Cook v. Eaton

16 Barb. 439, 1853 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 170
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 16 Barb. 439 (Cook v. Eaton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cook v. Eaton, 16 Barb. 439, 1853 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 170 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1853).

Opinion

By the Court, Mitchell, J.

The complaint in this cause alleged that a lease was held by one Howland, under a parol agreement, as security to Howland for money due to him by the plaintiff, and then for the benefit of the plaintiff; that Howland received the amount due to him, and assigned the lease to the Eagle Eire Company to be held by like parol agreement as security to the company, and then for the benefit of the plaintiff; that the plaintiff arranged verbally with the defendant Eaton that he, Eaton, should take an assignment of the lease, absolute on its face, and give his bond and mortgage to the company for the amount due to it, and should also from time to time advance moneys to him as he should need them, and that Eaton should hold the lease as security for the advances, and then for the benefit of Cook the plaintiff. That the assignment was accordingly executed to Cook, absolute in its form, pursuant to the agreement between the parties, although it was intended to be a security only. The plaintiff, in two affidavits re-affirms these statements ; but the allegations acquire no additional force by repetition- The defendant as positively denies that there was any understanding that he should hold the lease as security, and says, the assignment was made absolute in its form, and was intended to be an absolute sale to him. Without any power in the court to perceive that one p&rty is entitled to more credit than the other, the affidavits of the plaintiff and defendant must [440]*440be regarded as neutralizing each other, and each must be disregarded, so far as it contradicts the other.

Some time after the assignment was executed, the defendant executed a lease of the premises to the plaintiff, for one year from May 1st, then next, at $2000 a year, and the plaintiff executed a counterpart to the defendant. The plaintiff says this was executed under the representation of the defendant that it would not alter their relations between each other, and that the defendant would give the plaintiff a writing to that effect. This representation and promise the defendant denj^s, and there :is no proof of its truth.- After the lease-was Executed the - plaintiff was written to, to pay the rent, and proceedings to eject his under-tenants were commenced, and he came forward and paid to the defendant’s attorney something on account. He says he refused to pay it as rent. He produces no proof of, this, and the attorney who received the money says it was paid as rent. Leaving out the contradictions thus far, and the evidence would be that an assignment was executed to the defendant; that it was intended to be absolute in its form, and that it was in form an absolute sale; that the defendant, treating it as absolute, executed a lease of the premises to the plaintiff, who executed a counterpart of the lease; that the plaintiff’s under-tenants were proceeded against for 'the nonpayment of the rent, and that the plaintiff then came forward and paid part of the amount claimed. Of these facts there is no doubt. They all indicate an absolute ownership in the defendant, and they are in writing, except the act of payment, which is as strong as a writing. The burthen of nullifying them is therefore properly thrown on the plaintiff, and it must require strong and clear proof to do this. His affidavit, as before stated, can avail nothing, being contradicted by that of the defendant.

The plaintiff relies in part on the fact that Howard, and after-wards the Eagle Company, held the lease for his benefit, although under an assignment absolute in its form. But it would be the most dangerous rule of evidence.to allow a party to treat, an assignment as a mortgage only, which was absolute, on its face, because.former. parties, had so. held assignments, of. the. same, [441]*441property for Mm; when, as in this case, further sums were advanced to the person for whose benefit the lease had been held, and the assignor did not merely assign the lease but took a new bond and mortgage from the assignee, for all that was due to the assignor, and the former beneficiary did an act so inconsistent with a mortgage as to accept a lease of the premises, and agree to pay rent for them, and also executed a separate absolute assignment of the lease with the consideration of $600, subject to the mortgage to the company, expressed in it. It would be different if there were no act except a simple assignment by the former assignee, who held in trust.

The plaintiff also showed that he had always placed a Mgh value on this property, and had had a standing offer for it of more than the amount of the consideration which the defendant says he was to pay, and which was expressed in the assignment by Cook. The acts of the plaintiff, which may have been unknown to the defendant, can be no evidence against the defendant. The question is not what the plaintiff may have wished or thought he could do, or what price he could in fact get for the premises, but what he and the defendant agreed between themselves. He might have told the defendant that others would give Mm more, and that he valued the .property as worth more and had never been willing to sell it at so small a price, and yet ended with selling it to him for the price stated. So the fact that Geoi'ge Curtis had agreed to be assignee in trust, in place of the company, and to give his bond and mortgage to the company without advancing any thing to Mr. Cook, is no evidence that Mr. Cook did not afterwards agree to sell absolutely to Baton for $6000 advance on the mortgage. TMs brings us to the material evidence on this question of fact.

Mr. Sanxay says that before the assignment was executed, the defendant said he had agreed to help the plaintiff through Ms embarrassments, by lending him money enough to get Mm through, and that he was to take an assignment of the lease as Ms security for his advances, and to hold it as a security; that the defendant inquired how much the plaintiff would require to carry him through; that Mr, Sanxay mentioned the amount, [442]*442and the defendant said he was willing to advance that, and more, &e.; and that he had already advanced'considerable money to the plaintiff, which the plaintiff owed him, and that it also was to be secured by the assignment; arid that the plaintiff would be able in a couple of years, to retrieve his affairs completely and take up the assignment of the lease. That after this, Eaton met Sanxay in Broadway and said he was inconvenienced by his undertaking to advance money to Cook, and had already advanced to him several thousand dollars, and requested Sanxay to see if Mr. Curtis would not take his place and reimburse him, or see Cook and endeavor to get some one to pay him off and take up the lease.

Mr. Hillyer says that in the fall of 1851, he met Eaton in Wall- • street; that Eaton said that Cook owed him a considerable sum, and that he thought of suing him, and getting a judgment against him. This is the language which would be used by one to whom an unsecured debt was due. If Eaton considered the assignment held by him was a security, and in the nature of a mortgage, and referred to the debt secured by it, he would not say that he would sue on the debt and get a judgment for it; but that he would foreclose the mortgage or security which he held. Eaton then claimed that he had advanced Cook money beyond the consideration for the loan. Eaton also said that Cook did not pay the rent upon his lease. This, in connection with what was previously, said would mean the rent on the lease from Eaton to Cook.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Barb. 439, 1853 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-eaton-nysupct-1853.