Cox v. . Stokes

51 N.E. 316, 156 N.Y. 491, 10 E.H. Smith 491, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 722
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 4, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 51 N.E. 316 (Cox v. . Stokes) 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
Cox v. . Stokes, 51 N.E. 316, 156 N.Y. 491, 10 E.H. Smith 491, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 722 (N.Y. 1898).

Opinion

Vann, J.

As the respondents do not appeal, they are bound by the findings of fact made by the trial court; while the appellants are bound by all to which they did not except, and since the affirmance by the General Term, by all even of those excepted to that find any reasonable support in the evidence. (White v. Benjamin, 150 N. Y. 258.) Hence, in reviewing this case, we must start with the assumption that Mr. Stokes promised to perform the reorganization agreement, and was bound thereby, for the evidence is ample to sustain *505 the finding to that effect, and the respondents do not question it hy appealing. That promise was founded on the consideration that the receivers’ certificates held by him, as to which serious questions existed that were pending in the courts, should be expressly rendered valid by an amendment of the decree in foreclosure. That amendment was promptly made by the consent of the plaintiffs and other bondholders through the reorganization committee, and through the same agency the litigation pending at the time to test the validity of the certificates was discontinued and ended. When a defendant has actually received the consideration of an agreement by a voluntary performance of an act by the other party, upon his proposition or suggestion, such performance constitutes a consideration which will uphold the defendant’s promise.” (Marie v. Garrison, 83 N. Y. 14, 26.) Moreover, the settlement of a doubtful or disputed claim is a good consideration. (White v. Hoyt, 73 N. Y. 505.)

At this point of time, therefore, we have a binding contract, executory on the part of Mr. Stokes and executed on the part of the committee. It was found and is conceded that he has not performed that contract, and the only question presented, aside from that relating to the form or extent of the relief, is whether he has in any way been lawfully relieved of his obligation to perform, or from the consequences which would ordinarily follow from his breach of the contract. He agreed to receive in round numbers $700,000 in the first mortgage bonds of the new company, whereas he actually received $900,000; and he agreed that the second mortgage bonds of the new company should cover all the property on which the mortgage foreclosed was a lien, when in fact the stocks and securities, through which the Bankers & Merchants’ Telegraph Company controlled the connecting' links in their system, were omitted from that mortgage, and those stocks and securities were delivered to him as collateral to certain loans and advances that he made. He also agreed to buy in the property at the foreclosure sale for the benefit of the reorganization committee, and in accordance with the *506 plan agreed upon, and for this reason there was no competition in bidding ; but when the auctioneer struck the property off to him one of the attorneys for the plaintiff in the foreclosure suit said, “{For the reorganization committee?” and Hr, Stokes replied, “ No, for myself.”

Several theories are relied upon to justify the action and non-action of Mr. Stokes, upon none of which, however, did the courts below unite in pronouncing judgment. Those theories are (1) that there was a rescission of the reorganization agreement; (2) that there was a lawful modification of that agreement; (3) that there was a ratification by the plaintiffs, and (í) that there was such laches oh their part as to defeat their cause of action. We will now consider these theories of defense in the order named.

1. Rescission. It is not claimed that Mr. Stokes could rescind his contract upon any ground that existed when it was made, such as fraud, inadequacy of consideration, mistake or illegality. Nor could he rescind for non-performance by the reorganization committee representing the bondholders, for the contract was at once performed by them, so far as it related to him personally, by the amendment of the decree so as to declare his certificates valid, and the withdrawal of the appeal brought to test their validity. There was no failure of consideration and no reservation of the right to rescind. The ground upon which it is now claimed that a rescission could have been made is that through the wrongful act of a third party the property had become of less value than it was when the contract was entered into. There was, however, no rescission upon this ground or upon any other. The only evidence of any attempt to rescind is that Mr. Stokes, on the day after the wires were cut, stated to his own attorney, Mr. Lauterbach, in the presence of Mr. Townsend, the chairman of the reorganization committee, that he could not carry out the agreement.

Effective rescission requires a lawful right to rescind, due notice of an intention to rescind and the restoration of benefits received by the party attempting to rescind, so that the other *507 party may be placed in statu quo. Even if the most complete right of rescission exists it cannot be exercised without a return or an offer to return such benefits. The only exception emphasizes the rule. (Kley v. Healy, 127 N. Y. 555, 561.) Mr. Stokes made no attempt or offer to return the substantial •benefits that he had received. He did not procure or offer to procure a reamendment of the decree by' striking out the clause recognizing the validity of his certificates, or to revive the appeal. Retaining all that he had received, he simply said that he could not perform.

A contract cannot be thus put aside, for one party cannot speak for both, or bind and loose both at his discretion. Even upon the assumption that Mr. Stokes had the right to rescind, and that his notice of intention was sufficient, there, was no valid rescission on account of his failure to restore the benefits and to place the other parties in the same condition that they were when the contract was made. It is, however, very doubtful whether Mr. Stokes intended his declaration to his own counsel, in the presence of a member of the reorganization committee, to be a notice of intent to rescind, for two months after the alleged rescission and six weeks after the sale in foreclosure, he made an affidavit in a preceding commenced by one Bill to have the foreclosure decree amended so as to provide that the receivers’ certificates should share in the proceeds of the sale in the order of the equities of the claims underlying them, in which he recognized the reorganization agreement as in existence, made no claim that it had been rescinded, and admitted that he was to buy the property for the committee and turn the same over to them, or to any corporation to be designated by them. A similar affidavit was made by Mr. Townsend in another legal proceeding, and used in court with the knowledge and consent of the. counsel for Mr. Stokes. We think that the oral agreement of Mr. Stokes with the committee was never rescinded or abandoned.

2. Modification. The reorganization committee were, in a broad sense, trustees for the benefit of the bondholders and were bound to protect their interests in every reasonable way. *508 Tlieir powers were defined and limited by the reorganization agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.E. 316, 156 N.Y. 491, 10 E.H. Smith 491, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-stokes-ny-1898.