Ducker v. . Rapp

67 N.Y. 464, 1876 N.Y. LEXIS 419
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 12, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 67 N.Y. 464 (Ducker v. . Rapp) 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
Ducker v. . Rapp, 67 N.Y. 464, 1876 N.Y. LEXIS 419 (N.Y. 1876).

Opinion

Ohuroh, Oh. J.

This action is brought upon a guaranty by defendant’s intestate to secure the payment of rent by lessees of plaintiffs’ testator for certain premises in New York city. The amount claimed is for the rent due in May, August and November, 1874, and February, 1875.

The defense relied upon is, that the surety was discharged by certain transactions between the plaintiffs and the principal debtors. It seems that, for the rent due in May and August, actions had been commenced by the plaintiffs, as executors of the testator, and issues had been joined, and judgments were entered October 6, 1874, upon inquests at the Circuit. The same day an order was obtained staying plaintiffs’ proceedings upon these judgments until a motion could he made to open the defaults, but before the order was served executions had been delivered to the sheriff. TJpon the hearing of the motion, an order was made allowing defendants to defend the actions, hut permitting the judgments and executions to stand as security. A stipulation was then entered into between the plaintiffs’ attorneys and the principal debtors (the defendants in said judgments), the terms of which, it is claimed, discharged the surety. The stipulation provided: First. That the executions should, within one day, he countermanded. Second. That all proceedings upon one of the judgments be stayed until the 25th day of November, 1874, and upon the second judgment, until the 10th day of January, 1875. Third. That, in case legal proceedings were commenced to collect the rent due November 1, 1874, the time for the defendants to answer the complaint should be extended until the 5th day of February, 1875. The defendants agreed to pay the judgments on the 25th of November, 1874, and 10th of January, 1875, respectively, and to pay all sheriff’s fees accrued; and th.e plaintiffs were authorized to collect rents from sub-tenants and apply the same in payment of the judgments.

*470 Several questions are presented: First. Assuming that, by the terms of the stipulation, the time of payment is extended, is the agreement supported by a sufficient consideration ?' The stipulation gave the plaintiffs a benefit or advantage in authorizing them to collect of the sub-tenants and apply the amounts upon the judgments. This was in the nature of additional security. It gave the plaintiffs the benefit of the personal responsibility of the sub-tenants, to the extent of their liability to the principal debtors, which the evidence tends to show was between $4,000 and $5,000 a year. The payment of the sheriff’s fees upon the countermand of the executions, and the waiver nof the right to defend, were also' items of consideration; nor do I think that the manner of commencing the action impaired the validity of this agreement. The plaintiffs in the actions described themselves as executors, and claimed to recover the rents as such, while they should have claimed to recover as trustees and widow. The same persons were entitled to recover, although in a different capacity from that claimed; and any agreement by these persons, in respect to the rent or the judgments obtained therefor,, was binding and valid. These persons, and no others, had power to act. They were both executors and trustees by the same will, and the mistake in professing to act in one or the other of these capacities appears to me to be a formal rather than a substantial matter, so far as the question of the validity of this agreement is concerned. The agreement, in either form, would inure to the benefit of the proper cestuis que trust, and if the rents were received by the plaintiffs as executors, they would be obliged to apply it as trustees. The defendant waived all objection to the judgments on that ground, and it is very clear that the payment of these judgments would have discharged all claim by the plaintiffs, as trustees or otherwise, for the rents.

The objection that the attorneys of the plaintiffs in the judgments had no authority to make this stipulation is answered by the fact that one of the plaintiffs was present when it was made, and assented to it, and this one had the *471 principal management of the business. It is presumable, also, that these attorneys were attorneys for the plaintiffs for the collection of these rents, under the will of the testator, in any capacity which the law would justify, and their mistake, in attempting to recover m the name of the plaintiffs, as executors instead of trustees, should not impair their acts within the scope of their authority; and the fact alluded to, of the presence of one of the plaintiffs, renders it unnecessary to consider the extent of their authority as attorneys in the actions. It follows that the agreement was valid.

The important, and somewhat difficult, question is to determine the true construction of this contract. If it operated to postpone the payment of the rents, so as to prevent their collection in any form, until the specified days, then the surety was precluded, if he had paid them, from prosecuting the principal debtors before that period, and, upon familiar principles, was discharged. An ordinary stipulation during á litigation to extend the time to answer would not affect a surety, nor would any agreement for indulgence to pay, or otherwise, unless it was founded upon a good consideration, and operated to prevent the collection of the demand in any form. Assuming that these judgments were valid, and they must be so regarded after the stipulation by which any defence was waived, and assuming that, so far as the question, involved in this action is concerned, they must be regarded in the same manner as if the plaintiffs had prosecuted, formally, as trustees instead of as executors, as we must, from the above views, regard them, could the plaintiffs have discontinued these actions and commenced other actions for the recovery of these rents before the expiration of the times specified ? It seems to me not. The evident intent of the parties was to postpone the payment of the May and August rent for which these judgments had been recovered. True, the language is that all proceedings be stayed upon the judgments, but, looking at the substance of the transaction, it is evident that the parties, intended to agree to postpone payment until the times specified. If the plaintiffs had commenced another action. for *472 these rents as trustees, the former judgments and stipulation would have been a good defence, and the plaintiffs would not have been permitted to allege that they sued in the wrong capacity. As long as the defendants in the' judgments could not complain, and those for whom the plaintiffs acted could not be injured or prejudiced, no court would permit parties, upon a'mere technical formality, to violate an agreement to the injury of other parties. It is too late, strictly speaking, for a plaintiff to discont-kme an action after judgment. He may satisfy it, but not to retain an enforceable interest in the cause of action, without leave of the court, The defendant had an interest and right, for which he had paid a valuable consideration, which was directly in conflict with the right of the plaintiffs to otherwise prosecute for these rents. The defendant had paid value for indulgence, and he was legally entitled to it. The two installments for rent were merged in the -judgments, and the agreement to stay proceedings was like a valid agreement not to sue, which operates as a release of the surety. (Theobald on Prin.

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Bluebook (online)
67 N.Y. 464, 1876 N.Y. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ducker-v-rapp-ny-1876.