corporation but were transferred to that corporation by March, 1921. International Coal Products had been organized in 1918 to develop a process or patent for the distillation of bituminous coal, the production therefrom of smokeless fuel, toluol, ammonia and other by-products much in demand during the World war. In May, 1918, International had made a contract with the United States under which the United States agreed to pay not exceeding $2,000,000 as the cost of constructing a plant for International, and to purchase the toluol and ammonia produced therein; and International agreed to purchase the plant from the United States for $2,000,000 in annual installment payments commencing two years from the date of its completion. That contract required a guaranty of payment of the purchase price and the United States accepted a guaranty of the partnership, Blair & Co., on which at the date of its dissolution the partners were still liable. They were also liable on various notes of International and had guaranteed Blair & Co., Inc., against loss on accounts and bills receivable purchased under the April fifth agreement. These contingent liabilities in April, 1920, totaled over $6,000,000, including a liability of $2,750,000 to the United States, the original guaranty of $2,000,000 having been increased by agreement with the government, March 1, 1920.

On August 4, 1920, Blair, Dennis and Marston entered into an agreement which recited the dissolution of the partnership; the transfer of the business to Blair & Co., Inc. (except the banking business which was transferred to a new copartnership of which none of the former partners were members); the transfer of other assets to Blair Securities Corporation; and the necessity in the liquidation of the old partnership to continue the liability of the three parties to the agreement, former members of the firm of Blair & Co., as makers, indorsers or guarantors of outstanding [498]*498obligations. The agreement provided that, until the full and complete liquidation of all the liabilities of Blair & Co., the parties to the agreement should be liable in respect of all such obligations in the following proportions: C. Ledyard Blair, forty-eight per cent; John B. Dennis, thirty per cent; Edgar L. Marston, twenty-two per cent. Each of the parties was recognized as a liquidating partner and given the right to extend, renew and settle all such obligations or make new obligations in substitution therefor with the provision, however, that as between the parties hereto the ultimate proportionate liability of each of the parties hereto as between themselves shall remain as it was ” in the partnership; namely, Blair, forty-eight per cent; Dennis, thirty per cent; Marston, twenty-two per cent.

International Coal Products Corporation opened an account with Blair Securities Corporation and concededly very substantial payments of notes of International on which the former partnership was contingently liable were made through this account. Large additional advances for International were also required and were also financed through its account with Blair Securities Corporation. Between December 16, 1921, and February 21, 1922, to meet notes upon which the former partners were contingently liable, Marston and Blair paid into the account of International with Blair Securities Corporation $2,500,000, C. Ledyard Blair paying $1,714,285.72, and Edgar L. Marston $785,714.28. On each of the occasions when any contingent liability became due each of the former partners was duly requested by the others to pay his percentage thereof. Concededly, Dennis did not pay his agreed thirty per cent of the above payments.

All outstanding contingent liabilities, however, were paid and discharged prior to March, 1922, with the exception of the guaranty of the government contract, and that guaranty was settled and discharged June 10, 1925.

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Bluebook (online)
256 A.D. 495, 10 N.Y.S.2d 710, 1939 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bankers-trust-co-v-dennis-nyappdiv-1939.