Spencer v. Huntington

100 A.D. 463, 91 N.Y.S. 561
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 100 A.D. 463 (Spencer v. Huntington) 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
Spencer v. Huntington, 100 A.D. 463, 91 N.Y.S. 561 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinions

McLaughlin, J.:

This appeal is from a judgment entered on the report of a referee to whom the issues were sent to hear and determine, dismissing the complaint and from two orders, one of which denied a motion to amend the complaint and the other to send the report back to the' referee for further findings. ' - ^

The' facts are not complicated, and so far as material to the question presented are substantially as follows: In November, 1888, one John McNulta, the-original plaintiff in the action, entered into a contract under .seal with one Pardee .to sell and deliver'to him 800 shares of the stock of the San Francisco, Clear Lake and Humboldt Railroad Company, and 2,000 shares- of the Clear Lake Improvement Company, for the consideration of $32,500. At the time of the execution of the contract $14,100 was paid and the balance agreed to be paid within thirty days thereafter if certain claims which had been made against the r,ailroad and improvement com-' panics had then been satisfied. All of the. claims were not satisfied and discharged within the time specified iri the contract, but they subsequently were, and Pardee having failed and neglected to pay the balance agreed, this action was brought against Coll-is P. Hunt-' iiigton and Charles F. Crocker- to recover such sum, the' plaintiff [465]*465alleging in liis complaint that they were liable, inasmuch as it was understood and agreed at and immediately prior to the execution of the contract that Pardee acted simply as their agent. After the action had been commenced Crocker and Huntington died, but it was revived against Huntington’s executors and permitted to proceed against them alone. HcNulta also died, but an order was made permitting it to be continued in the name of the present plaintiff. During the course of the trial proof was offered tending to show that Pardee, in executing the contract, did, in fact, act for Crocker and Huntington, but the referee, as appears from his opinion, held that error was committed in this respect, and, while he permitted it to remain in the record, did not consider it in determining the rights of the parties. He held that the contract being under seal, and Huntington’s name not being referred to or mentioned therein, he or his representatives could not be compelled to respond jn damages for a breach, and he accordingly dismissed the complaint. After he had made a report to this effect, the plaintiff moved to amend the complaint, which motion was denied, as was also a motion to recommit the report for further findings, both of which orders the plaintiff seeks to review on this appeal.

■ The appeal, in so far as it is taken from these orders, is irregular, and for that reason should be dismissed. They are not intermediate orders in the sense in which that term is used in section 1316 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which enables an intermediate order to be reviewed on appeal from a final judgment. An intermediate order is one made between the commencement and termination of the action. Both orders were made after the referee had made his report, and a review, therefore, could only be had by a direct appeal from them. The filing of the referee’s report was the termination of the action, which finally and conclusively determined the rights of the parties, and nothing thereafter remained except to enter and enforce the judgment.

This brings us to a consideration of the main question, and that is whether the respondents, as the representatives of Mr. Huntington, can be held liable for the breach of a contract under seal, when his name is not mentioned or referred to therein. I am of the opinion that the conclusion reached by the referee was the proper one, and [466]*466to hold otherwise would he contrary to an unbroken line of decisions in this State. . ' ■

A case directly in point is Briggs v. Partridge (64 N. Y. 357). There the plaintiffs entered into an executory contract under seal with one Hulburd for the purchase of land. The complaint alleged that in executing the contract Hulburd acted 'as the agent of the defendants.,' Plaintiffs’ counsel, in opening the case at tlie trial, stated that the agreement on which the plaintiffs relied was in Writing ; that it was made by the plaintiffs as vendors and Hulburd. as vendee; that it did not show but that Hulburd was'a principal party, inasmuch as it was signed and sealed by him individually ; that the name of the defendant Partridge did not appear in the instrument, but that the plaintiffs would prove that Hulburd when he executed the contract, was acting solely for and under the direction of Partridge, who paid of caused to be paid .the first payment under the contract; that Hulburd was the agent and trustee of Partridge in the transaction. The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint upon the opening, which motion was granted, and in reviewing the disposition thus made the Court of Appeals, speaking through Judge Andrews, said : “Ye find no authority for the proposition that a contract under seal may be .turned into the simple contract of a person not in any way appearing on its face to be a party to or interested in it, on proof dehors the instrument that the nominal. party was acting as the agent of another, and especially in the. absence of any. proof that the alleged principal has received any" benefit from it, or has in any way ratified it, and we do not feel at liberty to extend the doctrine applied to simple contracts executed by an agent for an unnamed principal so as to embrace this case. The general rule is declared by Shaw, Ch. J., in Huntington v. Knox (7 Cush. 374): ‘Where a contract is made by deed under seal on technical grounds, no one but a party to the deed is liable to be sued upon it, and, therefore, if made by an attorney or agent it must be made in the name of the principal in order that he ...may be a party, (because otherwise he is not bound by it.”’

This case was cited With approval arid followed in Kiersted v. O. & A. R. R. Co. (69 N. Y. 343), Judge Andrews .again saying: “ The form of the lease made him the lessee, and the covenants in a deed can only be enforced against the party who, upon the face of [467]*467the instrument, is the covenantor, although it appears by extrinsic proof that he acted as the agent for another.”

In Schaefer v. Henkel (75 N. Y. 378) the rule was again announced. There an action was brought upon a lease under seal executed by “ J. Romaine Brown, agent,” as lessor, and by defendant as lessee. The action to recover the rent due was brought by the principal and not by the agent who signed the lease. Defendant had a judgment upon the ground that plaintiffs were not parties to the lease and, therefore, could not sue upon its covenants. The judgment was affirmed, Judge Miller delivering the opinion, saying : “ The plaintiffs were not parties to the lease upon which this action was brought. It was not signed by them. Their names did not appear in it and there was nothing in the lease to show that they had anything to do with or any interest in' the demised premises, or-the execution of the lease, or that it was executed in their behalf. * * * The rule seems to be quite well established, that in general an action upon a sealed instrument of this description must be brought by and in the name of a person who is a party to such instrument, and that a third person or a stranger to the instrument cannot maintain an action upon the same.

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Bluebook (online)
100 A.D. 463, 91 N.Y.S. 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spencer-v-huntington-nyappdiv-1905.