Bracken v. Atlantic Trust Co.

23 Misc. 579, 51 N.Y.S. 1007
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Misc. 579 (Bracken v. Atlantic Trust Co.) 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
Bracken v. Atlantic Trust Co., 23 Misc. 579, 51 N.Y.S. 1007 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

McAdam, J.

Plaintiff sued to recover $180,000 damages . ■ claimed to have been sustained by him and his assignors, holders of 102. bonds of the Julien Electric Traction Company, by reason of the wrongful refusal of the defendant Atlantic-Trust Company to deliver up 30,000 shares of stock of the Consolidated Electric Storage Company, deposited with it as security for the fulfillment of a guarantee of payment of said bonds, under the following circumstances: In April, 1892, a corporation known as the United Electric Traction Company, by an instrument in writing, guaranteed to the Mercantile Trust Company, as trustee for the holders and owners of said 10-2 Julien bonds, the payment thereof, and as security for the performance of the guaranty deposited with the defendant Atlantic Trust Company, the 30,000 shares .of the capital stock of the Consolidated Electric Company aforesaid. Default was subsequently made in the payment of interest on the 1.02 Julien bonds, by reason whereof the principal amount thereof became due, and the mortgage securing the bonds was foreclosed by the trustee, the Mercantile Trust Company. The mortgaged property when sold realized for the bondholders $1,488.56. The Mercantile Trust Company thereupon demanded of the United Electric Company the payment-of the bonds pursuant to its agreement of guarantee, which was refused. In November, 1892, the Mercantile Trust Company, acting in behalf of the holders and owners of the 10-2 Julien bonds-, [581]*581demanded of the Atlantic Trust Company, for the use of the Julien bondholders, the 30,000 shares of. the Consolidated Electric Company stock, deposited with it as security for said guarantee. The Atlantic Trust Company refused to comply with the demand, -and the Mercantile Trust Company was obliged to bring suit in equity to enforce a delivery of - the stock, which was finally delivered over in March, 1896, by force of a decree made in said suit requiring such delivery. The stock was thereafter, to-wit, in April, 1896, duly sold under the order of the court, at auction for $2,100. Excepting this sum, nothing has been paid on the 102 Julien bonds. The Julien Company and the United Electric Company became insolvent, and had no assets whatever. The theory of the plaintiff’s action was that if the Atlantic Trust Company had performed its duty as trustee, and complied with the demands made upon it in November, 1892, the 30,000 shares of Consolidated Electric stock eould then have been sold for $4 a share or $120,000, that being the market price at that time, .that in consequence of the detention of the stock until March, 1896, its value had depreciated 'to $2,100, the sum it brought :at the auction sale held in the month following, and that the expense of obtaining possession of the stock, an element of damage (Bennett v. Lockwood, 20 Wend. 223; McDonald v. North, 47 Barb. 530; Davis Sewing M. Co. v. Best, 50 Hun, at p. 80), exceeded .what the stock sold for. The court charged the jury that the plaintiff had a cause of action, and that the measure of damages was "the difference between the value of the bonds at the time of conversion in November, 1892, and their return in March, 1896, with the accrued interest for the wrongful detention, and the jury awarded the plaintiff as damages $151,142.82. The evidence fully sustains the award made, and as the plaintiff’s property in the 102 Julien bonds fully equals that amount, even after crediting the $1,488.56 realized on the sale, it cannot be said that the judgment is excessive. The action was brought in the name of the plaintiff because the Mercantile Trust .Company, the trustee, declined to bring it, and that company was in consequence made a party defend-^ ant. (Code, § 448.) No objection is made on-this account to the form of the action or the plaintiff’s right to maintain it. The real defense strenuously urged was that the judgment in the equity suit brought by the Mercantile Trust Company, for the possession of the 30,000 shares of stock, is a bar to this action, because, as it is claimed, the relief demanded here could have been had there, that the defendant should not be vexed twice for substantially "the same cause, and [582]*582that there could he ¡but one recovery in respect to said stock. The judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction directly oh the point is, as a plea in bar and as evidence in certain cases, conclusive between the same parties, or their privies, upon- the same matter directly in question in another suit. The proposition is whether this principle can be applied to the present controversy. The. rule is that an estoppel requires strict proof. A fact cannot be held to have been adjudicated in a former suit unless it so expressly appears by the record, or, at least, is clearly Shown by evidence aliunde that it was determined. In other words, a judgment is conclusive upon the parties thereto ¡only in respect to the grounds, covered by it, and the law .and facts necessary to uphold it. (See cases collated in note to 23 Abb. N. O. 283, et seq.) “ It is only the material, relevant and necessary facts which are decided in án action that are conclusively determined thereby. * * * It is final as to such facts as are litigated and 'decided therein, which have such a relation to the issue, that their determination was necessary to the determination of the issue.”' (Lance v. Shaughnessy, 86 Hun, at p.p. 414, 415; House v. Lockwood, 131 N. Y., at p. 268; and see Fairchild v. Edson, 154 id. 199.) Whether the plaintiff could have had the same relief under the pléadings in the first action as was demanded' in the second,, is one of the tests of a former adjudication. (Stannard v. Hubbell, 123 N. Y., at p. 531.) “In pleading a former adjudication, it is necessary that the plea contain an averment, in some form, that the matter now in controversy was actually determined in the former suit, or else that it might have been litigated under the issues then joined.” (9 Enc. of PL & Pr. 622.) The rule allowing the plea in bar was intended to prevent vexatious litigation and is rigidly enforced in common-law actions, but not in equity cases-where thb courts having ample power so to mold the relief grantéd as to prevent injustice, will not enforce it unless equity in the particular case requires it. (O’Dougherty v. Remington P. Co., 81 N. Y., at pp. 499, 500.) Ho damages were claimed in the suit by. the Mercantile Trust Company, so that the subject of the right thereto was neither litigated nor determined there and could not be, for it was not one of the issues to be tried. The object of that suit was to take the subject of the trust out of the hands of the Atlantic Trust Company and place it under ¡the control of the court for execution. It was practically a proceeding to remove from office a trustee for breach of duty, and culminated in that end. Such a proceeding can hardly operate as a bar to an action against the trustees for malfea[583]*583sauce while in office, and such is in effect the legal position ¡of the parties here. The defendant relies upon Commerce Ex. Nat. Bank v. Blye, 123 N. Y. 132, wherein it appears that the plaintiff brought an action of replevin to recover the possession of forty-six coupon bonds of the West Point Manufacturing ,C'o., with damages for the detention thereof, in which the plaintiff succeeded in obtaining judgment for possession, with substantial damages to the time of trial. The defendant gave an undertaking by means of which he retained possession of the property, not only up till the time of judgment, but thereafter by stays upon ¡appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Misc. 579, 51 N.Y.S. 1007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bracken-v-atlantic-trust-co-nysupct-1898.