Rapuzzi v. Stetson

160 A.D. 150, 145 N.Y.S. 455, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4714
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 7, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 160 A.D. 150 (Rapuzzi v. Stetson) 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
Rapuzzi v. Stetson, 160 A.D. 150, 145 N.Y.S. 455, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4714 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Lyon, J.:

On the 8th day of September, 1906, Orestes U. Bean and Albert H. Flint entered into an agreement whereby Bean agreed to sell and deliver to Flint on that day forty-three shares of stock of the International Smokeless Furnace Company for the sum of $30,000, payable in installments, and Flint agreed to [151]*151accept the stock and pay for the same as in said contract provided. At that time Bean indorsed upon a certificate of stock for the forty-three shares an assignment thereof to Flint, who was the president of the company, and the certificate was left in the stock book which was kept at the office of Flint, which was also the office of the company. Later Flint paid Bean $5,000 of the purchase price of the stock, but having made default in further payments, Bean, in April, 1907, brought an action against Flint in the Supreme Court of this State to recover the remaining $25,000, with interest, alleging the making of said agreement, the delivery of the stock to Flint, the acceptance thereof by Flint, the demand for payment of the remaining $25,000 and the failure of Flint to pay the same. Flint thereupon employed a firm of attorneys and interposed an answer verified by him in July, 1907, in which he denied that the said forty-three shares of stock had been delivered to and accepted by him, and that he was the owner thereof, and that he was indebted to Bean. In February, 1908, Flint, by the same attorneys, served an amended answer, verified by him, containing the same denials, and in addition thereto alleging that he had been induced to enter into the agreement of September eighth by false and fraudulent representations upon the part of Bean and as the result' of a conspiracy upon the part of Bean and another. About May 4, 1908, Flint employed the defenclants as his attorneys in said action and they were duly substituted as such. On or about May 15, 1908, an order was entered upon the consent of the attorneys for the respective parties, appointing a referee to hear and determine the issues in the action, and on May twenty-seventh the first hearing was had before the referee. At that time the defendants stated that they wished to amend the amended answer served by their predecessors. Leave to amend was obtained, and on the 4th day of June, 1908, Flint verified a second amended answer in which he repeated the denials before referred to contained in the two preceding answers, also alleging that Bean had not good title to and was not the legal owner of said forty-three shares of stock. This answer also repeated the defenses of inducement by false and fraudulent representations and conspiracy, setting forth the attending circumstances with [152]*152greater particularity. The answer also alleged that said agreement was entered into under the mutual mistake that Bean was the owner of the stock, whereas in fact the stock had not been validly issued, and Bean could not give good title thereto; that said agreement of September eighth was unconscionable, Flint in said answer, offering to return to Bean said stock delivered or attempted to be delivered by Bean to Flint; and the answer set up as a counterclaim the payment of said $5,000 by Flint to Bean, to which Bean replied denying liability.

At the hearing had before said referee said agreement of . September eighth and said certificate of stock were offered in evidence by Bean and received under the objection that the certificate had not the seal of the corporation upon it and did not appear to have been transferred upon the corporation books. At the hearing had June 30, 1908, Bean, on examination by defendants, testified that no transfer tax stamps were attached to said agreement of September eighth, or to said certificate of stock, or to the transfer upon the stock book, or to any memorandum, whereupon defendants moved to strike out the testimony of Bean and to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that under the statute requiring the affixing of stamps Bean had no cause of action and that there was no curative provision in the statute. The referee denied the motion, to which defendants took exception. The referee then allowed Bean, under the objection of defendants, to affix and cancel stamps aggregating eighty-six cents, the amount of the statutory tax.

Of the many hearings held by said referee Flint attended only three or four, although he testifies that he was always notified when hearings would take place.

On the 1st day of June, 1909, the referee rendered his decision holding that the stock certificate was duly delivered by Bean to Flint; that the failure of Bean to affix the transfer stamps to the stock certificate, or to the agreement, or to the delivery of said certificate, was inadvertent, and not with intent to avoid the payment of the transfer tax; that the failure to so affix the stamps was cured by the affixing of the stamps to the stock certificate during the progress of the trial; that the failure to affix the stamps was not available to the [153]*153defendant as a legal defense by reason of the failure to plead it in his answer, and that the defendant had waived such infirmity, if any there was, by his failure to object to the reception in evidence of such agreement, or of the certificate on the statutory grounds at the times when said certificate and said agreement were respectively offered in evidence. The referee thereupon directed the entry of judgment against Flint for the balance remaining unpaid of the purchase price of the stock, with interest and costs.

From the judgment entered upon the report of the referee, . Flint appealed to the Appellate Division, the appeal being conducted by other attorneys substituted at the request of the defendants herein.

Upon said appeal the court, holding that the non-payment of the transfer tax was a defense to be pleaded in order to be available, affirmed the judgment. (Bean v. Flint, 138 App. Div. 846.)

Flint thereupon appealed to the Court of Appeals, the Title Guaranty and Surety Company executing the undertaking upon appeal. That court affirmed the decision of the Appellate Division. (204 N. Y. 153.)

Executions having been issued against the property of Flint upon the judgments entered against him in said action, said surety company was compelled to pay the same, and in May, 1912, obtained by default a judgment against Flint for the sums so paid, aggregating, with interest and costs, $35,191.95. An execution was issued and returned unsatisfied, and it is conceded that no part of the judgment has been. paid.

In February, 1911, Flint assigned all claims, demands and causes of action against the defendants herein to the plaintiff, who is a stenographer in the office of plaintiff’s attorneys, and on the same day plaintiff and Flint executed an agreement whereby practically the one-half of any recovery which was to go to Flint was to be held by plaintiff for his use and to his order, he agreeing to save her harmless from any cost or expense on account of an endeavor to collect the claim.

In March, 1912, this action was brought, the complaint alleging upon information and belief the employment by Flint of the defendants as his attorneys in the action of Bean v. Flint; the preparation and service by them of the second amended [154]

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Bluebook (online)
160 A.D. 150, 145 N.Y.S. 455, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rapuzzi-v-stetson-nyappdiv-1914.