Consolidated Electric Storage Co. v. Atlantic Trust Co.

24 A.D. 172, 48 N.Y.S. 1083
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 24 A.D. 172 (Consolidated Electric Storage Co. v. Atlantic Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consolidated Electric Storage Co. v. Atlantic Trust Co., 24 A.D. 172, 48 N.Y.S. 1083 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

This action is brought to recover the balance of a sum of money deposited by the plaintiff with the defendant and which the defendant promised to pay. The acknowledgment of a deposit and promise is contained in a written instrument, dated June 2, 1890, to which the Consolidated Electric Storage Company (the plaintiff) was party of the first part, the Brush Electric Company, party of the second part, and the Atlantic Trust Company (the defendant) party of the third part. The obligations of the various parties to each [174]*174other, under this agreement, are clearly stated. The instrument was drawn by a skilled draftsman in concise and express terms, and no uncertainty exists as to the construction to be given to it. It was prepared by the attorneys for the parties of the first and second parts, respectively, clearly embodying what they intended should be the agreement between the parties executing the instrument. It was presented to the party of the third part, the defendant, after its execution by the parties of the first and second parts; was executed by it after a meeting of the executive committee, where the instrument was before the committee, and its execution was authorized by such committee. When executed by the defendant, the •counsel for the parties of the first and second parts were present, and no statement was made by either of them, or by anybody in their presence, that the agreement was other than what, upon its face, it purported to be. One copy remained in the possession of the defendant, was acted upon by it as did the other parties to the action, and, so far as appears, no objection was made to it, until the commencement of an action by the plaintiff against this defendant in the Court of Chancery, in the State of New Jersey, in the latter part of 1891. The instrument itself, after reciting the execution of an agreement between the parties of the first and .second parts, a copy of which was annexed, recites that, in and by the said instrument between the parties of the first and second parts, the party of the first part (the plaintiff) had covenanted to furnish satisfactory personal security that the terms of the agreement between the parties of the first and second parts would be carried out. Provided, <£ that, for the purpose of securing the punctual and faithful fulfilment of the said instrument on its part, the party of the first part hereto has given, granted, assigned and transferred, and does hereby give, grant, assign and transfer, unto the party of the third part (the defendant) hereto, the sum of two hundred and fifteen thousand dollars ($215,000), the receipt of wliicli sum last mentioned is hereby acknowledged by said party of the third part (the defendant) in trust, however, and upon the trusts following, that is to say.”' The trust upon which this defendant agreed to hold this sum of $215,000 was first to apply a sum of $65,000 to the payment of two sums of money provided for in the agreement to be paid to the party of the second part, and to hold the balance of the said sum of $215,000 in trust to pay the [175]*175same or so much as should be necessary to the party of the second part in case the party of the first part should fail to pay the various sums of money to be paid to the party of the second part under the agreement between the parties of the first and second parts, and further providing that “ so much of said trust fund as may remain, with all accumulations of interest thereon, if any, shall, subject to the compensation of the trustee, be repaid to the party of the first part; ” and it is to recover for such unused balance of this trust fund that this action is brought.

The defendant does not claim that the whole amount of the $215,000 has been paid under the contract. The answer of the defendant denies the deposit by the plaintiff of any money with the defendant, conceded the execution of the instrument referred to in the complaint and sets up as a counterclaim facts which the defendant insists justify a judgment for the reformation of the contract, and asks for a judgment reforming the contract and a money judgment in favor of the defendant against the plaintiff for $74,390.31. The court below sustained the defendant’s counterclaim, reformed the instrument sued on, and gave judgment for the defendant against the plaintiff for the sum of $95,426.12, and from that judgment the plaintiff has apjiealed.

Before examining the right of the plaintiff to recover any judgment against the defendant upon this contract, we should first ascertain whether or not the judgment of the court below reforming the contract and awarding judgment in favor of the defendant against the plaintiff can be sustained. The principle upon which courts of equity reform contracts in writing is well settled. It is not based upon any power of the court to make a contract between the parties which they have not made, or to relieve a party from a contract which subsequently turns out to be disastrous. The whole object of the exercise of this jurisdiction is to make a writing express what the parties really intended that it should express, and the power is never exercised, unless it clearly appears that the parties to the written agreement had made a verbal agreement which it is understood should be reduced to writing, but, when so reduced to writing, did not correctly represent the real agreement which had been made between the parties. The facts upon which relief is granted must show either, first, that after the verbal agreement was made, through a [176]*176mistake of the draftsman, or from some other cause, the real intention of the parties was not correctly expressed in the writing subsequently executed; or, second, that such verbal contract was not correctly stated in the writing by reason of a mistake of one party who was induced to execute the writing as a correct expression of their verbal agreement by the misrepresentations or fraud of the other party. No case has been cited to us in which a court has reformed a written instrument, unless either one or the other of these facts were proved.

No jurisdiction to reform a contract exists upon showing that a party executing it misconceived the extent of his liability, or made a contract which subsequently has proved to be an unfortunate one. There must be positive proof of the existence of a verbal agreement, to carry into effect which the writing was prepared and executed, and that such writing does not express the agreement, either from a mutual mistake as to its contents or effect, or a mistake as to its contents and effect by one party, where its execution was induced by the misrepresentation or fraud as to its contents, or as to its legal effect by the other. These principles are so well settled and have been so often applied that it is hardly necessary to cite authorities in support of them. As was said by Judge Gray, in delivering the opinion of the court in Avery v. Equitable Life Assurance Society (117 N. Y. 458): “An agreement between parties is presumed to contain what they intended and to comprise their whole sense of the subject-matter, and, therefore, when it is made to appear that, by a mutual error, the contract varies from their intent, or that, by some fraudulent practices, there has been a suppression, or omission, or insertion of material matter, which would operate as a surprise or a fraud upon a party, ground for relief is made. So, too, equity will relieve where there has been a misrepresentation of some important fact, by which a party is misled to his disadvantage, or so entrapped as that an undue advantage is gained over him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 A.D. 172, 48 N.Y.S. 1083, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-electric-storage-co-v-atlantic-trust-co-nyappdiv-1897.