Davids v. Bauer

155 A.D. 97, 140 N.Y.S. 55, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5060
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 7, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 155 A.D. 97 (Davids v. Bauer) 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
Davids v. Bauer, 155 A.D. 97, 140 N.Y.S. 55, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5060 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Dowling, J.:

While the present appeal is taken from an interlocutory judgment overruling a demurrer to certain separate defenses contained in the answer of the defendant, the real question involved is the sufficiency of the amended complaint herein. From an examination thereof the following facts appear: The American Loan and Trust Company, a domestic corporation, was dissolved by a judgment of the Supreme Court on May 1, 1891, in an action brought in the county of New York, wherein the People of the State of New York were plaintiffs and said company was defendant. Under its charter every director of the company was personally liable for debts incurred by the corporation during his administration to an amount not exceeding $5,000. At the time of its dissolution said company had nineteen directors. At that time it was indebted to the defendant herein in the sum of $10,254.32, to Durias Seacord in the sum of $21,966.31, and to other persons in amounts aggregating $456,643.54. On March 16, 1892, Louis Bauer, the defendant herein, commenced an action, suing on his own behalf as creditor of said company and on behalf of all other creditors similarly situated who shall come in and contribute to the [99]*99expense of this action, ” the defendants therein being John L. Macaulay and the other directors of the company, the prayer for relief being that an accounting might be had of the creditors of the company and of the amounts due them respectively, and of the amounts due by the directors, and that an adjudication be made as to the liability of the directors, and for the payment by them to the plaintiff and to the other creditors of such sums as might be found due. On August 1, 1894, Bauer received from Payson Merrill, one of the defendants in said action, the sum of $1,500, in compromise of his liability, and consented to the entry of an order discontinuing the action as to said Merrill. This sum Bauer retained for his own use and has never accounted therefor. It is further alleged that Bauer negligently failed to obtain jurisdiction over three defendant directors, Blair, Anderson and Aldige, and that despite the decision of the Appellate Division, First Department, in April, 1903, holding that said three directors were necessary parties to the action, Bauer failed to obtain jurisdiction as to them. Durias Seacord, on December 26, 1893, on the application of Bauer, by an order of the Supreme Court, New York county, was brought in as a party defendant in Bauer’s action against the directors, and a supplementary summons and complaint were directed to be issued as against him. At the same time and by the same order Seacord was enjoined, during the pendency and proper prosecution of the Bauer action, from prosecuting four certain actions in the Court of Common Pleas, where Seacord as plaintiff sought to recover $5,000 each from Kimmey, Macaulay, Parsons and Hart, directors of the company. It does not appear from the complaint that Sea-cord ever answered in Bauer’s action, or in any way sought to establish his rights therein. On November 14, 1896, Seacord died, leaving a last will and testament whereof the plaintiffs were the executors. On January 13, 1899, an interlocutory judgment was entered in the Bauer suit whereby twelve of the defendants were directed to pay into court specified amounts, which as to eleven of them amounted to $5,000, and as to the twelfth $3,426.28, or so much thereof as might be required to pay the claims of Bauer and the other creditors of the trust company and the costs of the action. On April 24, 1903, said inter[100]*100locutory judgment was reversed and a new trial ordered by the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court upon the ground that Bauer had failed to bring in certain necessary parties) to wit, Blair, Anderson and Aldige, three of the directors, as well as the receiver of the company, and upon the further ground that in discontinuing the action as against one director a defect of parties defendant had been created, which was fatal to the judgment. (Bauer v. Parker, 82 App. Div. 289.) Meantime, and before the death of Seacord, he had appealed from the injunction order against him restraining the prosecution of his own actions, and that order had been affirmed by the General Term. After the decision by the Appellate Division before referred to, Bauer, it is alleged, still refused to obtain jurisdiction over the five persons whom this court had indicated as necessary parties defendant, and as a result thereof the complaint in Bauer’s suit was dismissed as against Henrietta Parker, as executrix of John L. Macaulay, by an order entered January 7, 1907. Judgment dismissing the complaint having been duly entered upon the order of dismissal, the judgment was duly affirmed by the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, First Department, and by the Court of Appeals. Shortly after the dismissal of the Bauer action as against the executrix of Macaulay, various other defendants moved to dismiss the complaint as against them, and at about the same time various creditors moved to be brought in as parties plaintiff in the Bauer suit that they might prosecute the same. During the month of April, 1907, all these motions came up for hearing in the Special Term of the Supreme Court, the motions to dismiss the complaint were denied, without prejudice to their renewal if Bauer delayed in the prompt trial of the action, and the motions by the creditors to be made parties plaintiff with Bauer in his action were also denied. The plaintiffs in the present action also moved for an order making them parties plaintiff in the Bauer action, which motion was denied by order dated October 21-, 1907. This, therefore, left the Bauer action in this situation: that it had been dismissed as to one of the parties defendant only, and that the creditors who sought to be brought in as parties plaintiff with Bauer had been denied permission so to do. Beference to the decision of Mr. Justice Bischoff [101]*101upon the motion of the creditors shows that the latter was based upon the moving parties’ dissatisfaction with the plaintiff’s (Bauer’s) conduct of the litigation and upon the expressed fear that the rights of the parties would he lost through neglect. But, as his opinion states, “ the action has proceeded for fifteen years with the apparent consent of all the creditors, and to permit parties now to come in for the purpose of continuing the action free from any charge of neglect on the plaintiff’s part, would be to authorize the possibility of successive delays which could postpone the action indefinitely. The rule stated in the case cited (MacArdell v. Olcott, 62 App. Div. 127) confines the right to intervene to a period within the statutory limitations for the commencement of an action and, following this rule, I must deny the motion.” It is further alleged in the complaint that thereafter Bauer failed to bring the action on for trial and finally in June, 1908, received the sum of $2,000 from the executor of Baldwin, one of the directors, and that the same, or larger amounts, were paid by each of the said director defendants as further consideration for the discontinuance of the action, as a result of which Bauer has received sums of money “far in excess of any share therein * * * which the said Louis Bauer was entitled to receive and aggregated more than the amount of the said Louis Bauer’s claim against the said American Loan & Trust Company, ” and that Bauer has retained same to his own use and has failed to account to the plaintiffs therefor. The Bauer action was finally discontinued on consent.

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Related

Davids v. Baer
140 N.Y.S. 1116 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 A.D. 97, 140 N.Y.S. 55, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davids-v-bauer-nyappdiv-1913.