Cooke v. Broughton

1 Rec. Co. Ct. 65
CourtNew York County Court, Suffolk County
DecidedJanuary 30, 1672
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Rec. Co. Ct. 65 (Cooke v. Broughton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Court, Suffolk County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooke v. Broughton, 1 Rec. Co. Ct. 65 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1672).

Opinion

Leu* Richard Cooke plantiffe against the Goods, Debts or Estate that was formerly belonging vnto Mr Thomas Broughton & by him made ouer or Sold vnto Cap* Walter Price & Richard Cooke in behalfe of themselves & others of the Credittors of ye sd Broughton Defend* in an Action of the case for money Disburst for the managem* of that Estate & still remaines due the sume of Eight hundred forty six pounds fowre shilling & five pence or thereabouts with interest for ye same for about tenn years with other Due Damages according to Attaehm* Dated ye 29 th Day of June 1671 this Ación was referd from July to October court and thence hither & . . . the Jurie . . . found for the pi* one thousand fowre hundred & fowre pounds fiue shillings & seauen pence in Money & costs of Court The Magistrates refused this verdict & Soe it falls to the Court of Assistants in Case.

[ This is a small incident in a protracted series of suits about the estate of Thomas Broughton, a merchant who removed from Virginia to Boston in 1650 and engaged in real estate operations which got him into serious difficulties. An outline of these suits is given in the printed Records of the Court of Assistants, iii. 133-34. By a deed of trust dated April 20, 1659 (S.F. 314.2), Thomas Broughton of Boston merchant and Mary his wife conveyed (1) his moiety of a parcel of land about Windmill Hill in Boston, also called Centre Haven, including several dwelling houses, a brewhouse, bakehouse, malt mill, warehouse, and wharf, and (2) Noddles Island (East Boston, which he had purchased for £1378 of John Burch of Barbados in 1656 through the intermediary of Richard Leader the iron-master, but only half the purchase money had been paid), being one thousand acres or more of meadow and upland with a house, barns, and [66]*66garden, to Henry Shrimpton and Lieut. Richard Cooke of Boston, merchants, and Walter Price of Salem, merchant, his creditors to the amount of 40001, to the end that they might satisfy themselves of his debts, and also satisfy his other creditors, of whom Anthony Stoddard and John Checkley or Chickly of Boston are especially named. Broughton’s own schedule of his debts is in S.F. 314.1:
The Shedule of the names of those to whome I Thomas Broughton am indebted:
li ss d
Mr John Chickley . . . 450:00:00
Mr Henery Shrimpton: . 150:00:00
Mr Walter Price: . . . . 400:00:00
Mr Stoddard .... . 400:00:00
Mr Nath: Williams . 089:00:00
Mr Rand: Nicholls . . . 040:00:00
Mrs Ann Glour widdow: . 015:00:00
Mr Osborne. . 350:00:00
li ss d
Mr Wm Brenton . . . 190:00:00
Mr John Hull . . . , 030:00:00
Mr Sam: Hall . . . . 450:00:00
Mr Christpr. Hooper . 240:00:00
Sam: Ward .... 060:00:00
Henery Short . . . . 050:00:00
Mr Richard Cooke . . 300:00:00
A List of the names & sumes I Thomas Broughton haue tooke order and sent effects to pay but not yet heering what is discharged of them doe enter into the List of debts for their security if they appeare still due:
Mr Heze: Ysher. 300:00:00
Mr John Harwood . . .500:00:00
Mr Walter Price. 600:00:00
Mr Jonathan Ward . . . .584:00:00
Mr John Hull.226:00:00
The deacons of Boston Church. 200:00:00
Mr Nath: Williams . . .200:00:00
Mr Jacob Scheafe .... 250:00:00
Mr Henery Webb . . . .150:00:00
Mr John Knowles . . . .190:00:00
Mr Richard Russell . 100:00 00
Leif* Sprague . . . 100:00
Mrs Ann Glouer . . 120:00
Mr Hope Allen . 200:00
Mr William Davis . 160-00
Mr Haugh: minester . 036:00
Henery Short . . . 020:00
John Lake . . . . 080:00
Mr Ben¡ Gillam . 400:00
Mr John Croad 1000:00
Mr. Simon Broadstreet forty thousand foote of boards a yeare for three yeares — successiuely: Cap* Tho: Clark: 0600:00:00
Entered and Reecorded the 20th Aprill: 1659 per Edw. Rawson Record1 . . . vera Copia: Attest Edw Rawson Record1

On the same date William Osborne, attorney of Thomas and Mary Broughton, “ gaue full and peacable possession & liuery of seizen”1 of the Centre Haven and Noddles Island estates (S.F. 314.2, 3). On April 20, 1659, Thomas Broughton conveyed to Hezekiah Usher, Henry Shrimpton, Richard Cooke and Walter Price, “his moiety of two Saw Mills at New-ichewanik River on Quampegon (Salmon) Falls together with his three [67]*67fourth parts of the ship Hope” of 170 tons burthen, “then riding in Piscataqua River”; also toward satisfying the said debts; this deed is cited in a deed of trust dated June 23, 1659 (S.F. 320) from the Brough-tons to Cooke and Price, after Usher and Shrimpton had disassociated themselves from the transaction.

At a general meeting of Broughton’s creditors in Boston on December 24, 1662, they agreed that these estates should be managed for the advantage of all during the space of one year, Captain Thomas Clarke and Ensign John Hull, the goldsmith, to assist in the managing thereof (S. F. 596.4). One of the principal creditors to Thomas Broughton was John Checkley,1 who refused to come in with the other creditors, obtained a judgment and execution “uppon part of the said Broughtons estate as pewter and bras a clock and other things” (S. F. 596.5), and then summoned Cooke and Price to answer according to a deed and schedule from Broughton to the value of 9001. In Cooke’s plea (S. F. 596.5), printed below, he alleges that a part of what Broughton conveyed, notably the ship Hope, was not his to convey, and that the creditors had to purchase it from the rightful owner to gain possession; if Checkley would contribute toward these expenses, he could have his proportion of the dividend. The County Court, on January 27, 1662/63, gave a “speciall verdict” for Checkley against the Centre Haven estate for 470117s 6d (the text is in S. F. 962.10; see also S. F. 596.6 and the Court orders of Oct. 28, 1662, and January 26, 1663, printed below). Cooke et oí. appealed, February 25, and their reasons (S. F. 596.7), including an interesting appeal to the Magna Carta provisions of the Body of Liberties, are printed below, as are Cheekley’s highly truculent “answers to their reasons of appeale (S. F. 596.6).

Checkley’s “Objections against the validity of Mr. Broughtons deed of Center Haven and Nodles Island to Mr. Shrimpton, Price and Cooke” (S.F. 596.8) are also printed below, as are the “Answer to the objections.”

In S. F.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Rec. Co. Ct. 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooke-v-broughton-nysuffolkctyct-1672.