Hussey v. Flanagan

206 A.D. 187, 200 N.Y.S. 549, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7173

This text of 206 A.D. 187 (Hussey v. Flanagan) 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
Hussey v. Flanagan, 206 A.D. 187, 200 N.Y.S. 549, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7173 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Kapper, J.:

The defendant was held liable by the learned trial justice for converting stocks and bonds of the respective par values of $100,000 and $15,000. On March 20, 1906, an agreement was signed by the parties and one Charles C. Dodge, which recited that they were “ severally interested in the construction, completion and financing of what is known as the Cape Cod Ship Canal and have had various agreements amongst themselves as to the respective shares of the stocks, bonds and profits which they should severally receive from any sale of said project; ” and that “ negotiations are now pending and almost completed between the said DeWitt C. Flanagan, and responsible parties, who are expected to finance the construction of said canal, and it is deemed best that the rights of the several parties to this agreement be fixed anew and all former agreements and contracts between them be mutually annulled and abrogated; therefore, it was agreed that in the event that the negotiations now pending between DeWitt C. Flanagan and the parties hereinbefore indicated, for the financing and construction of the Cape Cod Ship Canal shall become consummated, that, in lieu of the compensation and share which the said Hussey was entitled to receive under said prior contracts, he shall receive [189]*189from the said DeWitt C. Flanagan, pro rata as and when the securities shall be paid to the latter by the purchasers or builders of said Canal or otherwise; but in no event unless and until the securities are so received by said Flanagan, One hundred thousand dollars of the full paid capital stock of the Boston, Cape Cod and New York Canal Company, and Fifteen thousand dollars par value of a total issue of not exceeding $6,000,000 of the first mortgage bonds of said Canal Company, from and out of the securities so received and not otherwise.”

The agreement then provided that if the canal company’s stock should not be paid to Flanagan by the “ purchaser,” and in lieu thereof stock of “ a holding company ” should be issued and paid to Flanagan, Flanagan’s obligation to plaintiff was then to be remitted to the pro rata portion of such stock as the same should be received by him, based upon the relation which the $100,000 of stock would bear to the total of $6,000,000 of stock; and that “ Upon the full, final and complete payment to said Levi Hussey of all the stock and the $15,000 of bonds which he is entitled to receive as above provided, they shall be accepted by him and be in full payment and discharge of any and all claims, contracts and agreements which he may have or may have had with either Charles C. Dodge or DeWitt C. Flanagan, jointly or severally, in any manner concerning the Cape Cod Ship Canal.”

The agreement next provides: “And the said DeWitt C. Flanagan agrees to make delivery of said stock and bonds to said Levi Hussey, his legal representatives or assigns at the times hereinafter specified, out of the securities received by him and not otherwise; ” and that “ In the event that the said purchasers should fail to complete said Canal, or if they should fail to pay to said Flanagan the entire amount of stock and bonds which he will be entitled to receive from them on the completion of said Canal, under the contract between them, then and in that case this agreement may be ended, annulled and entirely abrogated by said Hussey by notice in writing to be given to said Flanagan and Dodge, on said Hussey returning or offering to return to said Flanagan of all bonds and stocks paid to said Hussey hereunder; — and each party hereto shall thereupon be restored to the rights possessed by him before this agreement was executed.”

The agreement, coupled with the pleadings and the undisputed evidence, make out an unqualified agreement on the part of the defendant to pay to plaintiff the stock and bonds to the extent referred to, at such time as the defendant should obtain possession of the same.

That the defendant actually did receive $250,000 par value [190]*190of the bonds of the canal company and $1,400,000 par value of the stock of said canal company, is admitted by the defendant's answer. Notwithstanding this admission, the defendant failed to disclose upon the trial when he received this stock and these bonds, and, moreover, did not deny plaintiff’s testimony that it was only through information given by some outsider at the end of 1913 that plaintiff learned that defendant was in possession of this stock and these bonds to the full amount which defendant was to' obtain from the canal company and out of which the plaintiff was to be paid as per said agreement.

The defendant's contention is that the stock and bonds received by him were not the result of negotiations “ now pending between ” him and the persons referred to in the said agreement as the “ responsible parties, who are expected to finance the construction of said canal,” but came to him as the result of some agreements which he thereafter entered into with August Belmont & Company and which were wholly new and unrelated to the agreement above set forth. In other words, the defendant says: “ Plaintiff’s right to the securities in question was expressly conditioned upon the consummation of negotiations pending on March 20, 1906. The uncontradicted evidence established that such negotiations were never consummated.”

There is no question but that August Belmont & Company were the “ responsible parties ” who were “ expected to finance the construction of said canal,” referred to in said agreement. These subsequent agreements, two in number, one of January 14, 1907, and the other of May 26, 1909, contain modifications relating to the financial details of an agreement of February 21, 1906, made between the defendant and August Belmont & Company. To none of them was plaintiff a party, nor is knowledge of particular or detailed arrangements entered into between defendant and Belmont & Company, other than the fact that Belmont & Company were financing the project, imputed or brought to the knowledge of the plaintiff. Moreover, plaintiff testified, without contradiction from the defendant, that, notwithstanding the first of these new agreements under which defendant claims exoneration of liability, dated January 14, 1907, defendant spoke to plaintiff in June, 1907, telling him that the stock had not yet been issued, that plaintiff need not worry, and that he would let plaintiff - know as soon as the stock was issued; that he saw the defendant between 1907 and 1909; spoke to him about his contract, and during none of. those meetings did the defendant intimate anything about new negotiations or the non-consummation of those pending in 1906; and about November 18, 1909, deiecdant informed plaintiff [191]*191that stock would not be issued before the canal was completed. Plaintiff was. being informed from time to time by Mr. Dodge as to what Belmont & Company were doing in the matter. In December, 1913, plaintiff taxed the defendant with having received the stock. Defendant then sought to learn who had given plaintiff the information. The result of that conversation was that plaintiff made a demand for a settlement, and defendant told him to send him what papers he had, and that he (defendant) would see what could be done.” Plaintiff expressly stated that at no interview with the defendant did the latter ever inform him “ that the negotiations with Belmont had fallen through and failed.”

At the.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 A.D. 187, 200 N.Y.S. 549, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hussey-v-flanagan-nyappdiv-1923.