McKeough v. Hinsdale
This text of 51 Misc. 239 (McKeough v. Hinsdale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The defendants have interposed demurrers by separate counsel to the complaint herein. The [240]*240action is brought to recover money. It is alleged that, on or about the 15th of March, 1905, the defendant Hinsdale entered into an agreement with the plaintiff whereby, at the special instance and request of said Hinsdale, the plaintiff should introduce him to and make him acquainted with the executors of the estate of John Dunfee, deceased, and assist him in effecting a sale of a monument to said executors and that Hinsdale would cause five per cent of the selling price of said monument to be paid direct from said executors to the plaintiff for his services and assistance in effecting such sale to be paid by said executors to the plaintiff as part of and out of the first installment of money paid upon said monument, and that thereafter Hinsdale came to plaintiff’s office, at Syracuse, and requested him to carry out the said agreement of March fifteenth and introduce him to such executors. That thereupon the plaintiff, in pursuance of said agreement, and relying upon the promise of Hinsdale, conducted him to the office of the estate of said Dunfee and introduced him to the executrix of said estate, and that thereupon he, through the efforts of plaintiff, entered into a written contract with the executors to furnish and erect a monument for the agreed price of $8,700, and that, thereupon, the plaintiff became the owner of, and entitled to, five per cent of said $8,700 from the hands of said executors as the same should be paid according to the terms of said contract and to be paid by said executors to the plaintiff as part, of and out of the first money paid upon said monument.
The complaint further alleges that thereafter Hinsdale assigned his contract, so made with said executors, to the defendant Leland & Hall Company, a corporation duly incorporated within the State • of Hew York, which thereupon entered upon the erection of the monument aforesaid, and that such company has, in a large degree, completed the erection of said monument and has received installments of the purchase price, amounting to $1,500, the ownership of $435 of which, under the agreement of said Hinsdale, was, when said contract was made, and when it was assigned and when said installments were paid in, and still is, in [241]*241the plaintiff; that by reason of the facts above stated the defendants became and still are indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $435.
I think the above statement of facts contains all the material allegations of the complaint, substantially in the language thereof. I do not think that such allegations contain facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. I am aware of the rule that, however inartificial a pleading may be, it is the. duty of the court, if possible, to sustain it upon demurrer ; but this pleading lacks the essential averments of a cánse of action against the defendants. In the first place, as to the defendant corporation, there is absolutely no allegation of fact whatever which creates a liability to respond to the plaintiff in money or damages. The defendant corporation simply appears in the case as an assignee of the Hinsdale contract with the Dunfee estate; no allegations of notice or fraud or bad faith are contained therein, and clearly the pleading is devoid of allegations of fact which bring the Leland & Hall Company within a position of liability.
As to the defendant Hinsdale, it is not alleged that he has received any money belonging to the plaintiff; neither does it appear that there has been a breach of contract on his part, and assuming, as we must, all the facts alleged to be true, in my opinion there is not sufficient to render him liable to the plaintiff for any amount whatever.
The demurrers are therefore sustained, with costs, with leave to plaintiff to amend his complaint within- twenty days 'on payment of such costs.
Demurrers sustained, with costs, with leave to plaintiff to amend complaint within twenty days on payment of costs.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
51 Misc. 239, 100 N.Y.S. 812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckeough-v-hinsdale-nysupct-1906.