Goodwin v. Gilsey

210 A.D. 31, 205 N.Y.S. 529, 1924 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6649
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 2, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 210 A.D. 31 (Goodwin v. Gilsey) 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
Goodwin v. Gilsey, 210 A.D. 31, 205 N.Y.S. 529, 1924 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6649 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Dowling, J.:

Respondent claims that primarily and fundamentally this action is one for an accounting, and in effect to impress a trust upon certain real estate in New York city, known as No. 138 West Thirty-second street, and summarizes the allegations of his complaint as follows:

1. The probate of the will of Gilbert S. Coddington, and the issue of letters testamentary to Henry L. and Clifford C. Goodwin.

2. The death of Clifford C. Goodwin, and that Henry L. Goodwin is the sole surviving trustee and acting as such.

3. The two defendant corporations are domestic corporations.

4. The Investors and Traders Realty Company, a domestic corporation, acquired in January, 1907, the premises known as No. 140 West Thirty-second street, in consideration of $50,000, whereof $35,000 was represented by a purchase-money mortgage, and William L. Sutphin and Frederick C. Gilsey, the latter a defendant herein, were respectively its president and secretary.

5. The premises No. 138 West Thirty-second street, adjacent , to the foregoing, were, in January, 1907, in consideration df $100 conveyed to the Investors and Traders Realty Company.

6. An agreement in January, 1907, was entered into, whereby it was agreed that, whilst the title to 140 West Thirty-second street was in the Investors and Traders Realty Company, the beneficial interest was in W. L. Sutphin, Frederick C. Gilsey, Frederick J. Davison, Henry L. Goodwin and Mary J. McDonald (Isidor J. Pocher), each a one-fifth interest.

[33]*337. On February 4, 1907, the Investors and Traders Realty Company conveyed to H. L. and C. C. Goodwin, as trustees, the two lots 138 and 140 West Thirty-second street, by way of mortgage to secure a loan of $50,000, the obligors on the bond being F. C. Gilsey, W. L. Sutphin, F. J. Davison and I. J. Pocher; the mortgage was a first mortgage on 138 and a second mortgage on 140 West Thirty-second street.

8. On October 7, 1910, H. L. Goodwin and C. C. Goodwin, as trustees, assigned the mortgage to thé Windsor Trust Company, in consideration of $50,958.33, whereupon the trust company issued to C. C. Goodwin and H. L. Goodwin, as trustees, its certificate of deposit for $50,000 carrying interest at four per cent per annum.

9. On June 6,1912, the Windsor Trust Company, in consideration of $50,000, assigned the bond and mortgage to the Mutual Bank, whereupon the bank issued its certificate of deposit, to the two Goodwins, as trustees, for the sum of $50,000 with interest at four per cent per annum.

10. On April 30, 1908, the Investors and Traders Realty Company, in consideration of one dollar, conveyed both lots to the Knickerbocker Mortgage and Realty Company, subject to the two mortgages for $35,000 and $50,000; on May 21, 1910, the latter named company conveyed both properties to the Pennlane Realty Company.

11. On March 14, 1910, the Knickerbocker Mortgage and Realty Company conveyed both properties by way of mortgage to Alma M. Gilsey to secure the payment of $15,000 with interest at six per cent, falling due on March 14, 1911; and on April 23, 1913, Alma M. Gilsey assigned the bond and mortgage to the Yonkers National Bank, without recourse.

12. On April 23, 1913, the Mutual Bank in consideration of $50,000 assigned the bond and mortgage for $50,000 to Alma M. Gilsey, on which date the two trustees had in their possession the said certificate of indebtedness of the Mutual Bank for $50,000 carrying interest at four per cent per annum. On the same day the Mutual Bank demanded payment of the amount due upon the bond and mortgage, and the trustees demanded payment, likewise, of the amount due upon the bond and mortgage on April twenty-third.

13. Thereupon the bank made and delivered its check for $49,568.05 to the order of the said trustees, which check was forthwith paid in cash by the bank to the trustees, and out of this money so received by the trustees, they upon the demand [34]*34and insistence of the bank and Frederick C. Gilsey, acting for himself and his wife, and in pursuance of the scheme and device whereby the wrongs stated in the complaint were to be perpetrated, contributed $26,000 towards the payment to the bank of the amount then due it under the terms of the bond and mortgage, Alma M. Gilsey taking from the bank an assignment of the bond and mortgage, upon payment to it of the balance required to extinguish the amount due to the bank under the terms of the bond and mortgage, all of which was to the prejudice of the beneficiaries under the trust created by the said Coddington.

14. On the same day a so-called ownership agreement ” was entered into between H. L. Goodwin and C. C. Goodwin, as trustees, as parties of the first part and Alma M. Gilsey, as party of the second part, wherein it was inter alia agreed that Alma M. Gilsey had an ownership in the bond and mortgage to the extent of $40,000 with interest, and that the trustees were the owners of the balance of the mortgage debt remaining; that Alma M. Gilsey should have the right to foreclose the mortgage and receive the proceeds of sale, and should the same be sold the trustees should have the right to an accounting for all money received by her or any of her assignees; the rights and interest of Alma M. Gilsey and of the trustees agreed to under the terms of this contract were in the proportion of one-fifth to the trustees and four-fifths to Alma M. Gilsey, and by proportionate priority of interest but without priority of either share the one over the other.

15. On March 17, 1915, Alma M. Gilsey, assigned the bond and mortgage to the State and City Realty Company, in consideration of $50,000, she covenanting that there was then due thereon the sum of $50,000, with interest at five per cent per annum from October 23, 1913.

16. On March 29, 1915, the State and City Realty Company began an action for foreclosure of the $50,000 mortgage against the Pennlane Realty Company and others (to which action the trustees were not parties), the action proceeding to judgment and sale; the referee’s report shows that there was due the sum of $53,858.75, that the property was sold for $30,000 subject to the prior purchase-money mortgage of $35,000 to the Eastern Holding Company, and after deducting all costs and expenses, the balance of $29,494.66 was paid to the plaintiff State and City Realty Company, whereof one-fifth part, $5,898.93, became due and owing to H. L. Goodwin and his cotrustee pursuant to the terms of the ownership agreement. Frederick C. Gilsey was at that time the president of both the State and City Realty Company as well as of the Eastern Holding Company.

[35]*3517. After the Eastern Holding Company had acquired title to both premises, it' conveyed No. 138 West Thirty-second street by way of mortgage to Elise H. Kinkead to secure the payment of $15,000 with the interest thereon; and, prior to November 2, 1916, the owner of the $35,000 mortgage foreclosed the same and the proceeds of sale were insufficient to pay more than the amount of the mortgage, with interest, thus leaving no balance due to the Pennlane Realty Company, the then owner of the equity of redemption.

18. The title to No. 138 is now, and since October, 1915, has been, vested in the Eastern Holding Company subject to the mortgage of $15,000.

19. The Eastern Holding Company is a “ dummy corporation,” the real, true and beneficial owners being Alma M. Gilsey and Frederick C. Gilsey. .

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Related

Weiner v. Sentinel Fire Ins.
87 F.2d 286 (Second Circuit, 1937)
Goodwin v. Investors & Traders Reality Co.
210 A.D. 38 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
210 A.D. 31, 205 N.Y.S. 529, 1924 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodwin-v-gilsey-nyappdiv-1924.