Beach v. Smith

28 Barb. 254, 1858 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 110
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 28 Barb. 254 (Beach v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beach v. Smith, 28 Barb. 254, 1858 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 110 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1858).

Opinion

Bacon, J.

I should be yery well satisfied if I were able to uphold the judgment rendered by my brother Allen in this case. The unfortunate rail road enterprise which the plaintiff, as receiver, represents, has already swallowed up, past recovery or redemption, several hundred thousand dollars of the hard earnings of the subscribers to the stock, without the least hope of any adequate return or indemnity. I do not wonder at the reluctance with which these calls are met, and am disposed to listen favorably to any fair and legitimate de[260]*260fense that can be made to their enforcement. But 'unless we are prepared to abandon some of the doctrines upon which we have proceeded, and the decisions we have made, both at special and general terms, I am unable to see how the defendant in this case can be exempted from liability.

The facts in this case, upon which the question of law arises, are undisputed, and are in substance these: that the Ogdensburgh, Clayton and Borne Bail Boad Company was incorporated in April, 1853, and the defendant immediately thereupon became engaged as an agent for the company in procuring subscriptions, and negotiating for the right of way, and between that month and the 25th of February, 1854, procured subscriptions to the amount of $7700, and in several instances received the 10 per cent on the subscriptions thus obtained. While thus engaged, and in July; 1853, he made a subscription on his own behalf of $500, to the stock of the company; paying, however, nothing in form to himself or any one else upon such subscription. Subsequently to this, calls for installments upon the stock of the company were made by the directors; the first falling due on the 1st of February, 1854. On the 25th of February, after this call was due, the defendant presented an account to the company, making a charge of $450 for his services theretofore rendered and expenses incurred in the course of his agency, and crediting the sums paid to 'him by the subscribers to the stock as such agent, and also the original 10 per cent on his own subscription, and the first call of 10 per cent, being all that was then payable, and struck a balance against the company of $200, in cash, which was allowed, and on the 27th of February paid to him by the treasurer of the company.

The 4th section of the general act rail road requires that every subscriber, at the time of subscribing, shall pay to the directors 10 per cent on the amount subscribed by him, in money, and forbids any subscription to be received or taken without such payment. (Laws of 1850, ch. 140, § 4.) The defendant insists that as 10 per cent was not paid by him at the time [261]*261of subscribing, in money, the contract of subscription was wholly void, and no recovery can be had thereon. The case principally relied upon to sustain this proposition, is Crocker v. Crane, (21 Wend. 211.) That was a suit instituted to recover upon a check given for a subscription to the stock of a rail road corporation, the charter of which provided that the company should receive no subscription “unless two dollars on each share subscribed be paid at the time of subscription.” The marginal note of the reporter states, as a point decided by the court, that the company was not authorized to receive checks in payment of the sum required to be paid, but that specie, or its equivalent current bills of specie paying banks, must be demanded. Looking at the facts in that case and the opinion of the court, it is manifest that they intended to hold no such broad proposition as this. The evidence showed, clearly, that the check in question, among many others, was taken in lieu of uncurrent funds, and that it was well understood that the drawers had no funds in the bank, and that the checks would not be presented for some time for payment. Oowen, justice, after recapitulating the facts, says that on reading the evidence he feels no doubt that the whole was a mere evasion of the statute, and that the transaction was evidently the substitution of individual credit for cash payment. I think it clear that if the receiving of the check had been, an isolated transaction unconnected with the understanding that there were no funds to meet it, it would have been held a payment, within the provision. Indeed Judge Oowen says, in so many words, “I do not deny that receiving an occasional check might have been a fan substitute.” And he adds that checks are received because they operate as a mere transfer of money which a man has at his banker’s. It cannot be doubted then that a check or sight draft on a banker would be a good payment in money, under the 4th section of the rail road act, . where no suspicion attaches to the transaction and no pretense exists that the parties are practicing a sham. In the case of this same rail road against Davis, decided by this court at the [262]*262last April general term, we held that a sight draft, drawn by the defendant at Ogdensburgh, on a bank in the state of Hew Jersey, which the treasurer of the company subsequently received credit for, was equivalent to a payment in money at the time of subscribing, and a sufficient compliance with the requisition of the statute.

In the case of Beach v. Hazard, tried before me in September, 1857, it appeared that the defendant paid nothing at the time of subscribing, but that subsequently, after three calls had been made upon his stock, he gave his note for the ten per cent and the amount of the calls, and paid the note after maturity. The suit was brought to recover three other calls afterwards made, and I held and decided that the defendant was not discharged from liability on his subscription by his . failure to pay ten per cent at the time of subscribing, but that the payment of the same, with the subsequent calls, operated as a waiver of the condition and a recognition of his continuing liability on his subscription. Judgment was accordingly rendered for the plaintiff for the subsequent calls, and the defendant acquiesced in the decision and paid the amount demanded in the suit. In the case of The Utica and Black River R. R. v. Clarke, which was before us on appeal at the last July term, it appeared that the defendant, on the trial, offered to show that he paid nothing at the time of subscribing, but gave merely a memorandum check drawn on a bank where it was, at the time, understood that there were no funds to meet it, but conceding that he had subsequently paid $400 in cash, . which included the ten per cent and three calls on the stock. The referee rejected the offered evidence, on the ground that the subsequent payment on the subscription was an affirmance thereof,'and rendered it valid and binding as if an original payment had been made. To this ruling there was an exception, and on appeal we affirmed the judgment; thus holding with the referee on this as well as on other questions. involved in the case.

The points decided, and the principles recognized, in these [263]*263, cases are, it seems to me, a conclusive answer to this defense. A payment in money, eo nomina, ,at the time of subscribing is not necessary to the validity of the subscription, and a subsequent payment will operate as a waiver of the condition, and the party making it will be considered as recognizing his original liability. At the time the subscription in this case was made by the defendant he had been for several months in the employment of the company, soliciting subscriptions and rendering other services, and was earning a compensation for which they were then indebted to him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 Barb. 254, 1858 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beach-v-smith-nysupct-1858.