Collender v. . Phelan

79 N.Y. 366, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 4
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 13, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 79 N.Y. 366 (Collender v. . Phelan) 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
Collender v. . Phelan, 79 N.Y. 366, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 4 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Rapallo, J.

This action was for an accounting between the plaintiff, as surviving partner of the late firm of Phelan & Collender, consisting of the plaintiff and Michael Phelan, deceased, and the defendants as executors and executrix of the deceased partner. The questions before us arise upon, exceptions to the report of the referee settling the account.

*368 The first exception is to the allowance to the plaintiff of an item of $3,544.12, which was the aggregate of various small sums charged by plaintiff in the statement of his accounts presented to the referee, as payments made by plaintiff for account of the estate of M. Phelan, deceased. It is claimed by the appellants that these payments were not proven. The referee states in his report that the testimony was uncontradicted that such payments were made at the request of the defendants. On reference to the testimony wo find that the plaintiff so testified. It is further objected that the plaintiff failed to produce vouchers therefor. We find no exception in the case which raises the point that the production of such vouchers was necessary. The plaintiff was allowed without objection to testify to the fact of the payments. It is stated in a subsequent part of the case that it was understood that the plaintiff would produce vouchers, such as had not already been produced, for these payments, but it does not appear that the matter was followed up, nor what vouchers were wanting, nor that there was any application to strike out the testimony in default of the production of vouchers, nor any objection, ruling or exception on the subject of the necessity of the vouchers. The question not having been raised on the trial cannot be raised on appeal. The allowance of the item cannot be said to be entirely without proof, and therefore the finding of the referee cannot bo held erroneous in law.

It is further objected that the testimony shows that these payments had no connection with the partnership matters, but were individual transactions between the plaintiff and the executors, after the death of Phelan. This would not, we think, deprive the plaintiff of the right to credit for the payments. The plaintiff was entitled to credit for all sums paid the executors out of the funds collected by him as surviving partner, as they were the proper and only parties who could receive them as the representatives of Phelan. It is claimed that the testimony shows that the payments were made to the executors for their individual use. The referee has not *369 so found, and the testimony on the point is ambiguous. The-plaintiff first stated that they were made at the request of the defendants for the estate of Mr. Phelan, and then gave an affirmative answer to the interrogative statement of defendants’ counsel, “ That is for their individual use—the •executors ? ” The referee may well have construed this answer as not intended to convey that the payments were not made to or for the executors as such. ISTo sufficient facts or exceptions appear to justify us in reversing the allowance •of this item by the referee.

The second, third and fourth exceptions relate to matters of fact. The findings of the referee are not shown to bo unsupported by any evidence, and no -question of law arises upon these exceptions. The fifth and sixth exceptions relate to the allowance of payments for rent and indebtedness of the -Columbia billiard room and the Montreal billiard room. Although these payments appear to have been made and charged after the death of the testator, which was October 7, 1871, the referee finds that the rents and indebtedness accrued before that time. The testimony of the plaintiff was that he charged the estate with the rent up to Mr. -Phelan’s death, and charged all the rest to himself subsequently. The finding was not without evidence. The seventh exception is to the allowance to the- plaintiff of interest on his advances. The referee finds that the plaintiff, in making payments of the indebtedness of the firm, advanced moneys from time to time from his own funds, in excess of the amount in his hands as surviving partner, and the referee, allowed interest on such advances. In this we find no error. (Dougherty v. Van Nostrand, 1 Hoff. Chy. Rep., 68, 69.) The defendant claims that there is ail error in the amount of interest allowed, but there is no specific finding which discloses any such error. The appellant seeks to impose upon this court, virtually, the task of rehearing the case as referees, and reviewing the testimony and the facts, and stating an account between the parties. This cannot bo done. To review the conclusions of law of the referee, it must appear *370 from facts found that they are erroneous. The testimony cannot be resorted to for that purpose;. The findings of fact do not show upon what particular payments interest was allowed, and it does not appear from the findings that interest was allowed on items excluded and payments disallowed, as claimed in the appellants points. The eighth exception is to the finding of fact that there was no proof before .the 'referee from which he could determine the value of the contracts for billiard cushions, referred to in the finding. This exception may be considered in connection with the eleventh, which is to the conclusion of law that the defendants are not entitled to any credit or allowance for or on . account of any of the contracts for billiard cushions.

The facts found in respect to these contracts are, that at the time of the death of Michael Phelan the firm had contracts with different parties for the manufacture and sale of billiard table cushions, under patents issued by the United States, which belonged to Phelan &; Callender jointly, or to the' firm, which contracts by their terms extended •for periods beyond the death of Phelan, and that if the firm had continued, and the parties with whom the contracts were made had remained solvent, and the firm had continued the owners of the patents, the plaintiff and Phelan, would have realized large profits in carrying ■ on said • contracts.

It also appears from the findings that Phelan died on. the ' 7th of October, 1871, and that on the 17th of November, .1871, the defendants sold and transferred to the plaintiff for $40,000, Phelan’s half of all the stock which belonged, to the firm at the time of Phelan’s death, and of all fixtures, furniture, etc., according to a schedule annexed to the bill of sale. In that schedule was a valuation of the articles enumerated therein, composing the stock of the firm, which valuation amounted to $72,013.78, to which was added cash in bank, . October 7, 1871, $7,331.84, and at the foot was added a memorandum signed by the parties as follows: “ Upon settlement it was agreed that all the above* estimated ‘at *371 $80,000, for undivided half of which Mr. Collender agreed to pay $40,000.”

No reference was made in the bill of sale or schedule, to the contracts in question.

By an instrument dated December 30, 1871, the defendants, in consideration of $10,000, assigned and transferred to the plaintiff all the interest which Michael Phchui had in all letters-patent owned by Phelan & Oollender jointly, or by the firm, It is found that this assignment included the patents under which the cushions before mentioned were to be manufactured, and the finding is not excepted-to.

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Bluebook (online)
79 N.Y. 366, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collender-v-phelan-ny-1880.