Midwood Park Co. v. Baker

128 N.Y.S. 954
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 128 N.Y.S. 954 (Midwood Park Co. v. Baker) 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.

Bluebook
Midwood Park Co. v. Baker, 128 N.Y.S. 954 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

KELLY, J.

In this case I reach the following conclusions: The plaintiffs mortgage for $356,941.98 is valid and binding, and the plaintiff is entitled to a decree of foreclosure and sale. The mortgage [955]*955for $1,940, covering McLaughlin’s commissions, is also valid and a lien upon the premises. The mortgage given to the Title Guarantee & Trust Company, as trustee, to secure the 202 bonds of $1,000 each, I am compelled to hold void and invalid as against the owner of the property, as representing secret illegal profits sought to be obtained by Messrs. McLaughlin and Herd from the corporation and its stockholders, to whom they occupy a fiduciary relation.

The defendant Kouwenhoven Company, the owner of the land, attacks the plaintiff’s mortgage as well as the so-called second mortgage for $202,000 as fraudulent, alleging that it was part of a scheme ■of McLaughlin and Herd to defraud the company and its stockholders, but there is an entire failure of proof to substantiate the owner’s claims. While it is true that McLaughlin and Herd defrauded the company and its stockholders, their dishonest maneuvers took effect after the title passed from the plaintiff, and there is no evidence that the plaintiff took part in them. It is true that plaintiff was endeavoring to sell this land for some time prior to the sale to the Kouwenhoven Company. And the plaintiff may have been willing to sell at a lower figure than $2,750 per acre at some time, but when we come down to the date of the option given -to McLaughlin and Herd—October 14, 1905, because it was nothing but an option—the price then fixed was $2,750 an acre, and that was the price subsequently paid to the plaintiff, and of which the amount represented by the first mortgage now in foreclosure was part. There is nothing exorbitant about the price, there is nothing connecting the president of the plaintiff with the subsequent manipulations of the property, and nothing to show that the plaintiff took any part of the illegal profits sought by Herd and McLaughlin from the defendant company and its stockholders. The plaintiff company agreed to pay McLaughlin commissions for selling the property, and the commission is represented by the '$1,940 mortgage, deducted from the consideration paid, put into the form of a mortgage and assigned to some nominee of McLaughlin’s. This was, to be sure, an unusual and peculiar way to pay the commission. But, while McLaughlin and Herd were united in their scheme to despoil the Cincinnati parties, it is equally apparent that Mr. McLaughlin was endeavoring to get the better of his colleague, Mr. Herd. I do not think this is any concern of the defendant Kouwenhoven Company. The price agreed to be paid for the property, and which was paid, was $2,750 an acre. Up to that amount the debt is a valid debt.

[1] But, as to the so-called trust mortgage given to secure the $202,000 in bonds, I think that was fraudulent, because it represents an illegal, concealed profit, which McLaughlin and Herd, the promoters of the Kouwenhoven Company, the men who organized it, procured subscriptions to its stock, and managed the matter of the transfer of plaintiff’s property to it, sought to obtain from persons to whom they were bound to exercise good faith, as to whom McLaughlin and Herd occupied a fiduciary relation. This trust mortgage is for $202,-102.80, and this amount represents exactly the illegal profit sought to be taken by McLaughlin and Herd. There were two tracts of land in the transaction, the land conveyed to the Kouwenhoven Company [956]*956by the plaintiff, and another tract conveyed by the Brooklyn Realty & Trading Company, known as the “Wyckoff tract.” Both parcels were turned over to the syndicate by McLaughlin and Herd for $822,045, but they paid for the land under the option; for the plaintiff’s land $485,207.25; for the Wyckoff tract $134,734.95—$519,942.20. The difference, $202,102.80, is the amount of the so-called trust mortgage to the cent. So that there is no difficulty in ascertaining what this claim now advanced means.

The vendor here was the Midwood Park Company, the plaintiff. The purchaser was the ICottwenhoven Company, the defendant. Courts of equity will not be deceived by the artifices, devices, and empty forms which may be resorted to by wrongdoers to cover up their illegalities. It is the duty of a court of equity to brush aside.all these shams and get at the real facts. The fact that the deed was made by the plaintiff to McLaughlin’s sister and the property' turned "over by her to the corporation after she had placed upon it the genuine purchase-money mortgage held by the plaintiff, and the bogus purchase-money mortgage Ho secure the $202,000 illegitimate profit, in no way interferes with the power of a court of equity to right a wrong. The minutes of the incorporators and directors of the Kouwenhoven Company at the time of its organization, the exact phraseology of the resolutions approving the manipulations of Messrs. McLaughlin- and Herd, by which it was sought to put $202,000 into their pockets without the knowledge of their associates, and without the expenditure of a dollar on their part, are of no avail. Equity cuts through all this legerdemain, and lays bare the facts. The men who were adopting these resolutions, who were voting as incorporators and directors, who were in control of the corporation at its birth, and who sought to burden its existence with this unlawful debt were creatures of McLaughlin and Herd—office boys, clerks, stenographers, Herd’s chauffeur, and his brother automobile dealer. Their solemn declarations amount to nothing; and, when the time came to let in the men from the West to view the legal entity which had been created for them, with their imagination stimulated by the recent profits realized by the two masters of finance on the Coney Island avenue property, even then McLaughlin and Herd" were practically in control of the board of directors. The transaction does not reflect credit on the acumen of these gentlemen from Cincinnati. They were, as argued with much zeal by the learned counsel representing these' bonds, of full age, men of affairs, members of the legal profession—two of them were judges—and still it is the regrettable fact that they allowed the glamour of McLaughlin and Herd’s methods of finance to blind them. The wool was pulled over their eyes, and they were bled to the extent of $202,000 as effectually as if they belonged in the class of the inexperienced subscribers to the enterprise, of whom there are many, who had no voice in the management, whose only part in the transaction was their subscription to and payment for the capital stock. The evidence shows a very crude and old fashioned method resorted to by McLaughlin and Herd to whet the appetite of the Western men. Immediately before the main deal, they invested money through these gentlemen in land in the Parlcville section, realizing [957]*957quick and substantial profits in the purchase and sale of the property—one transaction followed another with astonishing expedition —but again, in a court of justice, we get down to the facts, and find that McLaughlin was buying his own land and selling it to himself, showing enticing results, but there was always a string on the profits, and they finally went into the bag in the Kouwenhoven deal. I do not think that these defendants should be allowed to keep them.

That McLaughlin and Herd occupied a fiduciary relation to the stockholders in the Kouwenhoven Company cannot, it seems to me, be doubted on the evidence in this case.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hyde Park Terrace Co. v. Jackson Bros. Realty Co.
161 A.D. 699 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1914)
Home Trust Co. v. Bauchens
151 A.D. 416 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1912)
Midwood Park Co. v. Baker
129 N.Y.S. 1135 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 N.Y.S. 954, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/midwood-park-co-v-baker-nysupct-1910.