Pounds v. Egbert

117 A.D. 756, 102 N.Y.S. 1079, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 333
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 8, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 117 A.D. 756 (Pounds v. Egbert) 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
Pounds v. Egbert, 117 A.D. 756, 102 N.Y.S. 1079, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 333 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Miller, J.:

This ease is not free from difficulty, because of inconsistencies between the two theories upon which the plaintiff seeks to sustain the judgment. The plaintiff alleges that he entered into copartnership with the defendant George W. Egbert for the purpose of purchasing, developing and selling an unimproved tract of land referred to in the record as the Ditmás tract; ” that the purchase price in excess of the amount raised by mortgage was contributed by said defendant and the title was taken in the name of the defendant Virginia L. Egbert pursuant to an agreement between the plaintiff and said George W. Egbert to the effect that, when the plaintiff had paid him a sufficient sum to make them equal contributors to the purchase price and carrying charges, he would deliver, or cause to be delivered to the plaintiff, a deed of an undivided half of said premises. It is claimed by the plaintiff that said agreement to convey was subsequent and collateral to the agreement creating the partnership. Prior to said alleged copartnership,, the plaintiff and one Decker had made a contract to purchase said tract for the sum of $40,000, and either because they, were not able to complete the purchase or because said Decker was then preparing to withdraw from the copartnership then existing between them, an arrangement was made with said defendant, and, passing for the moment what the agreement was, it appears without dispute that said defendant advanced the sum of $7,500 and obtained the rest of the -purchase price by borrowing $32,500, upon a bond executed by the plaintiff, said defendant and said Decker, secured by a mortgage executed by said Decker and wife, to whom the property was first conveyed; said defendant also conveyed to the plaintiff and said Decker, or to some person for their benefit, premises in which he had an equity of redemption then valued at $4,000, and thereupon said Ditmas tract was conveyed to the defendant Virginia L. Egbert. The defendant claims that he merely gave the plaintiff and said Decker a bonus of $4,000 for their contract. The plaintiff claims that at [758]*758the request of said defendant he took charge of the premises, leased them to the then occupant for $60 per- year, collected the first year’s rent and paid out the sum of, $588.40 for filling'and grading. ■ Shortly after said conveyance, the plaintiff’s partnership with said Decker ended, and a corporation was organized, styled the Manor ¡Realty Company, whose stock, except enough to qualify directors, was owned by the plaintiff and one Lamberton,, who had theretofore -Supplied the .capital for. the plaintiff’s business; said corporation succeeded to said business, and from time to time advanced money to said defendant and received payments from him up to August,. 1904, when its books showed _a balance in its favor of $6,738.80.. The plaintiff claims that he caused these moneys to be advanced as and for his contribution to the capital of the copartner- ' ship. The defendant claims that the money was loaned to him. -The plaintiff also claims that he and said defendant each made individual purchases of-parcels.of, land in the vicinity of said tract, not on the partnership account, but in reality for the purpose of benefiting the partnership property by enabling them to control the character of the houses erected in the neighborhood. ,

The complaint prayed for an accounting and for a decree directing the conveyance to the plaintiff of an undivided half of said ' premises, which is the relief granted by the judgment appealed from. The defendant, Virginia L. Egbert admits that she is a trustee ' for the true owner, so we need have no difficulty on that head, but may consider the case as though the title stood in the name of the ■defendant George. W. Egbert, and any reference made herein to the defendant will be understood to refer to him. The. agreements between the plaintiff- and the defendant, whatever they were¿ were not in writing, and the defendant invokes the Statute of Frauds. It is unnecessary now to discuss the proposition that a partnership for the purpose of dealing in real estate may be created by an oral agreement (Chester v. Dickerson, 54 N. Y. 1; Traphagen v. Burt, 67 id. 30 ; Fairchild v. Fairchild, 64 id. 471; King v. Barnes, 109 id. 267; Bailey v. Weed, 36 App. Div. 611; Burkardt v. Walsh, 49 id. 634); but a partnership' agreement not within the Statute of Frauds, because by.it.no estate or interest in-lands is created, granted or assigned, must not be confused with such an agreement which does involve the creation, granting or [759]*759assigning- of such an estate or interest. The individual partners do not own an estate in the partnership real property; irrespective of where the. title happens to he, such property, until the needs, of the copartnership are satisfied, is treated as personal property. An . agreement to form a copartnership to deal in lands does not, therefore, involve any element violative of the Statute of Frauds; but if such agreement also provides for a conveyance of real property from one partner to another or to the copartnership, it then provides for the creation of an estate or interest in'lands and comes directly within the Statute of Frauds. The ground upon which partnership agreements to deal in.land háve been sustained, as well as the plain words of tbe statute, requires the conclusion that the mere fact that an agreement happens to' provide for a copartnership will not save it from the Statute of Frauds if it also attempts to create, grant or assign an estate or interest in lands. The1 judgment appealed from-does not adjudge that the-premises in dispute are partnership property; on the contrary, it decrees specific performance of an agreement to convey land, and as incidental to that relief directs an accounting to ascertain the contributions of each. Whether the agreement to convey an undivided half interest in the property to the plaintiff was a part of the alleged copartnership agreement (and the two are inconsistent), or was subsequent and collateral thereto, as. claimed by the plaintiff, it must bear the test . applicable to agreements for the sale of land, or the judgment in its present form cannot be sustained.

The plaintiff claims that there has been such part performance by. him as will enable equity to decree specific performance under the head of fraud. After carefully examining all of the cases cited by the respondent, and many others, I am unable to find any ground supported by authority for the exercise of such jurisdiction in this case. In the case of Traphagen v. Burt (supra) one partner without the knowledge of the other, and in violation of his agreement, took title in his own name; subsequently the parties, adjusted their differences by an agreement, which the judgment earned out. In addition to. the fact that the court found in that case that the plaintiff had been induced to put himself in a situation which would have enabled the defendant to perpetrate a fraud on him if the agreement was not carried out, there was also a clear [760]*760case of resulting trust. The case of Sanger v. French (157 N. Y. 213) did not deal at all with an agreement to convey land. In none of the other cases cited by the respondent was the question of the specific performance of an oral agreement to convey land involved. The principles applicable to such a case were stated by Judge Earl in Miller v. Ball (64 N. Y. 286) and Wheeler v. Reynolds (66 id.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 A.D. 756, 102 N.Y.S. 1079, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pounds-v-egbert-nyappdiv-1907.