Davidson v. Mexican National Railroad

11 A.D. 28, 42 N.Y.S. 1015
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 11 A.D. 28 (Davidson v. Mexican National Railroad) 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
Davidson v. Mexican National Railroad, 11 A.D. 28, 42 N.Y.S. 1015 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Hatch, J.:

From April, 1884, to October, 1884, the Mexican National Eailway Company and the Mexican National Construction Company trembled on the verge of bankruptcy. In the latter month, after constant and continuous effort, the two companies succeeded in effecting an agreement between themselves and certain holders of the bonds and stock of the railway company for a scheme of reorganization whereby the railway company was to be absorbed in a new corporation to be thereafter formed, fresh money was to be injected into the languishing enterprise, payment of its bonds provided for, the plan of its organization preserved, and the purpose of its creation fostered and progressed. This instrument is known to this action as the Matheson-Palmer Agreement.” It does not appear that there has ever been any disagreement or difficulty respecting the fulfillment to the letter of every stipulation contained in this agreement by the respective parties thereto, so far as the same relates to the reorganization scheme. Under it the new corporation was organized, the properties therein mentioned have been delivered to and accepted by the respective parties and companies, the securities provided for have been executed and delivered to those entitled thereto, the bondholders have ratified the scheme and accepted the substituted securities, the new bonds have been sold and the fresh money has been realized for the purposes contemplated. The particular fund which is the subject of this controversy is now awaiting distribution to the present claimant, or, in the event of failure in this regard, it will go to swell the reserve fund for the payment of the obligations of the defendant. When the present claim was first asserted the parties negotiated for a settlement of it for nearly three years, and, failing to agree, resort was had to a friendly and, it was hoped, a speedy settlement through the medium of an arbitration. No one, however far-seeing, could have contemplated the tortuous course which the litigation was to take, or the fierce battle which was to ensue. After proceeding with the arbitration from the 14th day of April, 1890, to the 16th day of July, 1891, and when there seemed some prospect of an end being reached, the defendant served notice of revocation. Thereupon, on the 12th clay of September, 1891, this action was commenced. On the 28th of October, 1891, the Supreme Court, upon petition of [31]*31the defendant, entered an order directing that the action "be removed into the Circuit Court of the United States. The cause was pending and tried in • the United States Circuit Court during the years intervening between its removal and early' in 1895. This trial was had before Judge Wheeler, of the Circuit Court, and resulted 'in a judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of §151,832.41. On the writ of error being taken by the defendant from this judgment to the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals a question of jurisdiction of the Federal courts over the action was raised by the defendant and certified by the appellate court to the Supreme Court of the United States, where the question was resolved in favor of the defendant, and the Federal "courts, ousted of jurisdiction. (Mexican National R. R. Co. v. Davidson, 157 U. S. 201.)

This result brought the action again hito the Supreme Court of this State, and it found its way to a trial before Mr. Justice Cullen in May and June, 1895, resulting in a judgment in plaintiff’s favor for the sum of §95,237.92. An appeal by the defendant from the judgment, and by the plaintiff from certain parts of the judgment, particularly specified, brings the matter before this court. In the orderly administration of justice by the courts there must come a time when a given litigation must be composed, and when, if necessary to that end, technical and somewhat arbitrary rules must be enforced or disregarded as the case may be. (Greenwood v. Marvin, 111 N. Y. 440.)

This litigation is closely allied to the class where justice demands an application of this rule, and a proper regard for all parties requires an earnest attempt to settle finally the questions at issue. It is not at all surprising, in this maze of accounts, creating a very labyrinth, that confusion should arise. The most patient labor finds itself bewildered, amidst the various. contracts and accounts, each one a complication by itself, and the whole a staggering mass in amount, and of an intricacy which makes the attempt to reach a correct .result nearly as elusive as is the pursuit after perpetual motion. Such a condition makes it possible for counsel to march in steady column with page upon page of brief to the demonstration of a particular theory extracted from the mass. This condition furnishes abundant reason why, in the disposition of the questions pre[32]*32sented, we should rigidly hold the parties to the issues which the pleadings present, and reject consideration of questions not technically embraced therein.

So far as we purpose to discuss the questions presented it appears that the plaintiff seeks to recover, as assignee of the construction company, a debt due by the railway company to the construction company, in the sum of $111,454.28. This sum is made up of two items, $104,244.10 for work, labor and materials, and $7,210.18 for interest upon the principal sum to September 30, 1886. It appeared without dispute that upon the books of both companies the entries showed this amount of indebtedness, and the plaintiff becomes entitled to recover this sum unless it be defeated or reduced by the defense which has been offered. Plaintiff also claims to recover an additional sum of $80,000.

Defendant insists that in fact no indebtedness existed in favor of the construction company agairfst the railway company on the date of the Matheson-Palmer agreement. On the contrary, it is claimed that the indebtedness was upon the other side.

First, in that there had been an overissue of stock and bonds by • the railway company to the construction company in. payment for construction; that this excess of stock was illegally issued, and constituted no obligation against the railway company; that, as it was in fact paid for in securities provided by the Matheson-Palmer agreement, no debt now exists which the construction company is equitably entitled to enforce.

Second. That the Matheson-Palmer agreement worked a general release of the claims of each company as against the other.

Third. That an indebtedness actually exists in favor of the railway company against the construction company for $207,000 which is an offset to the claims of plaintiff.

Fourth. That the fund of $217,000 inserted in the MathesonPalmer agreement was procured to be so inserted by the fraud and misrepresentation of the officers of the construction company, and, therefore, does not embrace its claim.

The discussion will proceed in this order.

First. It is quite true as claimed that the railway company was, for all practical purposes, the creation of the construction company, and that the latter at all times elected a majority of its board of direct[33]*33ors, and practically controlled its corporate action.

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Bluebook (online)
11 A.D. 28, 42 N.Y.S. 1015, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidson-v-mexican-national-railroad-nyappdiv-1896.