Schantz v. . Oakman

57 N.E. 288, 163 N.Y. 148, 1 Bedell 148, 1900 N.Y. LEXIS 1048
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 57 N.E. 288 (Schantz v. . Oakman) 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
Schantz v. . Oakman, 57 N.E. 288, 163 N.Y. 148, 1 Bedell 148, 1900 N.Y. LEXIS 1048 (N.Y. 1900).

Opinion

Gbay, J.

One of the grounds of the demurrer to the complaint was that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action and that has been approved by the courts below and from a final judgment entered in favor of the defendants the plaintiff has now appealed to this court.

It appears from the complaint that, on October 16th, 1889, the plaintiff, possessing an option for the purchase of a majority of the capital stock of certain street railway companies in the city of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, of which the Milwaukee Cable Railway Company was one, entered into an .agreement with the defendants, Oakman and Ryan, who held a majority of the capital stock of the Milwaukee City Railroad Company and controlled its affairs, and who were desirous, by a union of interest, to form a new company, to be known as the Consolidated Company; the object of the agreement being alleged to be the promotion of the interests of the Consolidated Company.” Its consideration was described to be, the mutual covenants and agreements to do and to refrain from doing the things and acts therein specified.” It provided that the plaintiff was to deliver the entire capital stock of the cable company to the Consolidated Company. Other provisions are referred to, which provide for certain things to be done upon the formation of the Consolidated Company and that of its capital stock four-fifths should be issued to its stockholders and to the City Railroad Company and one-fifth to the plaintiff and his associates. The agreement itself is not exhibited and all we know of it is from the allegations of the complaint, which *153 have been referred to, and it is not alleged that it contained any agreement on the part of the defendants, Oakman and Ryan, to form the Consolidated Company. The complaint pi’oceeds to show that the provision bearing upon the cable company, by reason of the condition of its business and affairs, was not carried out, but Avas varied by the plaintiff and his associates, as he alleges, in furtherance of the agreement. It is not alleged, however, that the assent of the defendants, Oakman and Ryan, Avas had to that; although it is stated that the difficulties of the cable company Avere understood by them and that the plaintiff’s performance of the agreement and the delivery of the cable company’s stock Avere dependent upon such changes and delay as were required by reason thereof. The complaint then charges that while arrangements were in progress by the plaintiff, as he says, “ in .the interest of the Consolidated Company,” a combination Avas made between the defendants Oakman and Ryan and the defendants Yillard and Payne for “ the purchase and sale, or consolidation, of street railway companies in the City of Milwaukee,” or of the city and cable railway companies, or for the formation of companies to take over and operate street railway companies in Milwaukee and that they thereby joined themselves together as partners by a joint contribution of capital, or labor, for the purpose of such business, etc.,” which was in violation, on the part of Oakman and Ryan, of their said agreement Avith the plaintiff. It is alleged that this combination Avas for the purpose of forming the North American Company, a corporation designed to OAvn the capital stock of railways throughout the United States and to operate them; that it was formed Avith a large capital stock and with Ryan and Yillard as the principal officers; that thereupon the defendants Oakman and Ryan ceased and refused to co-operate with the plaintiff “ in the business of promoting the interests of said Consolidated Company ” and did not at any time form or organize the said Consolidated Company as they had agreed with this plaintiff to do.” The plaintiff then sets forth arrangements between the defendants Oakman and Ryan and the defendant Yillard, *154 ' ' I which resulted in the formation of a company called “ The Milwaukee Street Railway Company of Wisconsin; ” to which were transferred the common stock, property and franchises of the Milwaukee City Railroad Company and alleges .that, as a consequence of the combination between these parties and of their transactions, the defendants received large gains or profits.

Other acts and transactions of the defendants are alleged in furtherance of the purpose of their combination, from which large profits accrued to them. The complaint alleges that the plaintiff, or the plaintiff and his associates, did all that the agreement required on their part “ except in so far as anything * * * was rendered impossible of performance by the acts of the defendants Oakman and Ryan; ” that the defendants Oakman and Ryan by their acts deprived the plaintiff of his rights and benefits under the agreement between them and that they, by having engaged in the business of consolidating street railways in the city of Milwaukee, in combination with the defendants Yillard and Payne, “ in violation of their said agreement with the plaintiff for the formation of the Consolidated Company in combination with him,” have acquired great gains and profits.

Judgment is prayed for an accounting as to all the transactions of the defendants, and each of them, and as to the moneys received and paid out by them respectively in relation to the business prosecuted by all of the defendants in combination ; to the end that the amount received by the defendants Oakman and Ryan may be ascertained; that that amount be decreed the property of the defendants Oakman and Ryan and of this plaintiff jointly and that therefrom the plaintiff be paid a share equal to the interest which he was to receive in the Consolidated Company.

A fuller analysis of the complaint has been made in the learned opinions of the courts below and sufficient reference has been made to it here. It -appears that it was, at one time, intended and agreed, as between the plaintiff and the defendants Oakman and Ryan, that they were to effect a union of their interests in certain street railway companies and, there *155 upon, to form a new corporation, possessed of certain resultant rights and properties; of whose capital stock the plaintiff and his associates were to receive one-fiftli. This new corporation was never formed and the complaint of the plaintiff is that Oakman and Ryan violated their agreement with him by failing, or refusing, to carry it out and that, because of this breach on their part and of their subsequent acts, they have become accountable to him for the profits resulting from their combination with the defendants Villard and Payne for purposes similar to those involved in their agreement with him. It is the claim of the appellant that his agreement with Oakman and Ryan bound them as quasi partners to the prosecution of the enterprise contemplated and that relations of a mutual and confidential nature were created.

The allegations of the complaint, however, fall far short of establishing that any such relations were created between them. With all the force which is to be given to the demurrer, as an admission of the truth of the facts which are properly stated, the construction placed by the'plaintiff upon the agreement, or the correctness of the inferences drawn by him from admitted facts, are not to be deemed admitted. (Bogardus v. N. Y. Life Ins. Co., 101 N. Y.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 N.E. 288, 163 N.Y. 148, 1 Bedell 148, 1900 N.Y. LEXIS 1048, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schantz-v-oakman-ny-1900.