Gugel v. . Hiscox

110 N.E. 499, 216 N.Y. 145, 1915 N.Y. LEXIS 783
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 16, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 110 N.E. 499 (Gugel v. . Hiscox) 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
Gugel v. . Hiscox, 110 N.E. 499, 216 N.Y. 145, 1915 N.Y. LEXIS 783 (N.Y. 1915).

Opinion

Pound, J.

David Hiscox died January 25, 1906, survived by his widow, Mary M. Hiscox, the plaintiffs, who are two of his daughters, the defendants, who are his two oldest sons, and another son, Frederick Hiscox, and another daughter, Harriet M. Hughes. The defendants had, prior to the death of the father, been employed by him in the *148 business of manufacturing hair balsam and other proprietary remedies under the name of the Hiscox Chemical Works, and for some years prior to his death had charge of the business for him. David Hiscox left a will in which he provided for carrying on the business by the defendants as trustees until the payment of his debts or death of the survivor of the defendants, then for the division thereof, after making provision for an incompetent son, by giving one-third to his wife and the remaining two-thirds in equal shares to plaintiffs, defendants and the third daughter. Meantime the trustees were to pay annually to the wife $4,000, for the use of the incompetent son $1,000, to each daughter $1,000, to themselves* for managing the business $3,000 based on an estimated net profit of $32,000 annually, to be increased if the business increased its profits. He also directed that the husband of the third daughter be employed in the business at a salary of $2,000. He also directed that the surplus profits be accumulated until they should amount to twice the sum necessary to pay certain Eawolle notes and that these notes should then be paid. This will was admitted to probate by the Surrogate’s Court of the county of Suffolk on March 19, 1906. On January 31, 1906, the plaintiffs and the widow of David Hiscox executed an agreement with defendants whereby they turned, over to defendants all' their interest in the Hiscox Chemical Works under the will in consideration of the same annual payments for life as the will provided for without any share in the surplus profits of the business, so that the defendants would ultimately become the sole owners of the business, subject only to the rights under the will of the third daughter, who did not join in the agreement. The annual payments were to cease if the business became unprofitable or passed out of the hands of defendants. The widow also obtained a release of the interest of the defendants in the real estate owned by testator other than that upon which the factory was situated. Defendants *149 assumed, and agreed to pay all the indebtedness of the business of Hiscox & Co. The remaining personal estate consisted chiefly of mining stock of no value. In performance of their agreement plaintiffs on April 30, 1906, executed to defendants a deed of the property on which the Hiscox Chemical Works were situated. In January, 1909, the business meanwhile having been very profitable, plaintiffs brought this action to set aside the agreement and deed as fraudulent and void, alleging that they were induced by the false representations of their brothers whom they trusted, to surrender their interest in a lucrative business for an inadequate consideration.

On the first trial judgment was rendered for the defendants dismissing the complaint on the merits. The Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the second department reversed this judgment and ordered a new trial. (Gugel v. Hiscox, 138 App. Div. 61.) The agreement was characterized as unconscionable, and as one obtained by defendants by a betrayal of -trust and confidence. The court said that it was incumbent upon defendants to show affirmatively that no fraud was practiced and that “the presumption that the agreement and deed were void was not overcome by the evidence.” The court proceeds upon the theory that because the business was valuable in 1911 the value of plaintiffs’ interests was in 1906 far in excess of what they received for it.

After the decision of the Appellate Division and before the second trial of this case, in an action brought by the executors of the last will and testament of Frederick Eawolle, deceased, against plaintiffs and defendants and all others representing the estate of David Hiscox, it was found among many other things, that Frederick Eawolle and David Hiscox had been partners under the name of Hiscox & Co.; that the partnership was dissolved in May, 1900, Eawolle retiring; that Hiscox assumed the indebtedness of the firm and agreed to pay Eawolle $180,000 for his interest in the business in 240 monthly installments of *150 $750 each, beginning May 15, 1910; that by the dissolution agreement defendants and their mother agreed to carry on the business if it continued to be profitable and pay the Eawolle notes, and that in default of payment Eawolle might take charge of the business and carry it on until the notes were paid out of the profits; that the business was thereafter carried on 'under the name of Hiscox Chemical Works; that David Hiscox at the time of his death was insolvent and that the business of the Hiscox Chemical Works was also insolvent; that the liabilities of the estate and the business amounted to upwards of $163,000, and that the Eawolle agreement was a lien and charge against the Hiscox estate in conflict with the terms of the will which made a different' provision for the payment of the notes and that the deed in this suit was fraudulent and void as against the Eawolle estate. A receiver was appointed to take charge of the Hiscox Chemical Works and pay the Eawolle indebtedness out of the profits.

After the decision of the Eawolle case this case came on for a second trial. On the second trial the judgment roll in the Eawolle case was offered and received in evidence on behalf of the defendants. Although this judgment is not res adjudicata as between the defendants that the agreement in this suit is fraudulent and void, the findings are evidence of the relevant facts found. A judgment does not operate as an estoppel in a subsequent action between the parties except as to such facts ás are litigated and decided therein. (House v. Lockwood, 137 N. Y. 259, 268), and the question of fraud was not litigated between the codefendants in the Eawolle action. But the Eawolle judgment is final as to the facts litigated and decided therein which have such a relation to this issue that their determination is necessary to a determination of this issue. Such facts include the findings as to the Eawolle agreement, the insolvency of the David Hiscox estate and the business at the time of his death, and the *151 indebtedness of the estate and the business, all ■ of which have .a direct bearing on the good faith of defendants in dealing with the plaintiffs herein. Those facts were properly before the trial justice for his consideration and were in the highest degree pertinent to the issue of fair dealing between the parties hereto.

Indeed at the close of the evidence the trial justice expressed himself somewhat favorably to defendants on the merits, but said: “ Whatever my own views about it are, the findings of the Appellate Division are binding on me. ” Defendants’ counsel then urged that on a new trial and different evidence he did not understand that the Appellate Division had dictated what the action of the trial justice should be. The case was then taken under consideration, and on December 15, 1911, the trial justice handed down a memorandum of opinion as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
110 N.E. 499, 216 N.Y. 145, 1915 N.Y. LEXIS 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gugel-v-hiscox-ny-1915.