Central Mortgage Co. v. Partello
This text of 132 N.Y.S. 432 (Central Mortgage Co. v. Partello) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The plaintiff in its complaint sets forth two separate causes of action. In the first cause of action it alleges that the parties entered into an agreement in writing bearing date the 21st day of July, 1910, whereby the plaintiff agreed to procure for defendant two loans of $6,000 to be secured by mortgages to be made by defendant on certain real estate in the borough of the Bronx for which defendant agreed to pay plaintiff a commission of $120; that plaintiff duly performed said agreement on its part, but defendant failed to perform said agreement on his part; that, among other things, the defendant never acquired title to the real estate above referred to; that in procuring the moneys with which to make the said loans plaintiff was obliged to and did pay interest to the parties furnishing said moneys in the sum of $203. The second cause of action is upon an assigned claim of the firm of Otis & Otis for the sum of $485, which it is alleged that the defendant agreed to pay to the said firm for the examination of title.
The complaint is remarkable in several particulars. In the first cause of action it alleges, first, a breach of a contract to pay a commission for the procuring of two loans. Obviously the damages for this breach would be the amount of the commission of $120. It then alleges that it was put to expense “in procuring the moneys with which to make the said loans,” and seeks to recover this sum in addition to the amount of its commissions. There is absolutely no allegation in the complaint showing that it had any authority to procure the money to make the loan. The complaint states that it was agreed that it was to procure two loans; in other words, to act as agent and to receive a commission for its services, and not to procure the moneys and make the loans as principal.
Upon these pleadings the case was tried, and the trial justice di[434]*434rected a verdict for the plaintiff for the whole amount. In fairness to the trial justice it should be said that no objections were apparently made to the complaint, and, though I find nothing in the record to justify the result on the evidence, the parties who entered into a stipulation settling the case failed to include therein any exhibit introduced in evidence except the alleged written agreement. It is possible that if the record were complete there might be justification for the direction of the verdict, but the record presented to us seems to me to call for a reversal.
The plaintiff introduced in evidence the alleged agreement of July 21, 1910. This agreement is in the form of an application addressed to the plaintiff by the defendant to procure for him two separate loans of $6,000 each, and at the foot thereof occur the words:
“Accepted. July 21st, 1910.
“Central Mortgage Company,
“By Walker L. Otis, Vice President.”
The paper in no place recites that the Central Mortgage Company is to make the loan itself with borrowed money; but, reading the paper as a whole, in the light of all the surrounding circumstances, it seems to me that it is probable that it was the intent of the parties that the Central Mortgage Company was to have the right either to procure the loan or to make it direct. The plaintiff is therefore probably entitled to the sum . of $120 which the defendant agreed to pay it and which apparently it would have earned if the defendant had good title to the premises which were to be mortgaged. On the other hand, I find that the plaintiff has shown no right to recover any interest paid to persons from whom it borrowed money in order to make this loan.
Judgment should therefore be reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event. All concur.
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132 N.Y.S. 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-mortgage-co-v-partello-nyappterm-1911.