Reilly v. Freeman

73 N.Y. St. Rep. 224

This text of 73 N.Y. St. Rep. 224 (Reilly v. Freeman) 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
Reilly v. Freeman, 73 N.Y. St. Rep. 224 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

PATTERSON, J.

The plaintiff and defendants have appealed from the judgment herein. The plaintiff really seeks a modification of it, while the defendants ask for an absolute reversal. We will first considered the defendants’ appeal.

The pleadings present very simple issues of act. The plaintiff claims to be entitled to receive from the defendants some 1.500 shares of the common stock of the Retsoff Mining Company, or, alternatively, the value of such shares. The action is in form for an accounting of the results of a joint enterprise, in which it is alleged that they engaged upon an agreement to share equally in whatever might be realized as the outcome of the venture. The first issue raised related to the existence of an agreement of the character claimed by the plaintiff, upon which the court below-found, on sufficient evidence, in favor of the plaintiff. The testimony establishes that the defendant Freeman, in the year 1883, called the attention of the plaintiff to the then-supposed existence of salt deposits in Livingston county, in the state of Mew York, It is conceded that some agreement was then made by and between the plaintiff and the defendant Freeman and one Varker (an original defendant, who has died since the judgment was entered therein, and whose executrix has been substituted as defendant in his place), by which the plaintiff was to advance money for prospecting and exploration, and Freeman and Varker were to superintend such experimental work, and to procure options for the purchase of lands on or under which the salt deposits might be found. Thus far there seems to be no serious contradition in the testimony. That there was a joint venture, whether it be called a partnership quoad the particular subject of it or not, is fairly established. The plaintiff did advance moneys, and all that were advanced by any one up to a certain period, and when called upon to contribute more, and being unable to do so, authorized his associates to raise money by disposal of securities in their hands belonging to him. The first stage of an attempt to put in some tangible form the subject of the enterprise they had under» taken was the creation of a corporation called the Mew York Rock-Salt Company. Shares of stock of that company were issued—. one share to the plaintiff, one to each of the other associates, other shares were reserved for a working capital, and 2,500 shares were issued in a certificate to Freeman and Varker. In these last-mentioned shares was included the plaintiff’s one-third. Mo distribution of the 2,500 shares was ever made. The amount of the joint interest of the three subsequently was fixed at 1,500 shares. They were [226]*226held by the defendants Freeman and Yarker. At this point it is claimed by the defendants that, on the organization of the rock-salt company and the issuance of shares by it, the plaintiff’s rights became fixed and determined, and consist now only of a vauleless chum to his proportion of 2,500 shares of capital stock of that company. It does appear in evidence that the parties contracted for the formation of a corporation, but that first corporation never did business, the plaintiff never received his proportion of stock, and when new arrangements were made, as hereafter stated, he relinquished active participations in the affairs of the venture. But he did not abandon his interest in the project. Freeman and Yarker had gone on and taken options, in which options the plaintiff was still interested. They had been secured by the money advanced by him, and, although not all actually so secured within the time originally contracted for with the owners of the land, yet notice of acceptance seems to have been given before the options expired. The only real asset of this joint venture between the parties to it were these options, which turned out after-wards to be of very valuable salt lands. It being found impossible to carry on the purpose of the venture through the rock-salt company, Freeman appears to have made efforts to induce a gentleman named Foster to come into the enterpise. Mr. Foster consented. A new corporation was created, called the Empire Salt Company, to which Freeman and Yarker conveyed all the options or lands embraced in the options. Mr. Foster seems to have /'had the dictation of the terms on which he would enter into the adventure, and, as matter of fact, the interest of Reilly and his associates was recognized and provided for. ' That Reilly was included is distinctly shown by Freeman’s own letter to him of February 28, 1884, in which he states: “The whole.responsibility of the' purchase of theland Mr, Foster assumes personally, and he also agrees to allow our interest to amount to one-quarter of the whole.” Here is a direct acknowledgement from Freeman; and Yarker knew, as his letter of January 4, 1884, shows that Reilly’s interest or some of it, still remained in him. In this organization of. the Empire Company shares were alloted to Freeman and Yarker, and Reilly was entitled to one-third of them. But the Empire corporation was not satisfactory to Mr. Foster, and he caused still another one to be formed, called the Retsoff Company, whicli issued shares, of which 6,000 were given to Freeman and Yarker, being in the proportion of five in the last to one in its predecessor corporation. That Reilly's third interest is traced into these shares was found by the judge below on evidence satisfactory to him and to us. Freeman and Yarker recognized the plaintiff’s right to participate in the shares allotted to them. They sent him a certificate for 500 shares, Freeman saying “because it was right”; but they suppressed the fact that they had received 6,000 shares, which fact was not discovered by Reilly until late in the year 1895. There was quite enough evidence to justify the conclusion of the court below that there was one continuous series of transactions from the initial agreement between the plaintiff and Freeman and Yarker down to the [227]*227receipt by the latter of the 6,000 shares in the Retsoff Company, in which the three parties named were jointly interested, and that, out of the 6,000 shares which were the ultimate proceeds of those transactions, the plaintiff was entitled to his one-third. He is entitled to the stock specifically, not upon the theory of specific performance of an executory contract, as the defendants’ counsel intimates is the ground upon which the special term gave the particular relief, but because, upon the proofs, it appears that in an action for an accounting it is found that the plaintiff’s interest exists in the form of shares of stock in a corporation, which shares he elects to take in specie if they can be reached, and in accordance with the original agreement that a corporation should be formed, and the plaintiff’s interest consequently be held or represented in the form of shares.

It is urged by the defendants that the plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law, by action for damages or for conversion ; but no defense of that character is set up (Lough v. Outerbridge, 143 N. Y. 271; 62 St. Rep. 324), and for that reason it makes no difference whether or not the claim is well founded.

The statute of. limitations is also relied on by the defendants, but the statute would not begin to run until the shares of the Retsoff Company came into the hands of the defendants, which we understand to have been in December, 1885, and this we conceive to be a suit between partners to which the 10-years limitation applied. Still v. Holbrook, 23 Hun, 517.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lough v. . Outerbridge
38 N.E. 292 (New York Court of Appeals, 1894)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 N.Y. St. Rep. 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reilly-v-freeman-nyappdiv-1896.