Delahunty v. Hake

20 A.D. 430, 46 N.Y.S. 929

This text of 20 A.D. 430 (Delahunty v. Hake) 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
Delahunty v. Hake, 20 A.D. 430, 46 N.Y.S. 929 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinions

Parker, J.:

This action was brought to recover from the defendants possession of a certificate for thirty shares of stock of the Philip Hake Manufacturing Company, or, if possession could not be had, for the value thereof. The result of the trial was a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, the jury fixing the value of the stock at the sum of $2,250, [431]*431When this action was before this court on a former appeal (10 App. Div. 230) the judgment was reversed on the ground that there was no proof of a demand, except during the time when the defendants’ possession was rightful, and hence its refusal to surrender possession ■did not constitute a conversion. On the retrial plaintiff attempted to supply the defect of the former trial by evidence which, it is claimed, establishes (1) that a proper demand was made by the plaintiff after December 31, 1895, and before the commencement of the action; and (2) that the defendants had refused to deliver the property, and, therefore, a demand would have been unavailing and unnecessary. Whether any error was committed by the court upon this branch of the case is the only question which will be considered on this review,'and, therefore, only such facts as are pertinent to such a consideration need be referred to.

George W. Proctor Knott, of whose property the plaintiff is receiver, entered into an agreement with one Philip Hake in January, 1891, that Hake should deliver to the trustees of the Philip Hake Manufacturing Company, in escrow, a certificate for thirty shares of stock, which is now the subject of controversy, to be indorsed in blank by Knott and held by said trustees under the terms and conditions of such agreement. One of the conditions was that Knott should remain in the employment of the company until December 31, 1895, or until his death, if he should die before that time. It provided “ that on the thirty-first day of December, 1895, if the party of the second part shall then remain in the employ of the said corporation, the said trustees shall be and hereby are authorized to deliver said certificates of stock to the party of the second part.” At the time of the commencement of this action, and prior thereto, these defendants were the trustees of that corporation. October 21, 1895, the plaintiff was, by order of the Supreme Court, appointed receiver of all the personal property of said Knott in sequestration proceedings for the non-payment of alimony, under section 1772 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Subsequent thereto, and on October thirty-first, the receiver made a demand upon the defendants for the certificate of stock, which had been delivered to the defendant trustees in escrow, in pursuance of the agreement to which reference has been made. It will be observed that the receiver was not at that time entitled to the possession, for under the agreement the defend[432]*432ants, as trustees, were not only entitled to, but were in duty bound to-retain, possession of the certificate until the thirty-first day of December following. Hot until then could it be known whether Knott would become entitled to it, for one of the conditions óf the transfer of the stock was that he should continue in the employment of the company until the 31st day of December, 1895.

It is not claimed that the receiver or his representatives made a demand upon the defendants, or any of them, personally, after the 31st day of December, 1895. But it is insisted, nevertheless, that a. legal demand was made upon the defendants through their attorney, to whom, the plaintiff insists, authority was given to represent the defendants in this matter, of which fact the plaintiff was advised by one of the defendants. '

The foundation for this claim, briefly stated, is, that immediately -after the appointment of a' receiver, plaintiff’s attorneys saw the defendants, and exhibited the order appointing plaintiff receiver, and asked for the stock, and were then told that the matter was in the hands of Hatch & Wickes, their attorneys.. A few days later the attorneys for the plaintiff wrote the defendants about the matter, and on November thirteenth Philip Hake, in a letter to plaintiff’s attorney, stated: “ Your favor received. Our attorneys are Messrs. Hatch & Wickes, 35 Liberty. I have sent your letter to them, and you will please confer with them & oblige.” Correspondence thereafter ensued -between ' Messrs. Hatch & Wickes and the. plaintiff’s attorneys, in the course-of which plaintiff’s attorneys presented their understanding of the facts, and expressed the opinion'that the receiver was entitled to the stock. The last letter of the series was dated January 10, 1896, and was written by Messrs. Hatch & Wickes, who therein explained the cause of delay in writing, ¡and concluded: “If your Mr. Wilson or any representative of your-office will call, Mr. Kenyon will confer with him about the same.” Mr. Kenyon was an attorney connected with the firm of .Hatch & Wickes. Four days later Mr. Wilson called at the office of Hatch & Wickes and had an interview with Mr. Kenyon. That interview was not before the court-on the former appeal,'as appears from the following extract .from- the opinion (10 App. Div. 232): “There was evidence on the part of one Wilson, who was in the employ of the plaintiff’s attorneys as managing clerk, and who swore that he called' [433]*433at the office of the defendants’ attorneys in January, with regard to the payment or delivery by the trustees of the company to the plaintiff of the stock in question; but what transpired a.t this interview does not appear.” On this trial Mr. Wilson testified that, in the interview between himself and Mr. Kenyon on January fourteenth, “ I asked Mr. Kenyon whether now Hatch & Wickes would advise the Hake Company to deliver this stock to Mr. Delahunty as Receiver. He said, as I recollect, that there were- assignments that had been filed with the Hake Company regarding this stock, and that, in the face of notice of those assignments, the Hake Company could not-safely deliver the stock to Mr. Delahunty. I then suggested that the only way out of that predicament was for Mr. Delahunty to bring an action, wherein the trustees might interplead these various claimants, and Mr. Kenyon, as I recollect, said that he thought that would be the course to pursue.”

In regard to the same interview, Mr. Kenyon testified: “ Q. Mr. Wilson testified, if my recollection serves me right, that he asked if Hatch & Wickes were prepared to give up the stock. A. There was not a word of that kind said by Mr. Wilson to me, not. one word. The conversation was, that we could not advise the Hake Company to surrender the stock to the receiver, for the reason that Mr. George W. Proctor Knott had not fulfilled his contract, and that the contract was assigned to his father, and the salary had been assigned to a man, to a man by the name of Strange, in Boston. I did not have, at that time, in my possession the stock. I was not authorized to deliver it. I did not have any control over it. 1 did not know where it was. Q. Did Mr. Wilson at any time make a demand for the stock ? A. No, sir. Q. Did he ask for the stock ? A. No, sir. Q. Did he ever request you to deliver it? A. No. All the conversation that was had between Mr. Wilson and myself related to what had- occurred between Mr. Burr and Mr. Hake. Q. In regard to the first demand, about the 31st of October ? A. Yes. All the conversation and all the correspondence related to that and nothing else.”

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Related

Rider v. . Pond
19 N.Y. 262 (New York Court of Appeals, 1859)
Delahunty v. Hake
10 A.D. 230 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1896)

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Bluebook (online)
20 A.D. 430, 46 N.Y.S. 929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delahunty-v-hake-nyappdiv-1897.