Baring v. Waterbury

10 A.D. 1, 41 N.Y.S. 612, 75 N.Y. St. Rep. 1007
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 10 A.D. 1 (Baring v. Waterbury) 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
Baring v. Waterbury, 10 A.D. 1, 41 N.Y.S. 612, 75 N.Y. St. Rep. 1007 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The action was brought to recover the sum of $123,640.86, as the balance dne upon a banker’s sterling loan made by plaintiffs to the National Syndicate, a partnership composed of the two firms of L. Waterbury & Co. and William Wall’s Sons, and two corporations, Tucker & Carter Cordage Company and Elizabethport Cordage Company. The contract and the amount due thereon are admitted. The defendants Waterbury and Marshall, who were the only ones served with a summons or who appeared in the action, pleaded an accord and satisfaction; and their contention upon this appeal is that, not only had they made it out by such evidence as they were permitted to produce, but they were erroneously prevented from introducing competent evidence which would have coiiclusively established the defense relied upon.

This defense is thus pleaded: That the plaintiffs cannot maintain this action for the reason that heretofore the plaintiffs entered into an agreement with other creditors of said syndicate above named, and with the firm of L. Waterbury & Company, whereby they agreed to look to the assets of the said syndicate for the payment of their debt incurred in the name of L. Waterbury & Company on behalf of said syndicate, and consented further to the carrying out of a plan whereby it was among other things proposed to assign the syndicate assets to certain trustees, in trust, to pay, first, the debts of the syndicate ; and, second, to adjust the interests of, and distribute the surplus assets among, the members of the syndicate; and thereafter the plan proposed in said agreeement was in all respects carried out, including the assignment by said syndicate ; and said agreement operates by way of a composition with the members of said syndicate and said creditors, and also as an accord and satisfaction of the plaintiffs’ claims against the said syndicate, the said plaintiff receiving thereby a direct benefit by reason [3]*3of its interest in the surplus assets derived from the sale of collateral securities held by the other syndicate creditors, and from all other assets to said syndicate belonging, as well as other .benefits therein provided.”

It will be noticed that, while not asserting in so many words that the alleged agreement was in writing, nevertheless this defense refers to and describes the writing entered into between the parties to which reference will be made, and it leaves but little doubt that that was the agreement which the defendants relied' upon as establishing their defense of an accord and satisfaction. The defendants, however, claimed below, as they do here, that their effort was directed to showing that this written agreement was supplemented by an oral one, which was broader, and which supplied a provision, not referred to in the written agreement, relating to the consideration which should go to Waterbury & Co. for their action in turning over certain assets to the trustees appointed thereunder, and in assisting in carrying out the agreement. If we assume that the answer permitted, in addition to the agreement in writing, oral proof of this other and supplemental provision, a reference to the agreement and its purposes is essential to determine whether the defendants’ contention is sound.

The debt sued upon was a debt of the National Syndicate which, at the time the agreement was entered into, had liabilities aggregating a little less than $3,000,000, and had assets valued at $4,000,000; and defendants’ efforts upon the trial were directed to showing that the transfer of these assets to trustees was the consideration for the accord and satisfaction. Two paper writings were admitted in evidence, the first of which reads:

“The firm of L. Waterbury & Co. transacted its own business and has certain creditors, who have become such in the course of the transaction of the business of that firm.
“The National Syndicate, composed of L..Waterbury & Co., William Wall’s Sons, the Tucker & Carter Cordage Co. and the Elizabethport Cordage Co., also have transacted business in the name of L. Waterbury & Co., who were its managers. L. Waterbury & Co., therefore, as the representative of the syndicate, has other creditors, who have become such in connection with the business of the syndicate.
[4]*4“ L. Waterbury & Co. have also a third class of obligations, arising out of indorsement or guaranties of the obligations of the National Cordage Co.
“ It is now proposed to separate the assets of the syndicate from those of the firm and to devote the assets of the syndicate to the payment of its debts incurred in the name of L. Waterbury & Co., and the assets of the firm of L. Waterbury & Co. to the payment of the creditors of that firm.
“ The third class of debts above referred to, namely, those incurred by the indorsement or guaranties of the obligations of the National Cordage Co., will be taken care of by the reorganization of the National Cordage Company.
“ For the purpose of carrying out this plan, it is proposed to assign the syndicate assets to certain trustees, among whom will be George C. Magoun, Ernst Thalman and Gustav IT. Gossler, in trust, to pay: First, the debts of the syndicate; and, second, to adjust the interests of, and distribute the surplus assets among, the members of the syndicate.
“ Also, in furtherance of this proposition, and to avoid a receivership of the firm, or of the syndicate, or of both, which would retard and hamper the reorganization of the National Cordage Company, it is proposed to turn over all the assets of the firm of L. Waterbury & Company to a New Jersey corporation for the purpose of liquidating the indebtedness proper of the firm of L. Waterbury &■ Company, as distinguished from the syndicate debts.
“We, the undersigned, creditors of the National Syndicate, here, tofore transacting business under the name of L. Waterbury & Co.,, consent to the carrying out of the foregoing plan.”

■ This paper was signed by all the creditors of the syndicate, except five, namely, the National Bank of the Republic, Ladenburg, Thalman & Co., S. W. Boocock & Co., the New York Life and Trust Company, and the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company. But testimony was offered tending to show that Boocock & Co. were Mrs. Waterbury’s agents, and that, in addition, she had purchased the claim of the New York Life a,nd Trust Company and of the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company, and had assented to the agreement and that the National Bank of the Republic had written a letter to-one of the attorneys engaged in the transaction accepting the propo[5]*5sition of settlement. It is conceded that the firm of Ladenbnrg, Thalman & Co. did not sign. The agreement was executed by the plaintiffs conditionally, “ to be binding when signed by all the creditors of syndicate.” It being conceded that all did not sign, even though we assume that the paper in question was not the whole agreement, still, whatever the agreement was, it was subject to the condition affixed to it by plaintiffs. Though signed by all, this would not vary the stipulation attached to plaintiffs’ signature.

Thus at the outset there is an insuperable obstacle in the way of establishing the defense.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 A.D. 1, 41 N.Y.S. 612, 75 N.Y. St. Rep. 1007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baring-v-waterbury-nyappdiv-1896.