Snyder v. . Lindsey

52 N.E. 592, 157 N.Y. 616, 11 E.H. Smith 616, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 882
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 10, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 52 N.E. 592 (Snyder v. . Lindsey) 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
Snyder v. . Lindsey, 52 N.E. 592, 157 N.Y. 616, 11 E.H. Smith 616, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 882 (N.Y. 1899).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

Eor about two years prior to November, 1893, a large number of persons, including the plaintiffs and the defendant, owned and conducted what is known as a farmers’ co-operative store. They conducted a general mercantile business in the purchase and sale of merchandise. It was not incorporated, although it adopted by-laws and elected officers *618 in practically the same way as a ■ corporation or joint-stock association. The primary purpose of the association was to furnish to its members such goods as they needed, at a reduced price. The capital for the conduct of the' business was furnished in small sums by each member, for which he received a paper in the form of a certificate of stock, which represented his interest in the concern. It was, for all practical purposes, a mere partnership as between the members themselves and their creditors.- On the 11th day of November, 1893, the defendant Lindsey was the president and general manager of the association, and on that day, as the referee has found, he proceeded to execute and deliver to his son a chattel mortgage on all the property of the concern, which consisted of a quantity of goods then in the store. The consideration expressed in this mortgage was $1,500, said to be for money loaned to the association. The mortgage became due on the 14th of January following, and contained the usual clause permitting the mortgagee to take possession of the goods whenever lie deemed himself unsafe. The referee has found that in fact the concern did not owe the son anything, and that the mortgage was without consideration and fraudulent. On the saíne day of the execution of the mortgage the son executed to another person, who was a clerk in the store under the defendant, a bill of sale of all the goods, constituting, as already stated, the whole assets of the concern. A short time after, under some arrangement between the defendant and the party who had received the bill of sale, the defendant took possession of all the property as his own, and assumed to sell and dispose of it at public and private sale, not as the property of the association, but as the individual owner of the whole concern, in virtue of the transfer made by him to liis son, and by his son. through a bill of sale to another party, and by that party again to the defendant himself.

The referee has held that all these transfers were fraudulent ; that the defendant acquired no title to the property under them, and having sold the goods and appropriated the proceeds to his own use, that he must account for the same in *619 this action, which is brought by two members of the concern, in their own behalf and in behalf of their associates. The conduct of the defendant in thus dissolving the association and putting an end to the business was held to be wholly unauthorized.

The questions arising upon the trial of the case were mainly, in their nature, questions of fact, and the findings of the referee upon such facts having been confirmed by the General Term we have no power to interfere with them. The defendant claimed that the chattel mortgage which he executed and delivered to his son, the bill of sale by the son to a third party, and the transfer by that third party to the defendant, was with the consent of the other members of the association. But the referee found, upon sufficient evidence, that no such consent was given.

The only questions before us for review arise upon one or two exceptions taken by the defendant’s counsel upon the trial before the referee. On the trial the defendant claimed that at the time he executed the chattel mortgage his son was a creditor of the concern and the assignee of another member of the association who also claimed to be a creditor, and he sought to establish the fact that the mortgage was given as security for this debt. The facts in regard to this claim were these : It seems that the association had a number of directors, and at a meeting held on the 28th day of January, 1893, a resolution was passed in substance, as follows: That the son, who was a member of the association, and one of his neighbors named Cowden, were to invest the sum of $1,000 each in the concern, and receive for their compensation three per cent thereon. They and a clerk in the store were also to receive five per cent between them for handling and shipping farm products in car lots, and for the money so advanced they were to take one hundred shares each of the stock of the concern and share pro rata in profits with the other shareholders. They were also given the privilege to withdraw the amount so invested in the stock of the company at the end of a year, by selling goods from the store at regular rates. The resolu *620 tian also provided that a committee should be appointed to look after the printing of a constitution and by-laws and to take necessary steps for the incorporation of the concern. This resolution was recorded in a book kept for that purpose, ■and the defendant, his son and the other party so investing the money were present, and at all times had access to these records. The son and Oowden received certificates of stock in the same form as those issued to other members. The ■defendant at the trial called one of the shareholders as a witness, who testified that he was present at the meeting when this resolution was passed. The defendant’s counsel propounded to him the following question : What was said at that meeting in regard to what should be done with the money by the company ? ” This question was objected to by the plaintiff’s counsel. The objection was sustained and an exception taken. The defendant’s counsel then offered to show that this money was put in by the defendant’s son and his associate, who had assigned to him, upon different terms than the other members put money into the association, and that they were to have the privilege of selling the goods and drawing their money out in that way.” This testimony was objected to, the objection sustained by the referee and an exception taken.

The two exceptions may be considered together. It is manifest that the resolution passed by the directors, and the certificate of stock issued thereafter, represented the contract or agreement under which the defendant’s son and his assignor advanced the money to the copartnership of which they were members. It was either a loan, or an accession to their capital. They became by the transaction either lenders of money or, shareholders in the partnership. Whether they were the former or the latter may be solved by a very simple and practical test. If, after they had put in the money, the concern had made large profits, instead of losses, would they have been entitled to share in those profits beyond the stipulated or legal rate of interest? In other words, if, after this arrangement, they insisted upon sharing in the profits of the concern, *621

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Bluebook (online)
52 N.E. 592, 157 N.Y. 616, 11 E.H. Smith 616, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 882, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-lindsey-ny-1899.