Slayback v. Raymond

40 Misc. 601, 83 N.Y.S. 15
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 40 Misc. 601 (Slayback v. Raymond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slayback v. Raymond, 40 Misc. 601, 83 N.Y.S. 15 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

Leventritt, J.

Under the authority of Marvin v. Brooks, 94 N. Y. 71, and allied cases, this suit is well brought in equity. On the merits I find the plaintiff's story reasonable and worthy of credence, while I have not been impressed with the likelihood of the defendants’ version. I have reviewed the testimony with great care with the result that the view I took of the facts on the trial, when I saw and heard the witnesses before me, finds corroboration in many details.

The plaintiff was the financial backer of the Carbon Steel Company of New Jersey and this fact was generally known; the defendant was its executive head but so far from being possessed or known to be possessed of large means, there are various items of evidence to the contrary. The plaintiff’s private firm being threatened with financial embarrassment in the generally depressed and tightened conditions of 1893 requested the defendant to seek the intervention of a capitalist at Pittsburg, one James Hemphill, who was interested in several concerns supplying the Carbon Steel Company with material and whose business [603]*603ability and financial strength had arrested the decline of another company, to the end that the impending insolvency of the plaintiff’s firm should not affect sympathetically the standing of the Carbon Steel Company when its recognized financial support should have become impotent. The plaintiff offered to give up one-half his stock holdings in the event that Hemphill could be induced to take hold and succeed in having credit extended to the Carbon Steel Company. The defendant went to Pittsburg, returned and, according to the plaintiff, reported that Hemphill would accept only on condition that plaintiff should yield his entire stock holdings and that his wife should turn over one-half of her first preferred stock, that one Bobinson, who was vice-president of the company, had to give up all his stock, and that the defendant •“ had to do the same.” The plaintiff, for himself and his wife, both being creditors of the company to a large amount on notes as well as holders of a substantial block of bonds, bonds, agreed to the proposition and delivered the stock to the defendant for transfer to Hemphill. It is undisputed that not a share of stock was ever delivered to Hemphill. The defendant claims that it was given to him individually to enable him to control the company on his agreement personally to guide it over the shoals into safety. His version is that the plaintiff requested him to induce Hemphill to accept a receivership of the company, that he went to Pittsburg on this mission, that Hemphill refused, that he carried this refusal to the plaintiff and then made an alternative proposition to the effect that if the plaintiff would give up all his stock, and his wife half óf hers, he “would find a party or parties to loan us (The Carbon Steel Company) the money and give us the credit, and carry on the company, that I would guarantee his note for himself and his wife and would guarantee the company and make the bonds good.” .As to the Bobinson stock, the defendant testified “ I said Mr.' Bobinson would have to give his stock if I needed it; it was necessary for me to have control of the company in order to warrant my attempting or doing — taking the risk that I was going to take to carry this out as a personal obligation.”

I find myself unable to accept this story of the defendant. I deem it necessary to refer merely to some of the many facts which show its improbability. The relations between' the plaintiff and the defendant were such that the plaintiff was necessarily [604]*604fully advised of the defendant’s financial standing. It seems most unlikely that where, of the two, the plaintiff had always been called upon to supply the financial support of the company, he should promptly, on the defendant’s naked oral promise to see the company through and secure the necessary party or parties to loan money and give credit, turn over his all, especially where, according to the defendant’s version, a simple question of control was involved. If control of the stock was all that was required, it would seem that the plaintiff having far more at stake than the defendant, and being admittedly on most friendly terms with him, would readily' have acquiesced and voted his stock as the defendant required it. Or, if as the defendant claims, he needed stock to give to “other people,” which seems to be his main contention, that the plaintiff would willingly have consented, from time to time, to contribute his proportionate share rather than divest himself of his entire holdings at once when the “ other people ” were not yet determined. Further than this the defendant testified that his wife gave up all her stock but that he never called upon Bobinson to give up his. The reason assigned for not requiring the latter to do so is entirely unsatisfactory. “ Because he would always vote any way I voted ” is the defendant’s reason. But if control was all that was sought, it is quite evident that the plaintiff would have voted similarly and the defendant concedes that though Mrs. Raymond, his wife, would likewise have voted the way he told her to, yet he took her stock. Further, if Bobinson had been called upon to yield his stock, it is manifest that just by that amount the plaintiff and his wife would have been relieved from yielding theirs. Finally, the use made of the stock discredits the version of the defendant. It went in part to employees; a small portion to Newton Hemp-hill, the son of James Hemphill, but the bulk of it to nephews and nieces of the defendant who could render no conceivable service to the corporation. It also appears quite satisfactorily that these transfers to .relatives were merely nominal, for the defendant testified that from the beginning of his holding of this portion of the transferred stock to the present day the dividends thereon have been paid to him personally.

Again, it does not appear that after the transfer by the plaintiff to thé defendant, the latter ever did get a single party or parties to advance money or that a single new avenue of credit [605]*605was opened. All that happened was that the creditors of the company extended the time of payment. The defendant, driven to cover, rests the entire consideration for the transaction between him and the plaintiff on the latter’s desire to save the money loaned to the corporation and to see the bonds made good. But it is a tax on credulity to be asked to believe that after the plaintiff had sought the aid of a large capitalist he would on the first suggestion, without bargain or parley, accept the proposition of one who, on behalf of the company had theretofore called on the plaintiff to come to its financial assistance, whose own financial standing as known to the plaintiff did not warrant the assumption of any such personal liability, who offered in place of the named capitalist unnamed parties to be secured in the future and who above all offered an unenforceable oral personal guarantee in consideration of the plaintiff’s turning over every dollar of stock he had in the company, and that at a time when under the defendant’s own version the necessity therefor had not arisen. I accept the story of the plaintiff.

There remains to be considered the question whether the plaintiff’s remedy is barred by the Statute of Limitations. The plaintiff sues to recover a judgment on the ground of fraud to procure the return of certain shares of stock, their transfer on the books of the company and an account for dividends and for such of the stock as cannot be returned. The fraud was committed in the month of July, 1893. The action was begun on January 5, 1900.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 Misc. 601, 83 N.Y.S. 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slayback-v-raymond-nysupct-1903.