Gallagher v. Perot

112 Misc. 717
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 112 Misc. 717 (Gallagher v. Perot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gallagher v. Perot, 112 Misc. 717 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1918).

Opinion

Faber, J.

The purpose of this action is to procure an adjudication that a certain contract made by the defendants on July 16, 1906, to purchase all the right, title and interest of one James P= McQuaide in 1,250 shares of stock of the National Conduit and Cable Company, although in form for the sole benefit of the defendants, was in reality for the joint benefit of the [718]*718defendants and the plaintiff, and that the defendants be required to account to the plaintiff for his share of the net profits arising from a resale of the same shares of stock to a third party.

For a considerable number of years prior to April 1,1903, the plaintiff and the defendants and one James P. McQuaide were the owners of the entire capital stock of the National Conduit and Cable Company, a domestic corporation. The capital stock of said corporation was divided into 5,000 shares of the par value of $100 each, and each of the parties above named owned one-fourth of such capital stock, or 1,250 shares.

On April 1, 1903, McQuaide, who was at that time receiving a salary of $10,000 a year as treasurer of the corporation, finding himself in financial difficulties, entered into a trust agreement in writing with the defendant Perot, whereby he transferred to said defendant as trustee his 1,250 shares of stock in the corporation, and the right to receive the dividends thereon, and whereby Perot, as trustee, agreed to pay certain debts of McQuaide aggregating $26,173.15, and to pay to McQuaide’s'wife for the benefit of herself and children the sum of $6,400 per annum, and to pay the balance of the dividends on the stock, if any, to McQuaide or his appointees. About the same time, McQuaide was compelled to resign his position as treasurer of the company, but continued to draw his salary until July, 1906.

On July 16, 1906, McQuaide entered into a further agreement in writing with the defendants, whereby he agreed to sell to the defendants the 1,250 shares of stock above mentioned, subject to the trust theretofore created in favor of his wife and children, upon condition that said defendants pay certain of his debts aggregating $26,171.14, and pay him the sum of $10,000 per year, in equal monthly installments, for a period of five years from the date, of the agreement, and also pay $250,000 in cash on July 16, 1911. At [719]*719intervals after the execution of this agreement advance payments of considerable amounts were made to McQuaide, at his request, on account of the principal sum of $250,000, which by the terms of the agreement was to have been paid on July 16, 1911, and on each occasion when such advance payment was made a supplemental agreement in writing was executed extending the time for payment of the balance of such principal sum, and also the period during which the annual payments to McQuaide were to run, and reducing the amount of such annual payments. The advance payments so made between January 29,1909, and April 8, 1915, aggregated $154,205, and by the final supplemental agreement, executed on the date last mentioned, the time for payment of- the balance of the principal sum, then amounting to $95,750, was extended to July 16, 1921, and the amount of the annual payment to McQuaide was fixed at $3,830.

At the date of the original trust agreement of 1903, McQuaide executed a formal transfer of his 1,250 shares of stock, to the defendant Perot, and at the same time a new certificate for said shares of stock was issued to Perot as trustee, and Perot continued to hold the legal title to said shares as trustee after the agreement of July 16, 1906, and until April 16, 1917. On the date last mentioned all the stock of the corporation, together with the stock of certain subsidiary corporations owned by the plaintiff and the defendants was sold and transferred to one Hugh K. Pritchett for the sum of $8,000,000 in cash.

McQuaide died some time in the year 1916, the exact date not appearing from the evidence. The final payments under the contract for purchase of the stock were made out of the proceeds of the sale to Pritchett.

Notwithstanding the fact that the written agreement of July 16, 1906, provided on its face for a sale of the McQuaide stock to the defendants Perot and [720]*720Jackson, the plaintiff contends that the real understanding and agreement between the defendants and himself was that the stock was to be purchased by the corporation for their joint benefit, and that a considerable portion of the money paid to McQuaide under the agreement for purchase of the stock was money of the corporation and not of the defendant and that by reason thereof he is entitled to a share of the net profits realized from the subsequent sale of the stock to Pritchett. The defendants, on the other hand, contend that they never agreed with the plaintiff to purchase the stock in question for his and their joint benefit or for the benefit of the corporation, but that the purchase was solely for their own benefit, and that they are entitled to all of the profits arising from the resale of the stock.

In support of his contention that there was an agreement between himself and the defendants that the McQuaide stock should be purchased for their joint benefit the plaintiff testified in regard to a conversation which he claims he had with the defendant Jackson in the company’s office, just before July, 1906, as follows : "I came in one day, and Mr. Jackson told me that Mr. McQuaide was down in the street trying to sell his stock. And he said, ‘ Don’t you think the Company better purchase it? ’ ‘ Well,’ I said, ‘ I suppose so; I don’t know.’ Then he says1, ‘ You know we don’t want any outsiders coming in.’ He said, ' I think it would be a good thing for the Company to purchase it.’ I said, 'All right.’ ” He also testified that three or four days later Jackson came in again and said that the company had purchased McQuaide’s stock for $250,000, and the payment of McQuaide’s debts and $10,000 cash, and that he replied "All right.” The plaintiff’s testimony as to these conversations is contradicted by the defendants, who deny absolutely that any such conversations ever took place, but a careful consideration of all the evidence in the case, [721]*721together with my observation of the bearing of the respective witnesses on the stand, leads me to accept the testimony of the plaintiff as true. Standing alone, the plaintiff’s testimony as to his conversations with Jackson would probably be insufficient to show a binding contract for the joint purchase of the stock, and consequently would not entitle the plaintiff to the relief which he is now seeking. There is, however, another fact established by the evidence, which, to my mind, not only corroborates the plaintiff’s testimony as to the conversations in question, but which taken in connection with the conversations established the plaintiff’s right to an accounting. The fact to which I refer is that the purchase of McQuaide stock under the agreement of July 16,1906, was financed to a very considerable extent out of the funds of the corporation. The evidence shows that the payments for the stock were made from four sources. First. The dividend's on the stock itself, which during the period involved in this action amounted to $3,750 a quarter or $15,000 a year. Second. The sum of $833.33 per month which was paid by the corporation to the defendant Perot, as trustee, every month from July, 1906, to and including April, 1917, and which was in turn applied by Perot to payments under the contract. Third.

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Related

Fine v. Loew
7 Misc. 2d 245 (New York Supreme Court, 1957)
Gallagher v. Perot
122 Misc. 845 (New York Supreme Court, 1923)

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112 Misc. 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallagher-v-perot-nysupct-1918.