Havemeyer v. Havemeyer

13 Jones & S. 464
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedDecember 1, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Jones & S. 464 (Havemeyer v. Havemeyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Havemeyer v. Havemeyer, 13 Jones & S. 464 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1879).

Opinions

By the Court.—Sedgwick, J.

An outline of the case is that the plaintiff, and others, were the owners of a quantity of the shares of the stock of the Long Island Railroad Company. The defendants owned and controlled another quantity of that stock. The plaintiff and her associates, acting by an agent, and the defendants agreed that neither quantity of stock should be sold, unless it was in a sale that included the other quantity, and the defendants then authorized plaintiff’s agent to sell to Mr. Poppenhusen the stock which defendants owned and;' controlled, for seventy-five per cent, of its nominal value, and certain bonds owned by them for ninety per cent, of their amount, in cash, if Mr. Poppenhusen should put his offer to pay that in writing. The defendants further agreed that during the'negotiations for the sale, they would neither buy stock nor do anything else to interfere with the negotiations.

Plaintiff’s agent then began negotiations for a sale-on these terms. While they were on foot, the defendants had interviews with the executors of Mr. Charlick, to learn if they would be willing to sell to the defendants stock of the same railroad owned by the executors, [478]*478and on what terms. On December 2, the plaintiff’s agent wrote to the defendants, that Mr. Poppenhusen had declined the proposition for the sale of the stock and bonds, but had submitted5 one in return, which the agent did not submit to the defendants, for the reason that they had expressed no desire to entertain anything different from that agreed upon, viz.: cash. On December 11, the defendants bought from the executors of Charlick, their stock, at sixty-five per cent, of the nominal value. On December 14, the plaintiff ’ s agent, in ignorance of ,the purchase of the Charlick stock, obtained from the defendants leave to sell the stock in which plaintiff was interested, by itself, and proceeded to attempt to sell it without including defendants’ stock.

On January 26, 1875, the defendants sold to Mr. Poppenhusen the stock owned and controlled by them for seventy-five per cent, in cash. The plaintiff claimed that the purchase from Charlick’s executors and the sale to Mr. Poppenhusen, were violations of defendants’ obligations to plaintiff.

After all the evidence was in, the defendants’ counsel moved to dismiss, upon several grounds. One of them was that “even if the pretended agreement was made, continuing and valid, the purchase by the defendants of the Charlick stock on December 11 (the negotiation for a joint sale, pending on November 24, having ended on December 2), was not a breach of such agreement.” They also asked the court to charge, that 1 ‘ the evidence conclusively shows, that on or about December 14, 1875, and before the sale to Poppenhusen, which is complained of by the plaintiff, the plaintiff was by the consent of the defendants released from any further obligation, to hold her stock or keep it out of the market.”

A further request to charge was, that the conduct of the parties after" December 14, 1875, as established by [479]*479undisputed evidence on the part of the plaintiff and given by the witness, Parsons, is inconsistent with the theory, that after that date there was any binding contract or obligation in force between the parties. They also asked the court to charge, that “ the purchase by the defendants, at the time and under the circumstances given in evidence, of the stock known as the Charlick stock, was not a breach of any contract established by the evidence to have been made at any time between the plaintiff and the defendants also, that “ upon the whole case, the defendants are entitled to a verdict.”

Beyond controversy, the complaint does not set out any contract of which the purchase of the Char-lick stock was a breach.

The court instructed the jury to find whether the parties, before April, made any arrangement with a provision “ that neither lot of stock should be sold without-including the other,” and whether this agreement “was renewed in the fall of 1875;” “and a further agreement then made, that if a sale could be effected at seventy-live cents on the dollar, the defendants would include the Albert Havemeyer stock, and the stock which they owned and controlled, and that the xiegotiation for such sale should be put in the hands of Harry O. Havemeyer, with a further provision that during the negotiation, the defendants should neither buy stock nor do anything else to interfere with negotiation.”

Of course, the purchase of the Charlick stock did not violate the provision, “ that neither lot of stock should be sold without the other.” Was it a violation of the other provision, that “during the negotiation the defendants should neither bay stock nor do any- • thing else to interfere with the negotiations ?” By the charge (and upon it the jury found for the plaintiff), the negotiations, during which the defendants agreed not to buy stock and not to do anything to interfere [480]*480with negotiations, were “the negotiations for such sale.” The sale referred, to was one to be made for cash, at seventy-five per cent, for the stock, and ninety per cent, for the bonds, if a written proposition to buy on those terms should be made by Mr. Poppenhusen. The evidence shows that such was the sale, although the charge refers to it as a sale for seventy-five per cent, for the stock alone. The evidence, by the construction most favorable to plaintiff, shows that defendants’ promise referred only to negotiations for a sale of the kind that has been described. The witness, on this point, for plaintiff, was her agent, and he testified: “I told John . . I wanted him to. state again that he would sell her stock at seventy-five cents, and his bonds at ninety cents, and I wanted also his brother Henry to say so ; that the negotiations had reached a point where they were to be consummated.” After testifying to defendants’ consent to this, he continued, “ that they must neither buy nor sell, that the position must remain exactly as it was, as in the event of its not being sold, the position was to remain unchanged.”

It should be here observed, that the complaint did not state or base any claim, upon an agreement “that the position was to remain unchanged.” The plaintiff on the trial did not make any claim upon it; nor did the charge of the court leave it to the jury, or in any way refer to it. Its significance here, is to show, that the negotiations referred to were those for the specific sale mentioned in the testimony.

The witness proceeded to say, “I recall that John stated, ‘ Suppose you cannot get the price; suppose that negotiations fall through,’ and I stated then the affair is to remain as it was, until some new arrangement is made.”

The testimony of the witness on another trial, read on this was, “ I stated to John, that my negotiations for obtaining a bid for seventy-five for the stock, and ninety [481]*481for the bonds would probably be successful, and, in connection with that,” John C. Havemeyer said that, pending the negotiations with Messrs. Poppenhusen, they would have no transactions in the stock in any way, shape or manner; neither buy nor sell, nor do anything to depreciate; I stated the same, that I did not wish to have anything transpire that would interrupt the negotiations.”

The next question is, did the evidence incontrovertibly show that the negotiations had ended, before the defendant bought the Charlick stock on December 11. On December 2, the witness wrote to the defendant this letter.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Jones & S. 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/havemeyer-v-havemeyer-nysuperctnyc-1879.