Henderson v. Bartlett

32 A.D. 435, 53 N.Y.S. 149, 1898 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1778
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 32 A.D. 435 (Henderson v. Bartlett) 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
Henderson v. Bartlett, 32 A.D. 435, 53 N.Y.S. 149, 1898 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1778 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Hatch, J.:

This action was brought to recover damages for a breach of con- ' tract. The facts out of which the claim arises are briefly these : The testator, Edward B. Bartlett, was a member of the firms of E. B. Bartlett & Co. and Peter Mallett & Co., and was a stockholder in the Union Warehouse Company, of which last company Alexander D. Henderson, a son of the plaintiff, was secretary. Prior to the 1st day of May, 1893 the plaintiff had loaned to the firm of E; B. Bartlett & Co. $25,000, through the agency of her son, for which she held the notes of the firm and certain stocks and bonds as collateral security for their payment. These notes were payable to the order of. the son and were by him indorsed to the plaintiff,- and he also delivered to her the collaterals. On May 1, 1892, E. B. Bartlett entered into a written agreement under seal with Alexander D. Henderson to sell to the latter 250 shares of the Union Warehouse Company stock at its par value of $100 each share. By the terms of this agreement Henderson was to take the stock and pay therefor the sum of $25,000. Bartlett agreed that at any time prior to May 1,. 1894, on thirty days’ notice in writing from Henderson, he would take back the stock at its par value, in which event he would pay interest upon' the purchase price at the rate of six per cent per annum, and was to receive under such circumstances all dividends paid or accrued thereon.- Ho money passed as the result of this agreement. While the contract was made with Henderson and he was a party to it, yet the real party in interest was the plaintiff, her claim being that this contract and the delivery of the stock thereunder were to take the place of the notes, of E. B. Bartlett & Co. and of the collateral security' held by her. We think the evidence upon this point warranted the jury in finding that such was the transaction, and that this contract, together with the stock, was transferred and assigned by the son to the plaintiff, and that she held the same subject to the option clause contained therein.

The issue raised by the pleadings, as finally amended, and litigated upon the trial, was whether this agreement and the transaction were independent of the loan to E. B. Bartlett & Co., or whether they were a mere substitution of security for such loan which in fact was [437]*437continued, and, if so, was the notice given under the option clause of the contract one to treat the transaction as a loan instead of a sale of the stock ? ' The plaintiff, therefore, attempted to show that in fact the notes of E. B. Bartlett.& Co., and the securities held for their payment, were surrendered and the debt represented thereby canceled. And plaintiff sought to establish that she relied upon the contract with E. B. Bartlett, that notice to Bartlett to take the stock had been given, and that failure upon his part to pay rendered him liable in damages. Bartlett died on May 24, 1894. In order to establish that notice of election to treat the agreement with E. B. Bartlett as a loan instead of a sale of the stock was given, evidence was introduced tending to establish that payment of interest was made from time to time at the rate of six per cent upon $25,000. After the time when under the option clause in the agreement notice should have been given to treat the transaction as a loan instead of a sale, the inference which plaintiff insists should be drawn from the fact of the continued payment of interest is that such payment was inconsistent with the sale of the stock, and such inference, we think, it was fair to draw. If the agreement had become absolute as a sale of stock, then no interest was due, for the reason that the $25,000 would then represent,.not a loan, but the purchase price of the stock, in consequence of which no interest would become due, and plaintiff was only entitled to the stock and such dividends as had accrued thereon. The fact that interest had always been paid at the same period and in the same amounts is not inconsistent with the deduction which might reasonably be made .after the time when the option clause was to take effect, by the continued payment of interest. All payment of interest prior to that time was concededly upon the assumption that the money advanced represented a loan. Such, however, could not be the fact after the time when plaintiff was to make her election whether she would treat the transaction as a sale or as a loan of money. If treated as a sale no interest would become due or be likely to be paid. If treated as a loan, then it was payable at the given rate upon that sum. By thé terms of the agreement, notice of election to treat the transaction as a loan and not as a sale was to be given thirty days prior to May 1,. 1894, while interest was paid on the 1st day of April, 1894, and on the first day of May following, and also on the following first day of [438]*438June, the latter payment being after Bartlett’s death. The last two payments, one of which was during the lifetime of Bartlett, could reasonably be treated by the plaintiff as a recognition of the fact that the option right had been exercised, and that election had been made to treat the transaction as a loan and not as a sale, for such payment was entirely inconsistent with a sale, as- nothing would have been due thereunder. Bartlett must be presumed to have known of this payment, as the check was drawn by the firm and entered in the books, and he is presumed to know the contents of the firm’s books (Fairchild v. Fairchild, 64 N. Y. 471; Bates Part. § 975), and is, therefore, to be regarded — at least so the jury was authorized to find—-as having knowledge that the transaction' was to be treated as a loan and not as a sale. It was upon this theory alone that the court submitted the case to the jury, to find whether notice of election to treat the transaction as a loan had been given, and upon such submission the jury found in favor- of the plaintiff. We are of opinion that the defendant cannot complain of this submission. It was upon a single fact alone, while as we view the evidence the court would have been warranted in submitting it upon a somewhat broader view. The defendant, upon cross-examination of the plaintiff, introduced in evidence the claim of the plaintiff against the firm of E. B. Bartlett & Co. for this same debt, filed with the assignee of E. B. Bartlett & Co. While the purpose of the introduction of this claim by the defendant was undoubtedly to show that the plaintiff always treated her demand as a loan to E. B. Bartlett & Co., and that, therefore, her present attitude was entirely inconsistent with such claim, yet no such limitation was placed upon the evidence, nor was it restricted to any particular portion or for any particular purpose. It was, therefore, in evidence for all the purposes to which it might be legitimately applied. It is therein stated, after setting out the transaction, that plaintiff had elected to surrender the stock and treat the transaction as a loan, and had given notice of such fact. Thus was introduced a declaration of the plaintiff that she had given notice under the option clause in the contract, and thereby supplemented the inference which the court charged the jury might be drawn from the payment of the interest, alone. In addition to this, plaintiff testified to the same fact upon her oral examination. It is quite true [439]*439that the filing of a claim with the assignee of E. B. Bartlett & Co. was inconsistent with the claim that the liability was alone that of E. B. Bartlett for damages arising out of the breach of his contract..

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Bluebook (online)
32 A.D. 435, 53 N.Y.S. 149, 1898 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-bartlett-nyappdiv-1898.