Place v. . Hayward

23 N.E. 25, 117 N.Y. 487, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 710, 72 Sickels 487, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1457
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 10, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 23 N.E. 25 (Place v. . Hayward) 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
Place v. . Hayward, 23 N.E. 25, 117 N.Y. 487, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 710, 72 Sickels 487, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1457 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Earl, J.

This action was brought by the plaintiff, as sole acting executor of Susan A. Place, deceased, against the defendant to recover three sums of money alleged to have been received by him to and for the use of the plaintiff. One item was a sum of $10,000 and upwards alleged to have been received by him upon a bond and mortgage which came to the plaintiff as executor. The other two items, amounting-together to about $12,000, were alleged to have been received by him upon two endowment policies issued to the testatrix upon the life of her husband, James 3L Place, which became due subsequently to her death, in November, 1885. The action was referred to a referee and tried before him, and at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, the defendant, without announcing that he rested his case, moved “ that the complaint be dismissed on the merits,” and the referee granted the motion and the plaintiff’s counsel excepted. Thereafter the referee made his report, containing findings of fact and of law, and concluding that the complaint should be dismissed on the merits and judgment rendered against the plaintiff on the merits of the action, with costs to the defendant. Subsequently, upon the settlement of the case, this took place:

“ On settlement of case on appeal the plaintiff’s attorney having in his proposed case given the following notice:

“ A motion will be made upon the case before the referee to change or modify his findings so that the decision on the final motion will be judgment for the defendant dismissing the complaint, with costs, and not a judgment, or decision or finding, upon the merits.

“And the plaintiff’s attorney having made said motion, the same is denied by the referee on the whole case and the plaintiff’s attorney excepts.”

Section 1209 of the Code provides as follows: “ A final judgment, dismissing the complaint either before or after a *492 trial, rendered in an action hereafter commenced, does not prevent a new action for the same cause of action unless it expressly declares, or it appears by the judgment-roll, that it is rendered upon the merits.”

The defendant, by procuring a dismissal of the complaint ■on the merits, probably had this provision of the Code in mind, and intended to procure a judgment that would bar a new action for the same cause. And the plaintiff’s counsel by the motion he made on the settlement of the case sought to have the dismissal in such form that the judgment would not bar a new action. The precise scope of that provision of the Code we do not now determine. Nevertheless, what the referee ■did was to nonsuit the plaintiff. We can give no other significance to the proceeding. Therefore, he should have made no findings of fact except such as would justify a nonsuit upon the trial. Under the Code the referee was required to make findings of fact and of law after granting the nonsuit; but he had no right to make any findings of fact depending upon disputed or inconclusive evidence. Therefore, to maintain this judgment, the defendant is bound to show that there was no disputed question of fact which, upon a jury trial, the court would have been required to submit to the jury, and that upon the undisputed evidence he was entitled to judgment. (Scofield v. Hernandez, 47 N. Y. 313.)

As these moneys were received by the defendant after the ■death of the testatrix, and as all the dealings with reference thereto between him and the plaintiff took place after her death, he claimed upon the trial that-the plaintiff could not, in his representative capacity, maintain this action, but that the same should have been instituted by him in his individual name. But the referee held before any evidence had been given that the plaintiff could maintain this action in his representative capacity, and that ruling then became the law of the ■case; and even if erroneous, the defendant having had judgment in his favor cannot now complain of it. But, upon the ■argument here, he expressly waived any objection that the ■plaintiff could not maintain this action in his representative *493 capacity, and, therefore, this nonsuit cannot he maintained upon the ground, if a valid one (which we do not determine), that the plaintiff in his representative capacity could not maintain the-action.

The plaintiff is not, by anything which appears in the case, estopped from claiming against the defendant that the proceeds, of the mortgage and of the insurance policies received by him belonged to and were payable to the plaintiff.

The defendant during all the times of the transactions under-consideration was the plaintiff’s attorney, and the evidence-tends to show that the plaintiff during those times acted under and implicitly relied upon his counsel and direction. It appears, without dispute, that there was fear on the part of the defendant, whose wife was the daughter of the testatrix and a sister of the plaintiff, and interested in the estate of her mother, as. well as on the part of the plaintiff, that the mortgage and the insurance policies might be seized by adverse claimants, creditors of the husband of the testatrix; and, therefore, the plaintiff claims that, under the advice of the defendant, on the 22d day of November, 1869, he assigned the mortgage-to him for the purpose of protecting the same against such adverse claimants. The consideration expressed in the assignment was $12,000. At the same time the defendant executed to the plaintiff the following instrument:

“I, J. K. Hayward, agree to reassign the mortgage of $25,000 to Barker Place on the repayment of the sum (principal and interest) loaned to Barker Place by said Hayward.

“J. K. HAYWARD.”'

The plaintiff and his father, who, at the time, had the principal management of the estate of the testatrix, both testified that the assignment of the mortgage was merely formal, without any consideration whatever, and that not a dollar, at any time, was paid to the plaintiff for the same. On the sixteenth day of April thereafter the defendant, by an assignment, absolute in form, in consideration of $12,000, paid to him by W. J. A. Fuller, assigned the mortgage to him; and, on the *494 twenty-third day of April thereafter, Arthur T. Sullivan, who was at that time one of the executors of the will of Susan A. Place, for the recited consideration of $1, also executed an assignment of the same mortgage to Fuller. The mortgage was subsequently foreclosed and Fuller received as the net proceeds of the foreclosure $33,949.29; and the defendant having repaid to Fuller the $12,000 which he had paid for the mortgage and the interest thereon, Fuller gave a check for the amount payable to the order of the defendant and to the plaintiff as executors. Twenty-five thousand nine hundred -and forty-nine dollars and twenty-nine cents of the proceeds ■of that check came to the hands of the plaintiff, and $8,500 thereof came to the hands of the defendant, and that sum, at least, and the interest thereon, the plaintiff claimed to recover in this action.

These various assignments do not estop the plaintiff from recovering in this action, and it was not necessary for her to bring an action to set them aside before she could recover.

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.E. 25, 117 N.Y. 487, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 710, 72 Sickels 487, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/place-v-hayward-ny-1889.