Drexel v. . Pease

29 N.E. 241, 129 N.Y. 96, 41 N.Y. St. Rep. 236, 84 Sickels 96, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1147
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 29 N.E. 241 (Drexel v. . Pease) 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
Drexel v. . Pease, 29 N.E. 241, 129 N.Y. 96, 41 N.Y. St. Rep. 236, 84 Sickels 96, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1147 (N.Y. 1891).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The controversy which resulted in this appeal grows out of a written contract made in March, 1883, between Joseph M. Pease, a merchant doing business at the time in the city of New York, and George St.Amant, a merchant doing business in Paris, France. Before making any further reference to the terms of the contract it is necessary to get a clear idea of the proceedings through which St.Amant and the parties representing Pease are before this court. In August, 1884, Pease failed and made an assignment for the benefit of his creditors. Immediately after this failure the defendant, the Mechanics’ National Bank, and the National City Bank of New York as creditors, instituted suits and proceedings against him, in which attachments were issued and levied upon goods in his possession and upon a large number of open accounts due to him. In these suits the goods were reduced by the banks to possession and many of the accounts collected. It seems that these proceedings and whatever lien the banks obtained upon the property preceded the assignment. The goods seized, it is claimed, were shipped to Pease by St.Amant under the contract and the accounts collected represented goods shipped and sold by Pease under the same arrangement. St.Amant claimed that the title to these goods and their proceeds remained in him and did not, under the agreement, pass to Pease or his creditors. The plaintiff, Drexel, Morgan & Co., by means of a letter of credit, furnished to Pease the *100 funds which he advanced to St.Amant under the agreement, and they claimed a bankers’ lien upon the goods and their proceeds by virtue of the advances to and arrangement with Pease, which has been found. The plaintiffs brought this action to enforce this lien and made the attaching banks., the assignee of Pease, and St.Amant parties defendants, who all answered. In the meantime, with the consent of the parties, a receiver was appointed in the action of the fund representing the collected accounts and the proceeds of the goods which had been attached and subsequently sold. The case having been brought to trial at Special Term, an interlocutory judgment was entered directing the receiver to pay to the plaintiff the sum of $4,264, with interest thereon and costs out of the fund in satisfaction of their lien, which was adjudged. This disposed of the plaintiffs’ interest in the controversy and none of the defendants now seem to raise any question as to this, part of the judgment. The court, however, did not then pass upon the conflicting claims to the rest of the fund by St.Amant on the one hand and the banks as attaching creditors on the other, but a provision was inserted in the judgment providing for a reference to ascertain the particular portion of the goods or the proceeds in the receiver’s hands received by Pease from St.Amant under the agreement, and also whether the judgments obtained by the banks against Pease were for an individua^ debt due from him or for advances made to him on account of the business under the agreement through which the goods came from St.Amant, and that all other questions between the defendants be reserved until the coming in of the report upon the reference. From that part of the judgment directing a reference the banks and the assignee appealed to the General Term, but the appeal was dismissed. The reference proceeded and the referee reported that all the goods and their proceeds that came to the hands of the receiver were received by Pease from St.Amant under the agreement and all the accounts collected were for the purchase of like goods that Pease had received and sold under the same conditions. That the indebtedness of Pease to the banks was on his individual *101 account, and that the lien of the banks did not attach till St.Amant was paid. That there was due to him September 16, 1884, for goods delivered under the agreement, after deducting all advances, expenses or profits, the sum of $23,630.41. That the receiver had realized from the goods and accounts that came to his hands the sum of $24,924.75. That he had paid the plaintiffs, on account of their bankers’ lien, pursuant to the judgment of the court, $6,053, and in other expenses $532.60, leaving in his hands a balance of $18,338.49, subject to his commissions and certain disbursements. The case came on for trial again at a Special Term held by another judge. The trial was had mainly, if not entirely, upon the report of the referee, the proofs reported by him to the court, and exceptions to his findings. The court overruled the exceptions and substantially adopted the findings of the referee and adjudged that StAmant was entitled to the whole fund in the hands of the receiver. Upon this decision, final judgment was entered and, upon appeal, was affirmed by the General Term. The banks and the assignee appeal to this court from the judgment of affirmance, and they also bring up for review the order of the General Term dismissing the appeal from that part of the interlocutory judgment directing a reference of the special questions above stated. We are asked to reverse the judgment and order upon substantially three grounds:

1. That the contract between St.Amant and Pease constituted a sale to the latter of the goods, and that consequently the fund in the receiver’s hands is bound by the lien of the attachments.

2. That the finding of the court that the fund was the proceeds of the goods received by Pease from St.Amant under the contract is without any competent evidence to support it.

3. That the court had no power to refer the questions before stated, and that the General Term should have reversed that part. of the interlocutory judgment instead of dismissing the appeal.

The correspondence between St.Amant and Pease resulted, as the court below found, in the following contract, to which reference has been made in the foregoing statement:

*102 “ Yóur favor of fifth inst., is duly at hand. I had an interview with the packer (Dumagnou) and owner of the Billett Brand, who is willing to give us the monopoly of these sardines, the agreement to be as follows:

“We to advance 80% of cost of each invoice as they are forwarded from the factories, this advance to be halved by you and I.

“ As a basis, we take the amount of 1,000 of American Js, and 4,000 cases of 100 low ¿s, to be handled during the season, we to have the liberty of stopping shipments and annulling the agreement at any time during the season, if we find it unprofitable or have any other good reason.

“ Interest to run on the account of 6% per annum. Ho commission to be charged by us nor profit to be added by him. You to charge brokerage only when actually paid by him.

“ Goods to be sold from wharf, unless some very good reason should exist for doing otherwise.

“Any loss occasioned by failure of your buyers to be supported in thirds, one-third each by you, the owner of - the brand and myself.

“ The total of net proceeds of all accounts sale, compared with the total cost, shall determine the profit of the season, which shall be divided in thirds in same manner as stated in previous paragraph. If this should sliow a loss, this loss is. borne by the packer.

“There are about 500 cases of tins cut to size of old American J, which will be sent on first, in order to get as many in as possible under the four per cent duty.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.E. 241, 129 N.Y. 96, 41 N.Y. St. Rep. 236, 84 Sickels 96, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drexel-v-pease-ny-1891.