Childs v. . Smith

46 N.Y. 34
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 46 N.Y. 34 (Childs v. . Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Childs v. . Smith, 46 N.Y. 34 (N.Y. 1871).

Opinion

Folgbb, J.

The contract between the parties, as it stood at the commencement of this action, was not formed at once, but was the result of several changes and modifications. In *37 the first instance (if we take the testimony on which the learned referee seems to have relied), the plaintiff agreed to sell his farm of 150 acres and convey it to the defendant, for the consideration of $20,000. The consideration was to be paid; by the defendant assuming two mortgages upon the premises, which, with accrued interest, were called $10,000; by an exception to the plaintiff from the premises conveyed of four acres, called $2,000; by cash $3,000, to be paid to plaintiff by defendant; and by one quarter interest in a company to be formed to work the clay and peat in fifty acres of the premises, called $5,000; the stock of the company to be $150,000; $70,000 of which was to be reserved as working capital, and $80,000 to be allotted to the parties; one quarter to the plaintiff as part of the consideration of his conveyance, two quarters to the defendant, without payment from him, and another quarter to the plaintiff, for which he was to pay the defendant $5,000 on the organization of the company.

It will be seen that, by this agreement, the defendant obtained the title to the whole farm, save the four acres reserved, upon assuming the payment of the mortgages and interest, and paying $3,000 in cash, and that, practically, he at once resold to the plaintiff a quarter of fifty acres for $5,000. All that the plaintiff gained, was the freeing of the four acres from the lien of the mortgages, the $3,000 in cash, and the securing of an associate in a company to work the clay and peat in the fifty acres, and for this he was to pay ■ $5,000 in cash. And it is important to observe, that here was an, absolute and unconditional agreement on the part of the defendant, to pay the whole of the $3,000 upon the delivery of the conveyance.

The first modification of the contract, was as to the time of payment of the $3,000 by the defendant. He was not thereby released from his obligation to pay it, but the time when he was to pay was changed. One thousand dollars was to be paid in a few days after the delivery of the conveyance, and $2,000 when the company should be organized. Manifestly, the organization of a company, was not a condition precedent to *38 "his being obligated to pay. But that expression was used, as a convenient designation of a time when his obligation, already fully incurred and existing, should become matured and enforceable against him.

If the parties meant such an organization as would create a corporation de jure, which could successfully maintain itself against an inquiry on the part of the State, then it is evident that the time had not, at the commencement of this action, arrived, at which the $2,000 became due and payable. For the parties bad neglected to file certificates of association, in accordance with law. (Laws of 1848, chap. 40.)

But the obligation, at some time, to pay the sum of $2,000, did not rest upon the organization of the corporation either de jwre or de facto. The consideration of the promise to pay that sum, was the conveyance by the plaintiff to the defendant of certain real estate. The conveyance the plaintiff had made and delivered. He had parted with his property and had become entitled to his compensation therefor, at some time. And the organization of a corporation, was not the event which should fix the fact of the indebtedness of the defendant to the plaintiff, but only mark the time when a solution of that indebtedness might be exacted. The conveyance made and delivered, the defendant owed to the plaintiff $3,000; $1,000 thereof was payable in a few days thereafter, and $2,000 thereof could be lawfully demanded when the company was organized.

It seems, then, too strict and technical to hold, that the parties meant that the time of payment would not arrive, until there should be an organization so exactly in accordance with the statute, as that it would successfully .meet any scrutiny into its right, which the sovereign power could institute. It is rather to be held, that they meant such acts and doings among the associates, as should form and set on foot, in practical existence, a body in which they should have rights, and to which they would owe obligation, and through which they should possess rights against, and- incur obligations to, each other.

*39 This they did. They signed certificate of incorporation; they adopted by-laws; they elected officers; they had, as a corporation, a place of business. The basis on which the company should become the owner of the real estate was agreed upon, and the amount of stock which each associate was to take was agreed upon.

In our opinion, here was an organization of the company sufficient to meet the meaning of the parties, and to make payable the $2,000 agreed to be paid by the defendant.

And here there came in another modification of the contract. By it, the fifty acres of clay and peat land, was by the defendant, to be conveyed to the company subject to the two mortgages. Thus, the defendant would have the clear title to the whole farm, save the four acres reserved to the plaintiff, and the fifty acres to be conveyed to the company, and paying the plaintiff $3,000, and receiving from him $5,000 for one quarter of the stock, would also have made a gain of $2,000 in money. But as this would have been unconscionable, the further modification was also made, that the defendant should also convey, without price to the company, the timber and lumber already prepared for use, and the right to use a certain patent brick machine; and the distribution of the $80,000 of stock was changed so that the plaintiff should receive but the one quarter, which formed a part of the consideration of his conveyance. The defendant should receive the two quarters, but one of them should be held, used, or sold for the benefit of the company, and he should pay into the treasury of the company $5,000. The quarter which was to be taken by the plaintiff, and for which he was to pay $5,000, was to be issued to one Laithe, an associate in the company, for which he was to pay into the treasury $5,000.

Thus the defendant would retain his clear title to two-thirds of the farm, and hold one-fourth of the $80,000 of stock upon paying the plaintiff $3,000, and giving to the company $5,000, and the personal property above mentioned. The testimony of the defendant is, that the farm was worth from seventy-five dollars to eighty dollars, per acre, which would make the two- *40 thirds worth $7,500. This does not seem an unreasonable arrangement for the parties to make.

How the referee has found in these terms: “ that the $20,000 of stock, which by said agreement was to be taken by the plaintiff, and $5,000 paid therefor, was by the arrangement of the parties, assumed and taken by the said Wm. B. Laithe.” Which finding, we, in the light of the testimony on which it is based, construe to mean that this associate, Laithe, was to take the one-fourth of the stock, and pay for it the $5,000, which the plaintiff had agreed to pay; and that thus the plaintiff was relieved from his obligation to pay that sum to the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.Y. 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/childs-v-smith-ny-1871.