Peyser v. Myers

9 N.Y.S. 229, 63 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 175, 30 N.Y. St. Rep. 837, 56 Hun 175, 1890 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 100
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 N.Y.S. 229 (Peyser v. Myers) 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
Peyser v. Myers, 9 N.Y.S. 229, 63 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 175, 30 N.Y. St. Rep. 837, 56 Hun 175, 1890 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 100 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1890).

Opinion

Daniels, J.

The plaintiffs are judgment creditors of the firm of Halsted, Haines & Co. They recovered their judgments in the latter part of the year 1884, and the early part of 1885; and upon these judgments executions were issued against the property of the judgment debtors, and returned unsatisfied. On tlie 12th of July, 1884, the judgment debtors made a general assignment to Lewis May of all their joint and individual property for the benefit of their creditors. This assignment contained a preference in favor of the executors of John K. Myers for the sum of $102,872. The assignment also contained other preferences amounting to about the sum of $400,000. After the assignment was made and accepted by the assignee, and on the 9th of September, 1884, he delivered to Frederick A. Ward, who was the attorney for the preferred creditors, a check substantially for the amount of their preferences. The payment of this check was restrained by an injunction at the suit of other judgment creditors, but it was paid on the 16th of October, 1884; and the attorney transferred to the executors and executrix of the estate of John K. Myers the amount received by him on account of, and to satisfy, this preference. And it was the object of the action to set aside the assignment and this payment, and require the executors and executrix to account for so much of this money as should be necessary to pay the judgments set forth in the complaint in this action. The testator became a partner in a preceding firm, engaged in the same business and under the same name, as early as January 1, 1860, and he invested as capital in the firm the sum of $62,318.73. This was increased by interest and profits to the sum of $131,828.85 by the 1st of December, 1872; and the evidence tended to show that on that day the testator withdrew from the firm. The evidence as to this fact was not very decisive. But it did appear that after the 1st of January, 1873, his account on the books of the firm was headed, instead of a stock account, a private account; and a notice was published in the Hew York Times, over the name of the firm, stating that Myers had withdrawn from it. . A new firm was organized in January, 1873, and the book-keeper of that firm testified that Myers was not one of its members. His evidence was by no means decisive, but it tended to establish that to be the fact. And a similar statement was made by the plaintiffs' witness Davidson, from the examination which he made of the books, but it was not confidently adhered to in the future course of his evidence. The witness William A. Haines stated that he was very confident that Myers retired from the firm within three years after he himself entered it, and he became a member of the firm in 1870; and the witness William M. Halsted added, in the course of his evidence, that he thought Mr. Myers retired from the firm in December, 1872. These witnesses were unable to state the making of any agreement by which Myers ceased to be a member of the firm; but, from the manner in which the books were kept, and the statements were made by these witnesses, there was sufficient to sustain the conclusion reached by the judge presiding at the trial, that Myers did cease to be a member of the firm from the last of December, 1872.

Interest was stated to appear from the books to have been added to his account at the rate of 12 per cent, from the 1st of January, 1870, to the 1st of June, 1877; and, so far as this exceeded the sum of 5 per cent., it is claimed in behalf of the plaintiffs that it should be accounted for, and applied to the payment of the plaintiffs’ judgments. But it appeared from the evidence that the testator, in the early part of the summer of 1877, became apprehensive that the reservation of this additional interest might imperil his right to the moneys standing to his credit on the books of the firm; and during the months of May, June, and July, 1877, he, with the assent of Mr. Halsted, who seems to have been more especially the managing partner of the firm, drew out of it the principal and interest to which, according to the books, he had become entitled, receiving in this manner the aggregate sum of $183,699.70, and during the same months he returned to the firm the sum of $179,000. The ob[231]*231jeet which seems to have induced these collections, and the return of the money, was to put it out of the power of the firm to question its liability because of the reservation of this usurious interest; and the adjustment of the amount in this manner not only prevented the firm itself, but the plaintiffs, insisting upon the right to the collection of this usurious reservation of interest. The result would have been the same if this change in the accounts had not taken place; for by the statute the right of the borrowers, as well as of the plaintiffs claiming under them, to recover the usurious excess of interest, was limited to an action to be brought within one year after the payment of the usurious interest. 2 Rev. St. (6th Ed.) 1165, § 3; Palen v. Johnson, 50 N. Y. 49. But when the debtors made the assignment, even if the preference contained in it in favor of the executors and executrix of the testator included the balance which in part had arisen out of the allowance of this interest, that would not entitle the plaintiffs to recover it; for such an assignment has been held to preclude the assignee, as well as the other creditors, from questioning the legality of the preference. Murray v. Judson, 9 N. Y. 73. As to this usurious interest, it was properly held, therefore, that the plaintiffs were not in a condition to maintain their action.

It further appeared from the books of the business that $141,893.31 was due to the testator on the last of January, 1874, and from that date to the failure, in July, 1884, there was $130,157.74 allowed as interest on his account, and that the simple interest for that period was the sum of $57,095.70, leaving a residue, consisting of credits for compound interest, amounting to the sum of $48,-574.99; and this interest had been compounded annually, or semi-annually, as it appeared by the books. The testator died in September, 1877, and this firm is shown to have been insolvent from the 1st of January of that year; and no agreement has been proved at any time to pay or allow to himself or his representatives this compound interest, and without proof of an agreement sustained by a legal consideration the allowance of such interest was unauthorized. This was considered in Young v. Hill, 67 N. Y. 162, where the court determined “that an agreement to pay interest upon interest must, in order to its validity, be made after the interest which is to bear interest has become due; and, second, that it must be supported by a sufficient consideration. A mere voluntary promise, without a consideration, is a nudum pactum, and cannot be enforced. ” Id. 167, 168. As the proof appeared in the case, therefore, so much as was paid by the assignee to the personal representatives of this partner for compound interest was unlawful. Neither an agreement for its allowance was proved to have been at any time entered into, nor was any consideration shown to support such an agreement, if it had been made. And the consequence was that so much money as was paid by the assignee under the assignment to the executors and executrix of this estate as included this compound interest was substantially a gift to them, which, as the trustee of an insolvent estates he had no right or authority to donate; and they were equally without the right to receive it. And in Bates v. McConnell, 31 Fed. Rep.

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.Y.S. 229, 63 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 175, 30 N.Y. St. Rep. 837, 56 Hun 175, 1890 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peyser-v-myers-nysupct-1890.