Marie v. . Garrison

83 N.Y. 14, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 447
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 30, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by154 cases

This text of 83 N.Y. 14 (Marie v. . Garrison) 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
Marie v. . Garrison, 83 N.Y. 14, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 447 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

*23 Andrews, J.

Special demurrers, as known to the former practice, have no place in our present system of pleading. The Code authorizes a demurrer for specific causes and no pleading is demurrable unless it is subject to one or more of the objections specified in the section defining the grounds of demurrer. A demurrer to a complaint for insufficiency can only be sustained when it appears that, admitting all the facts alleged, it presents no cause of action whatever. It is not sufficient that the facts are imperfectly or informally averred, or that the pleading lacks definiteness and precision, or that the material facts are only argumentatively averred. The complaint on demurrer • is deemed to allege what can be implied from the allegations therein, by reasonable and fair intendment, and facts impliedly averred are traversable in the same manner as though directly averred. (1 Chitty’s Pl. 713; Haight v. Holley, 3 Wend. 258 ; Prindle v. Caruthers, 15 N. Y. 425.) The remedy for indefiniteness is not by demurrer, but by motion. (Code, § 546; Seeley v. Engell, 13 N. Y. 542.) “Indefiniteness,” says Chitty, “ is in general only matter of form.” (1 Chitty’s Pl. 717.) The rule by which, under the Code, the sufficiency of a complaint is to be determined is stated by Denio, J., in Zabriskie v. Smith (13 N. Y. 330.) He says: “It is sufficient that the requisite allegations can be fairly gathered from all the averments in the complaint, though the statement of them may be argumentative, and the complaint deficient in technical language.”

In the light of these rules we proceed to examine the question whether the complaint in this ease sets forth a cause of action. It is undoubtedly essential, to sustain the complaint, that it should appear therein that a valid contract was entered into by Garrison, from the breach of which a right of action has accrued to the plaintiffs and Denny. It is insisted, on the part of Garrison, that the promise upon which the action is based is, so far as the complaint shows, amere nudum pactum, no valid consideration therefor being averred. The oral agreement of June, 1876, upon which the action is brought, is alleged to have been made in consideration of the surrender by the *24 plaintiffs and Denny to the defendant, Garrison, of the letter of March 29, 1876, and of their consenting to a modification of the terms of the agreement contained therein, and no other consideration is averred or can be gathered from the terms of the substituted agreement. If the contract surrendered was itself a nude pact, its surrender formed no valid or legal consideration for the substituted,promise. If, on the other hand, it was binding and valid, it néeds no citation of authorities to show that its surrender was in law a good consideration for the new agreement.

Does, then, the complaint show, either directly or by fair inference, a valid consideration for the conditional promise of the defendant, Garrison, contained in the letter ? Mo consideration appears in the letter itself. ' It shows in general terms the situation of the Pacific Railroad Company and the relation of the parties to it; that Garrison was the owner of a majority in amount of the third mortgage bonds of the road, and that the parties to whom the letter was addressed were stockholders therein, and that a foreclosure action to foreclose the third mortgage was pending at the suit of one Keteham. The letter contains, in substance, a promise by Garrison that if he should purchase the road on the foreclosure, he would, upon the plaintiffs organizing a successor company within six months after the purchase and making the payments and complying with the other conditions specified, convey the road to them. He does not bind himself to purchase; but in the event that he does purchase his undertaking to convey the road on the terms stated is absolute. In substance, Garrison agreed in case he purchased the road to give the plaintiffs the option to take it upon the terms proposed at any time within six months after such purchase.

The complaint in its introductory averments sets forth that the plaintiffs and Denny “ owned and held either in their own right, or in trust for others with full power of disposition,” thirty-six thousand shares of the capital stock of the Pacific railroad of Missouri, of the aggregate par value of $3,600,000; that the defendant held $2,200,000 *25 of the $4,000,000 issue of third mortgage bonds, which it is alleged were of doubtful validity, and were claimed by the stockholders to have been fraudulently and collusively issued by the directors of the company, and without the consent of the stockholders, as required by the laws of Missouri; that the defendant was solicitous to have the bonds adjudicated to be valid, and that a collusive foreclosure suit, in the interest of Garrison and others, was commenced by Ketcham in November, 1875, to foreclose the third mortgage, and was pending, in which suit the defendant had in April, 1876, been admitted as co-complainant, and had become the principal party in prosecuting the same; that certain stockholders had intervened in the suit, and filed an answer and cross-bill, alleging collusion and fraud on the part of the directors of the road in the issue of the bonds; that some of the plaintiffs had filed a petition in the foreclosure suit to be made parties, and to be allowed to defend the same in their own behalf, and in behalf of other stockholders; that the value of the equity of redemption in the road was $8,-000,000. Following these introductory averments of the complaint, are paragraphs five and six, upon which the plaintiffs rely as containing an averment of a consideration for the defendant’s promise contained in the letter, as follows:

“ 5th. That on or about the 29th day of March, 1876, with the view of compromising said conflicting claims, and establishing the validity of said debt of $4,000,000 in the hands of said Garrison (the defendant Garrison) and others of his associate bondholders, and to prevent the plaintiffs from defending said foreclosure suit, and in consideration of the relinquishment by the plaintiffs of all further opposition to said foreclosure suit, the said Garrison, the defendant, entered into an agreement with plaintiffs, evidenced in part by a letter written by him to some of the plaintiffs and the defendant Denny, a copy of which is hereto attached, marked ' A,’ and the same is made a part of this complaint.
“ 6th. The plaintiffs aver that they and the defendant, Denny, performed and fulfilled all the preliminary obligations in the said agreement contained and agreed to be performed on their *26 part and behalf, and in consequence thereof said defendant, Garrison, was enabled to procure a judgment and decree of foreclosure on or about June 6,1876, and a sale of said premises on or about the 6th- day of September, 1876, which sale was confirmed by the court in the month of October, 1876, viz.: October 6, which confirmation was modified October 23,1876.”

It is not averred that the plaintiffs and Denny agreed to relinquish their opposition to the foreclosure in consideration of the agreement of Garrison, contained in the letter.

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Bluebook (online)
83 N.Y. 14, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marie-v-garrison-ny-1880.