Groh's Sons v. Groh

80 A.D. 85
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 80 A.D. 85 (Groh's Sons v. Groh) 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
Groh's Sons v. Groh, 80 A.D. 85 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinions

Hatch, J.:

This action was commenced against John Groh, and an answer was interposed by him. He died before the case came on for trial, his executrix was substituted as defendant, and an amended answer was served by her.

The plaintiff is a domestic corporation. Three separate causes of action are alleged in the complaint. In the first cause of action it is averred that M. Groh’s Sons prior to December 30, 1896, was a copartnership; that the defendant’s testator, John Groh, had charge of its cash, and that between June 1, 1895, and December 30, 1896, .he received $7,175.02 belonging to said copartnership, which he still retains and refuses to account therefor; that the plaintiff purchased said' copartnership and all its claims on the 30th day of December, 1896. For a second cause of action, that between December 30, 1896, and April 17, 1897, the said John Groh, while president and treasurer of plaintiff, received as such president and treasurer $1,577.53, the property of plaintiff, which he has appropriated to his own use; that the plaintiff has duly demanded of the said John Groh prior to the commencement of this action the sum so appropriated, but that he has failed to return the same. For a third cause of action, that the said John Groh on or about the 17th [87]*87day of April, 1897, received from this plaintiff, without consideration, the sum of $6,763.16, and that said sum was procured by the said John Groh from this plaintiff by said Groh’s representations that it was due and owing to him, when in fact there was nothing owing him from the plaintiff, all of which the said Groh well knew at the time he made the representations as aforesaid; that- before the commencement of this action the plaintiff duly demanded from said John Groh the payment of said last-mentioned sum, so received by him without consideration; that the same has not been paid, nor any part thereof. Then follows a demand for judgment for the full amount set forth in the three causes of action, $15,515.71.

The answer, after admitting the. copartnership of M. Groh’s Sons and the incorporation of the plaintiff, denies the receipt and appropriation of the money alleged in the first and second causes of action, and denies that the sum declared upon in the third cause of action was wrongfully obtained, averring that it was justly due to the said John Groh and his mother, Julia A. Groh, as the undivided earnings and profits upon their shares of stock in the concern. For a second and separate defense to the first and second causes of action, the defendant set forth a history of the transaction, which shows that prior to the 1st day of January, 1897, the defendant with one Julia A. Groh was carrying on the business of brewers as a partnership under the firm name and style of “M. Groh’s Sons; ” that upon January 1, 1897, a corporation was formed for the purpose of carrying on said business under the same name, and all the real and personal property of the old firm was transferred to the corporation so formed; that the said John Groh and Julia A. Groh owned all the capital stock in equal shares; that one George Flammer, an attorney and counselor at law, had been the attorney for the old firm, and continued to be the attorney for the corporation and was the personal attprney for the said John and Julia A. Groh, and was familiar with and had knowledge of all their business affairs; that on April 16, 1897, the said Flammer purchased all the capital stock of said Julia A. Groh, being one-half of the whole, and through her purchased for himself one share from the said John Groh; that certain expenses, amounting to $8,332.30 up to the time of this transfer of stock, had been paid out by the said John Groh, and that he had not credited himself therefor upon the books of the corpora[88]*88tion, and that on the 15th day of April, 1897, the said John Groh had said last-mentioned sum credited upon said books as expenses having been paid; that on or about the 15th day of April, 1897, the plaintiff, with the consent and approval of the said Flammer and Julia A. Groh, paid to the said John Groh and Julia A. Groh $3,381.68 each, which was due them as earnings upon their capital stock; that, by an instrument in writing, the said Flammer released the said Julia A. Groh from all the liability set forth in the complaint.

The first two causes of action may be considered together; for all practical purposes they arise out of the same state of facts, and resort is had to the same class of proof in establishment of their existence as constituting a legal demand against the estate of John Groh. The proof upon the part of the plaintiff, bearing thereon, tended to show that the cash book, kept by the firm, showed that there was cash received between June 1, 1895, and December 30, 1896, amounting to $7,175.02, which, so far as shown by the .book, had not been paid over by John Groh to the firm, or deposited with the firm’s assets, and that it had never been received by the corporation. The second cause of action was arrived at by deducting two items which had been entered in the cash book under the direction of John Groh, one being: “By expense, sundries, oje old firm, $8,332.30.” These two items made up the sum of $8,752.55, and deducting therefrom the amount claimed in the first cause of action, leaves a balance of $1,577.53, the amount which the plaintiff claimed John Groh was chargeable with, which said sum has been in nowise accounted for by him to the corporation. The evidence to establish these two causes of action was given by the bookkeeper, Schwarzer. His testimony was to the effect that the balance stated in the first cause of action stood as a charge upon the cash book as money received by John Groh, for which he had not accounted; that on April 17, 1897, shortly before Flammer entered upon the control of the business, John Groh directed Schwarzer to make certain entries in the cash book from a slip, among which were the two items heretofore mentioned. Schwarzer had no personal knowledge of the transaction beyond what appeared upon the book and the directions which Groh gave to him from time to time as to the entries to be made therein. Plaintiff’s case, therefore, [89]*89came to rest in the establishment of these two causes of action upon the cash book, its entries and an arithmetical calculation which produced the specified sum. It is easily seen that this evidence is by no means conclusive in showing that John Groh owed these particular sums and was bound to account therefor to the corporation. It appeared with much clearness that the business methods of the concern, carried on under the partnership which had existed before the formation of the corporation, were quite loose in character and the books quite imperfectly and carelessly kept. For a long period of time it had been the custom of the firm to keep the cash received in one compartment of the safe used in the business and checks and other paper items in another compartment. "When deposits were made in a bank, they were made in equal sums in units of $100. If the paper items to be deposited did not make in amount equal hundreds, enough money was taken from the safe to equalize the matter so that the deposit would make the unit. In the course of business, money was placed in the safe and paid out without going into the cash book at all, such moneys being represented by slips, which took the place of cash paid out. These items were never placed in the cash book and the bookkeeper knew nothing about them, did not have charge of the cash, did not know how much was paid out and only made his entries in the book from time to time as specified and directed by Groh. This course of business had continued for a long period of time.

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Bluebook (online)
80 A.D. 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grohs-sons-v-groh-nyappdiv-1903.