Parker v. John Pullman & Co.

36 A.D. 208, 56 N.Y.S. 734
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 36 A.D. 208 (Parker v. John Pullman & Co.) 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
Parker v. John Pullman & Co., 36 A.D. 208, 56 N.Y.S. 734 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Goodrich, P. J.:

The demurrer brings up two questions; First, the right of the plaintiff to maintain an equitable action for an accounting under the terms of the agreement set forth in his complaint; and, second, the defendant’s right to test the question by demurrer.

The complaint alleges that the plaintiff is a resident of this State and the defendant corporation a foreign corporation; that on August 18, 1892, a written contract, of which a copy is annexed to the complaint, was executed between the parties to this action, whereby the plaintiff and the defendant Parker, former employees of the corporation, should continue in its employ until the same was terminated "oh sixty days’ written notice; that the plaintiff ivas to have general charge of the factories of the corporation, one situated in Brooklyn and the other in Baltimore, Maryland, to engage and discharge all employees, to have charge of deliveries of goods manufactured, and to perform such other services as might be required of him in the business; that the defendant Parker was to have charge of all other matters relating to the office in Brooklyn; that all sales of goods manufactured at .the factories were to be made through the corporation, and on the first day of August in. each year an account of stock should 'be' taken, and" the profits of the business carried on at said factories, if any, should be ascertained and apportioned, two-sixths to the corporation, threq-sixths to the plaintiff and one-sixth to the defendant Parker; that if either of the Parkers should leave the .employ of the Corporation, and an account of stock was not taken at that time and the ¡irofits of the business ascertained, either of them .so .leaving should be entitled at the next taking of stock to his timely proportion of the year’s profits; that no part of the profits should be withdrawn by either. of the Parkers until the business [211]*211should show a profit of $1,000 over all advances, debts and liabilities, including the amount then invested by. the corporation in the business, the value of which was stated to be $14,704.20; that the plaintiff had the privilege of purchasing the business and property upon giving sixty days’ written notice, and paying the corporation the value, as shown by the books; that the defendant Parker was discharged- September 27, 1896; that on June 26, 1897, the corporation, without written notice, closed the factory in Brooklyn, to which the property in the Baltimore factory had been removed in June, 1896, and sold all the stock, goods and merchandise to persons unknown to the plaintiff, and retained the moneys received therefor; that there has never been any ascertainment or apportionment whatsoever, as provided in the written agreement, of the profits of the business, and that the jdaintiff has repeatedly since his discharge demanded a full and complete accounting of the dealings and transactions in said business and a payment to him of the amount due him, which the corporation has refused ; that the corporation has collected and retained the moneys on all sales of merchandise, and has taken possession of the books in which the accounts were kept; “ and that the said accounts are long and complicated, and no settlement thereof has been made between the plaintiff and the defendants,” although the profits on such sales and deliveries were large, and the amount is unknown to the plaintiff.

The contract contains the following provision: “ That said J. Kos Parker and Leonard S. Parker are employees of said John Pullman & Company and not copartners with them. That they have no qontrol or interest in said business except as employees, and it is expressly agreed by and between the parties hereto that the interest in the profits of said business, which is to be set apart or paid to either of said Parkers, is for salary or compensation as such employees of John Pullman & Company.”

The plaintiff demands judgment that an “ account may be taken between the plaintiff and the defendants of. all and every of the dealings and transactions of the said business, and that the said John Pullman & Co. pay unto the plaintiff the amount found to be due to the plaintiff under said accounting.”

The defendant corporation demurred to the complaint, the court [212]*212overruled the demurrer, and from the interlocutory judgment" the corporation appeals^

The first question involves the equitable jurisdiction of the Supreme Court.

The Constitution reserves to the Supreme Court general jurisdiction in law and .equity. (Art. VI, § 1.) The same general provision was in the Constitution of 1846, previously to the passage of the Code of Civil Procedure. It is well, therefore, to consider the English authorities which have decided that mere complication of accounts, without any relation of trust, is enough to give equity jurisdiction. (Watford & Rickmansworth Ry. Co. v. London & North Western Ry. Co., L. R. [8 Eq.] 231; Kimberley v. Dick, 13 id. 1.)

■ In the Watford case, Lord Romilly, Master of. the Rolls, said (p. 237): “lam quite satisfied that no such account would be taken at law. * * * It is quite settled, if the account is difficult and complicated, that it may be taken in equity, even though there is no relation of trustee and cestui que trust between the parties. I think this is a case of that description.”

In the Kimberley case, also, he said (p. 21) : At law, I am of opinion that the account would be too complicated to be ‘.taken in court;, that it would involve too many minute claims and counterclaims to be possible for it to be satisfactorily disposed of without a reference to arbitration, which, according to my experience, is usually one of the most dilatory and expensive of all tribunals. I am of opinion that the court has jurisdiction to deal with this case, and that it is bound to do so.” v

In a Mew Jersey case (Seymour v. Long Dock Co., 5 C. E. Green, 396, 407) the court said“ Courts of equity, in cases of complex accounts, take cognizance sometimes from the very necessity of the case, and from the incompetency of a court of law, at nisiprius, to examine it with the necessary accuracy. In this case, on this ground alone, I think jurisdiction of this cause must be maintained.”

The defendant’s counsel cites Uhlman v. New York Life Ins. Co. (109 N. Y. 421) as authority for the proposition that an allegation that the accounts are long and complicated is insufficient to give equitable jurisdiction. I do not so understand the decision. The counsel states it too broadly. The court said (pp. 433,434): “ How[213]*213ever it' may be, it lias, at least, been stated that whether or not the court would take jurisdiction upon the sole ground of the account being complicated was a matter largely withi/n the discretion of the court?

Before "the adoption of the Code of Procedure in 1848, the rule of the common law prevailed in our own courts.

Post v. Kimberly (9 Johns. 450), decided in 1812, was an action for an accounting in which there was a question whether there was or was not a partnership adventure between the parties. I refer to it only to quote a statement from the opinion of Thompson, J. (p. 493) : “ It was suggested, though not much pressed on the argument, that the respondents’ remedy, if any they had, was complete at law, and, therefore, not proper for a Court of Chancery.

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Bluebook (online)
36 A.D. 208, 56 N.Y.S. 734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-john-pullman-co-nyappdiv-1899.