Charles I. Hudson & Co. v. Wood

208 S.W. 2, 183 Ky. 16, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 430
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 24, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 208 S.W. 2 (Charles I. Hudson & Co. v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charles I. Hudson & Co. v. Wood, 208 S.W. 2, 183 Ky. 16, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 430 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

This is a suit in the nature of a bill of discovery brought in the court below upon a return of no property found, seeking to collect a judgment which appellants (who are partners and who were plaintiffs below) recovered against George T. Wood & Company (a partnership) in the United States circuit court for the Western District of Kentucky on May 17, 1902, for the sum of $81,029.70, and $554.75 costs. The suit was filed against the appellee, George T. Wood, as the sole defendant, leaving out his other partners, who were defendants in the judgment sought to be collected.

The suit was defended mainly upon the ground that plaintiffs had failed to comply with the terms of a contract entered into between the parties on March 26,1903, whereby defendants in the judgment and George T. Wood & Company (a corporation) transferred to plaintiffs in the judgment certain claims held by.George T. Wood & Company, both as a partnership and corporation, against St. John Boyle, Louis Appel and Samuel Avritt, aggregating more than the amount of the judgment, and that by reason thereof plaintiffs were barred as well as estopped from prosecuting the present case. Appropriate pleadings put this defense in issue and upon submission the court sustained the defense and dismissed the petition, and to reverse that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

To understand the issue both of law and of fact it is essential that a brief statement of the facts be made. [18]*18During the year 1900, George T. Wood & Company (a partnership) were engaged in the brokerage business in the city of Louisville. A part of that business consisted in dealing in stock upon the stock exchange of the city of New York. That firm had as its correspondent in New York the plaintiffs, Charles I. Hudson & Company, who were members of the stock exchange and who owned seats therein. Messrs. Boyle, Appel and Avritt were customers of George T. Wood & Company, and through them' dealt in stock on the New York exchange, which dealings were transacted by the Louisville brokers through their New York correspondents. Some time in December, 1900, Boyle, through his agents and brokers, George T. Wood & Company, sold on the New York stock exchange 100 shares of Northern Pacific Railroad Company common stock. In the latter part of January, 1901, another transaction of the same character was made, but in the meantime George T. Wood & Company had become incorporated, and the latter transaction was with the corporation. An unsettled and panicky condition afterwards arose upon the stock market, especially concerning Northern Pacific common, which advanced in price until in May, 1901, it sold for as high as $1,000.00 per share. On the day prior to this high water mark Boyle was notified by George T. Wood & Company that he must put up additional margins to meet the advancing price of the stock which he had sold, the price having gone far above that at which he had agreed to sell it in the two transactions .referred to. Although he promised to do that, he failed, and on the following day (May 9) he could not be found. To save themselves the plaintiffs, representing George T. Wood & Company, who were the agents of Boyle, went upon the market and purchased the two hundred shares, paying therefor $500.00 per share for one hundred shares and $600.00 per share for the other one hundred, and charged the difference between the price at which the stock was agreed to be sold by Boyle and that for which it was purchased by Boyle’s agents, George T. Wood & Company, which difference was the amount of the judgment recovered in the Federal court. Wood & Company contended that since they were acting only as the agent of Boyle, he, as their principal, was indebted to them in the amount of the losses which they sustained in executing his transactions, and it was this claim, that was transferred in the [19]*19contract of March 26, 190S, which claim, included additional sums for losses in other transactions, making it' larger than the amount of the judgment recovered in the Federal court by something like $18,000.00. The claims of Appel and Avritt transferred by that contract arose in the same way. It is shown in this case that there was actual handling of the stock involved in the transactions, relieving them of any wagering aspects, and the defense of wagering contracts is not relied on in the pleading, even if it had been available under the terms of the contract herein relied upon.

Prior to entering into that contract plaintiffs had instituted an equity action similar to this one in the Federal court at Louisville, where the original judgment was recovered, and that suit was pending at the date of the execution of the contract relied on. The contract is too long to.copy in full herein, and we will take only such excerpts therefrom as are necessary to present the defense here made. It recites the facts, stipulates that second parties (plaintiffs herein) shall have the right to sue and take such proceedings against those who owe the assigned claims as may be necessary, either in the name of Wood & Company or of plaintiffs, in any court in Kentucky or elsewhere, and binds Wood & Company to lend all proper aid and assistance and to make full and true disclosures of all accounts and the transactions had with the parties whose accounts are transferred and to freely and truthfully testify in any court where any proceeding may be instituted, and then inserts the agreements and undertakings of plaintiffs in these words:

'‘ The said parties of the second part, in consideration of the covenants and agreements and undertakings of the said first parties, hereinabove set out, do hereby undertake and agree, upon the institution of any action against St. John Boyle hereunder to dismiss, without prejudice, their pending action in the circuit court of the United States for the Western District of Kentucky, in equity, at complainants’ cost, and to suspend any further proceedings against the said George T. Wood, George L. Bacon and Carey H. Bacon, George T. Wood & Co. as a firm and also as a corporation, except such proceedings as may be necessary, in their judgment, to enforce the claims against the said St. John Boyle, and the said Avritt, and the said Appel, as hereinbefore mentioned.
[20]*20'“And said parties of the second part do further undertake and agree that upon recovery of ally final substantial judgment against the said St. John Boyle under the foregoing arrangement, all claims, demands or obligations which may exist in favor of said second parties from said first parties, or any of them, by reason of the transactions heretofore set out or by reason of the judgment rendered, as aforesaid, shall be released, acquitted and discharged.”

Shortly after the execution of this contract Boyle went to New York and defendant’s firm notified plaintiffs of that fact and a suit was instituted by plaintiffs against him in the courts of that state some time in May, 1903. That suit pended upon the docketwithvarious apparently unnecessary delays until January, 1906, when Boyle died, a resident of the city of Louisville, leaving a will in which his wife (who also resided in Louisville) was named as sole devisee and executrix of his will. A year or more after his death some kind of effort was made to revive the New York suit against Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
208 S.W. 2, 183 Ky. 16, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-i-hudson-co-v-wood-kyctapp-1919.