Smith v. Ijams

24 N.Y.S. 202, 70 Hun 155, 77 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 155, 53 N.Y. St. Rep. 915
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 N.Y.S. 202 (Smith v. Ijams) 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
Smith v. Ijams, 24 N.Y.S. 202, 70 Hun 155, 77 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 155, 53 N.Y. St. Rep. 915 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

BARRETT, J.

This action was brought against the executor and executrices of Phoebe Smith, deceased, to recover the price of a certain business which the plaintiff alleges that he sold to the decedent (who was his mother) in the month of December, 1884. The defendants, in their answer, deny the sale, but admit that the business was turned over to the decedent. Prior to the transfer, the decedent had advanced large sums of money to the plaintiff (and his partners) for the purposes of the business, and at the time of the transfer he was indebted to her in the amount of these advances; and the defendants claim that the transfer was to the decedent as a creditor, but not as a purchaser. The answer then ■sets up by way of counterclaim the promissory notes given by the [203]*203plaintiff and by his firm for these advances, and asks judgment for the total amount thereof. The plaintiff replies to the counterclaim, reaffirming his allegation of a sale, and pleading the statute of limitations as against the notes. He also claims in his reply that by her will the decedent canceled his indebtedness to her, and discharged him from all liability thereupon, including these notes; and in support of this claim he sets forth the following provision of the will:

“Sixth. To my son, William F. Smith, I have given him during my lifetime all I ever intended to give him, so by the conditions of this will he inherits no further portion than that which he has already enjoyed.”

Upon the trial the defendants permitted the plaintiff to testify without objection to the transaction with his mother. He accordingly narrated all the facts which he recalled with regard to the agreement. His testimony abundantly supported the averments of the complaint upon that head, and he was corroborated in several particulars by other witnesses. There was clearly enough to go to the jury and to support their verdict on the issue with regard to the sale.

The real question is whether such agreement included the forgiveness and cancellation of the plaintiff’s indebtedness upon the notes set up in the counterclaim. The amount of this indebtedness was nearly $100,000. The plaintiff testified that his mother agreed ■ to pay for the business whatever was realized after the accounts were collected, and the obligations owing to different merchants paid, but that her account representing the indebtedness in question was to be excluded from consideration. The net amount ultimately realized from the business was $28,956.23, while the actual amount realized by Mrs. Smith was but about $22,000; for it seems that, after taking the business, and receiving therefrom less than $2,000 in cash, she in a short time turned it over to another son, but the consideration given by this other son was his own note for $20,000, which has never been paid. The verdict was for $22,000 and interest, so that the jury treated this latter sum as what Mrs. Smith “realized,” within the meaning of the agreement.

The defendants’ contention is that the plaintiff’s existing indebtedness remained in full force notwithstanding the sale, and that it still exists, subject only to a credit for the $22,000 so realized. On the other hand, the plaintiff contends that in excluding the existing indebtedness from consideration at the time of the sale the intention was to wipe it out as an obligation. These varying contentions present an interesting question, but, upon the whole, we think the circumstances were such as to justify its presentation to the jury. The defendants rely upon the consideration that there is no direct evidence that the indebtedness was forgiven; that, as matter of fact, the notes were not given up or physically canceled; and that, some six months prior to the sale, Mrs. Smith agreed verbally not to sue her son upon these same notes for 10 years. But, while there was no direct evidence of cancellation, there were strong circumstances from which forgiveness of the [204]*204indebtédness might properly be inferred. In the first place, the relations between the parties were not those of ordinary debtor and creditor. Mrs. Smith was the plaintiff’s mother. She had derived from her husband a fortune, which was largely accumulated in the conduct of this very business. After the death of the husband, the business was continued by the plaintiff, his brother. Clarence, and the decedent’s son-in-law, Looser; but the capital, which, in the father’s lifetime, was between $300,000 and $400,000, was now reduced to $75,000. Mrs. Smith assisted the new firm, from time to time, with advances, which finally amounted, as we have seen, to nearly $100,000; but seemingly the business did not prosper. First Looser retired: then Clarence; and in December, 1884, the plaintiff found himself alone, with a business worth less than $29,-000. It is evident that Mrs. Smith’s advances had meanwhile been sunk, and that her efforts to assist her sons to follow in their father’s footsteps had failed. She had nothing to show for her loans except unsecured acknowledgments of indebtedness in the shape of notes. These notes she never used in any manner, nor did she demand payment thereof at any time during the eight years they were in her possession. In fact, she never acted in any wise as a creditor with regard to these obligations. She seems rather to have looked upon them as representative of advancements made to her sons of their share of her estate. If she did not look upon them in this light, the provisions of the will are worse than meaningless, and her agreement to pay for the business seems quite unaccountable. Why, indeed, should she exclude her account from the consideration to be given for the business, unless she treated her son’s indebtedness merely as a mother’s advancement, to be charged against him in the ultimate disposition of her property? Why should she pay him presently whatever might be realized from the business, if this indebtedness was vital? Why not simply credit upon the larger indebtedness to her the amount to be so realized? It is no answer to this to say that she realized little or nothing because Clarence did not pay his $20,000 note. The question is, why did she agree to pay whatever might be so realized? And why, when the plaintiff, from time to time, demanded this agreed consideration, did she put him off upon the plea that Clarence had not paid her? The evidence on this head is clear and conclusive. The bookkeeper, Powell, testified that before the sale Mrs. Smith told him that she was going to purchase the plaintiff’s interest, and requested him to go over the books, and make an estimate of the value of the business, excluding her account. Clarence testified that on one occasion his mother told him that she was going to pay the plaintiff what the business was worth. Another son, Isaac, testified to a conversation with her, in which her purchase of the business from the plaintiff came up. He wanted to borrow some money from her, and .she told him she could not lend him any money, as she owed the plaintiff too much, and it would take all she had to pay him. But for another circumstance, it might be said that all this was consistent [205]*205with an intention to keep the indebtedness alive, but not to press yet awhile for payment. That other circumstance, however, points conclusively to a gift, and to the consequent exclusion of the indebtedness from consideration, at a time and under circumstances when, if deemed existent, it would naturally have been adverted to and utilized. We refer to the provision of Mrs. Smith’s will, already quoted.

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Related

In re the Estate of Macneal
174 Misc. 947 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1940)
Smith v. . Ijams
36 N.E. 343 (New York Court of Appeals, 1894)

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.Y.S. 202, 70 Hun 155, 77 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 155, 53 N.Y. St. Rep. 915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-ijams-nysupct-1893.