Phoenix Bridge Co. v. Keystone Bridge Co.

37 N.E. 562, 142 N.Y. 425, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 807, 97 Sickels 425, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 771
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 37 N.E. 562 (Phoenix Bridge Co. v. Keystone Bridge Co.) 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
Phoenix Bridge Co. v. Keystone Bridge Co., 37 N.E. 562, 142 N.Y. 425, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 807, 97 Sickels 425, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 771 (N.Y. 1894).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

The parties to this action, excepting the individual defendant Eckert, entered into an agreement between *428 themselves by which they formed what they termed the “American Bridge Manufacturers Association,” which had for its object the promotion of harmony among the bridge manufacturers of America and the carrying out of the provisions of the agreement then entered into. The agreement provided that each of the parties should pay monthly into a common fund a certain amount per pound on all iron work made and sold by them respectively during the previous calendar month, with exceptions therein particularly stated. The payments made by the parties were to form a guarantee fund until its total amount should be $260,000. First payments were made in cash by the parties in proportions specified in the agreement, the proportion of the plaintiff being 16 per cent of a total of $52,000. After the guarantee fund had reached the above-named amount the surplus assets were to be distributed among the members each month after deducting expenses and in proportions to be arrived at in a manner pointed out in the agreement.

Provision was made for referring disputes and other questions arising from carrying out the agreement, to a commissioner, who was to be appointed in a stated manner and who was to have power to hear and decide such matters as were under the agreement referred to him, with the power to any party to appeal to the executive committee and then to the association as a body and obtain from it a decision which would be final and binding.

Provision was also made in the agreement for the voluntary withdrawal of any party from the association upon notice, and if notice of such intended withdrawal were received and the consent of a majority of the members of the association obtained, the withdrawal became absolute at a stated time thereafter. Upon such withdrawal the party withdrawing took his proportion of the guarantee fund, the amount of such proportion being arrived at in a certain manner specified. If a party were to withdraw without the proper consent, then he forfeited one-fifth of his share in the guarantee fund, while if he were expelled under certain conditions the party would *429 forfeit all his right to the guarantee fund. The individual defendant Eckert was made the commissioner as provided for in the agreement. The association was formed in April, 1887, and under the provisions of the agreement the parties to it paid their monthly dues for some time.

Disputes subsequently arose between them, and to such an extent were their differences carried that the plaintiff commenced this action in January, 1890.

The complaint alleges the execution of the agreement between the parties and states that the plaintiff has ever since such time fully performed and kept all the covenants and provisions thereof. It is then alleged that the plaintiff had a contract for manufacturing certain iron work and setting it up for the elevated railroad in Brooklyn, and that by the true meaning and construction of the agreement the plaintiff was exempt from the payment to the association of any percentage on the amount of the iron manufactured and sold under that contract with the railroad. In substance it was shown by the further allegations of the complaint that this claim was not allowed by the association and that the commissioner and the association itself had improperly and in violation of the provisions of the agreement undertaken to determine that the plaintiff owed the association an amount of percentage on this iron in question of over $30,000. That in arriving at this determination the association had failed and refused to give plaintiff an opportunity to be heard, and that the proceedings of the defendants in refusing the plaintiff’s claim for exemption were had in pursuance of an unlawful undertaking between them by which they were to compel plaintiff to pay these dues, although they were not properly chargeable to plaintiff under the terms of the agreement, and that in the event of the plaintiff’s refusal to pay the same it should be expelled and its share in the guarantee fund forfeited. The plaintiff desired to have the question of its liability to pay the dues to the association, determined by some properly constituted tribunal after a full and proper hearing had been afforded the plaintiff.

*430 The amount of the guarantee fund was at the commencement of the action about $250,000, and plaintiff’s interest therein about $40,000. Unless the dues declared to be payable to the association were paid within ten days from the time of notice so to do, the defendants threatened to expel the plaintiff from the association without legal cause and to declare all its rights in the guarantee fund forfeited and to divide up such fund among themselves as members of such association. The plaintiff had given notice of withdrawal from the association in accordance with the provisions of the agreement, hut the membership would not terminate under its provisions until a year from the notice of withdrawal, which period had not elapsed at the time of the commencement of this action. There were some other allegations in the complaint which upon the question discussed it is not important to notice. The plaintiff asked in its prayer for relief that the resolutions and determinations of the association upon the assessment of the dues payable to it from the plaintiff should he decreed to be unlawful, and that the court should determine what if any amount was due the association from the plaintiff, and what amount from the association to the plaintiff, and that defendants should be enjoined from enforcing any penalties against plaintiff and from interfering with its rights in the association and from forfeiting its rights in the guarantee fund and from distributing the same. The complaint also prayed for a temporary injunction restraining defendants as above mentioned. The answers of the various defendants, while admitting the execution of the agreement and the formation of the association under it. and the payment of the monthly dues and the existence and extent of the guarantee fund, denied that there had been any improper act on the part of the defendants or the association in regard to the plaintiff, and alleged that it had been regularly and fully heard in regard to its claim for exemption, and a proper and regular decision had been rendered by the commissioner and the association, and that it was in accordance with the provisions of the agreement. They also denied any unlawful or improper agreement in regard to *431 expelling the plaintiff or the forfeiting or division of the fund in question.

Upon these pleadings the parties went to trial. Certainly, up to the time of the trial, there is nothing appearing upon the record which shows any attempt at a disaffirmance or repudiation of the agreement under which the association was formed. I fail to find any proof that the plaintiff repudiated or disaffirmed the agreement at any time during the trial. Uo part of the evidence is returned on this appeal, and we can only form a surmise as to its character hy looking at the various requests to find facts made hy the different parties and their proposed conclusions of law therefrom.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 N.E. 562, 142 N.Y. 425, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 807, 97 Sickels 425, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phoenix-bridge-co-v-keystone-bridge-co-ny-1894.