Dady v. O'Rourke

61 A.D. 529, 70 N.Y.S. 694

This text of 61 A.D. 529 (Dady v. O'Rourke) 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
Dady v. O'Rourke, 61 A.D. 529, 70 N.Y.S. 694 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Sewell, J.:

The Gravesend Hygienic Ice Company was organized on the 22d day of June, 1896, by the plaintiff, John A. Cook, William G. Pierson, S. S. Williamson and the defendant O’Rourke, with a capital stock of $120,000, divided into 1,200 shares of the par value of $100 each. O’Rourke acquired the interest of Cook before any stock was issued. Each of the other incorporators named or suggested two or more of his friends" or employees, and eleven certificates of 5 shares each were on July 23, 1896, issued to enable them to become directors. Subsequently the plaintiff purchased Williamson’s interest in the company. When the remaining 1,145 shares were divided, 458 shares were issued to the plaintiff, the same number to the defendant O’Rourke, and a certificate for 228 shares was issued to the trustees of Pierson’s estate. The plaintiff purchased the Pierson interest or stock, and caused 40 shares to be issued to certain persons to be held for his benefit.

On the 30th day of October, 1899, the plaintiff made an agreement in writing which provided that, in consideration of the sum of one dollar in hand paid, the plaintiff gave to the defendant O’Rourke an option to purchase all his right, title and interest in the property and assets of the Gravesend Hygienic Ice Company, “ including the stock now held and owned by me, either in my name or in the name of any person or persons for my benefit, said stock holdings amounting to three-fifths of the entire capital stock of said company, for the sum of thirty thousand ($30,000) dollars, to be paid -on or before the first day of December, 1899, on which day this option shall expire in default of payment being made.” Upon the payment of said $30,000 on or before the 1st day of December, 1899, the plaintiff agreed to make assignment in blank of his stock in said ice company, to procure the resignation of the officers and trustees' and to deposit the stock and resignation with the defendant the Hamilton Trust Company, in escrow, to be delivered to said O’Rourke upon the payment by him of '$30,000. The plaintiff further agreed that there were no claims,, debts or liens against the property of the ice company except two [531]*531mortgages, and upon the consummation of the sale, thereby contemplated, there should be no liens or debts except said mortgages. The plaintiff further agreed to sell all his right, title and interest to the dock property at the foot of Twenty-second street for the sum of $1,600. O’Rourke deposited the sum of $31,500 with the defendant the Hamilton Trust Company on the twenty-eighth day of Hovember. The plaintiff thereupon procured and delivered to O’Rourke the resignation of the officers and directors, and deposited with the defendant the Hamilton Trust Company 687 shares of stock and the deed of the dock property. It appeared in evidence that seven of the stock certificates .issued to qualify directors were about the same time surrendered or delivered to the defendant O’Rourke, and at his request new certificates were issued to other persons. The plaintiff testified that he did not name or suggest either of the four directors who refused or neglected to deliver their stock to the defendant, and that he was not and never had been in any manner interested in the stock held by them. The defendants in their answer admit that the plaintiff demanded the $30,000 deposited, and that the trust company refused to pay over the money by direction of O’Rourke. They also admit that the plaintiff elected to avoid the agreement, and that the trust company refused to return the stock, though requested by the plaintiff so to do.

The defendants claim that the true construction of the agreement required the plaintiff to assign and deposit three-fifths of 1,200 shares, the entire capital stock of the company, and that the learned trial court misconstrued the obligation of the plaintiff in finding that he had performed the conditions of the agreement on his part. If this obligation rested upon the plaintiff, we could not say that the court found that he failed to comply with it. The appellant obtained from some one all the stock he claims to have contracted for, and the court may have found that the thirty-five shares of directors’ stock surrendered to O’Rourke were delivered and accepted in pursuance of the agreement or option, and that the plaintiff was entitled to be credited therewith as well as the 687 shares deposited. There is ample evidence in the record to support such a conclusion, but it is not at all necessary to sustain the judgment. If the contract is construed solely by its own language, it is [532]*532manifest that the 'plaintiff did not intend to bind himself to assign three-fifths of the entire capital stock of the company. The subject-matter is declared to be the plaintiff’s right, title and interest in the property and assets of the company, including- the stock then held and owned by him. The agreement in the instrument is “to make assignment in blank of my stock in said Gravesend Hygienic Ice Company,” and it cannot be doubted that had the plaintiff intended to assign three-fifths of the entire capital stock, 33 shares more than he then held and owned, he would not have limited his obligation to the assignment of the particular stock then held and owned by him. The plaintiff has not in express terms agreed to assign three-fifths of the stock of the company; his right to demand payment was not made to depend upon that condition; and taking into consideration the entire description, we think that the statement of the amount of plaintiff’s stock holdings is not controlling, but, on the contrary, is rendered nugatory by the explicit description immediately preceding it. Ho other construction can be placed upon the description to make out the quantity which the plaintiff owned and obviously intended to assign. But if such be not its proper construction, and, standing alone, the statement of the amount is an essential or material part of the description,, as the defendants contend, a latent ambiguity was created when it was shown that the plaintiff held and owned less than three-fifths of the stock, which was explainable by .paroi proof, without infringing' upon the rule that a written contract cannot be added to, varied or reformed, by evidence of negotiations which precede or conversations which accompanied the making of it.

It is a familiar rule that paroi proof of extrinsic circumstances may be given to apply a description to its subject-matter. Thus, paroi evidence may be admitted where it appears from extrinsic facts that there are two persons, or objects, or modes of performance corresponding to the terms o;f the contract, and if it appears-that the description is in some parts erroneous, those parts may be rejected, and what is left, if sufficient of itself, alone regarded. (Mansfield v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 102 N. Y. 205 ; Field v. Munson, 47 id. 221; Burr v. Broadway Ins. Co., 16 id. 267; 2 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law [2d ed.], 303.) The extrinsic evidence introduced in this case shows conclusively that the plaintiff assigned [533]*533and deposited, or delivered to the. appellant personally, all the stock held or owned by him, and that this was all the stock the appellant sought to acquire or the plaintiff intended to assign. We think that the reasonable construction of the agreement, and one which gives force and effect to the intention of the parties, is that which made it possible for the plaintiff to comply with its provisions.

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Bluebook (online)
61 A.D. 529, 70 N.Y.S. 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dady-v-orourke-nyappdiv-1901.