Stokes v. . Polley

58 N.E. 133, 164 N.Y. 266, 2 Bedell 266, 1900 N.Y. LEXIS 883
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 2, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 58 N.E. 133 (Stokes v. . Polley) 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
Stokes v. . Polley, 58 N.E. 133, 164 N.Y. 266, 2 Bedell 266, 1900 N.Y. LEXIS 883 (N.Y. 1900).

Opinions

Landon, J.

The defendant excepted to the denial of his request to go to the jury, and to the direction of a verdict for the plaintiff; also to the exclusion of evidence offered by him. The questions of law thus presented are before us for review.

The controversy is over two notes of $15,000 each which the defendant agreed to deliver to the plaintiff, but which he in fact delivered to James D. Leary, and the main issue upon the trial was whether the plaintiff had authorized and directed such delivery, or, if he had done so, whether he recalled or countermanded the direction before the defendant actually delivered the notes to Leary.

The written agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant, to which James D. Leary, Daniel J. Leary and It. T. McDonald were also parties, required the defendant to pay to tjie plaintiff $25,000 in cash, and the further sum of $115,000 in seven notes to be made by the defendant and guaranteed by the Learys and McDonald upon plaintiff’s delivery to the defendant of 1,300 shares of the capital stock of the Hoffman House. This agreement was made and bore date September 27, 1897. The plaintiff delivered the shares of stock to the defendant September 28, 1897.

The complaint alleges that the plaintiff had then already received the $25,000 from the defendant, but that the defendant had not made or delivered any of the notes to the plaintiff, but. did thereafter deliver to him, first, one note for *269 $30,000, and next, the four other notes aggregating $55,000, but failed and refused to deliver to him the two notes, one at six months and one at eight months, each for $15,000, and hence the plaintiff asks judgment for $30,000 and interest.

The defendant’s answer is that “it was understood and agreed at or about the time when the shares of stock were delivered as set forth in the complaint, that all the notes referred to therein should be delivered to James D. Leary, referred to in said complaint as the representative and agent of the plaintiff, and the defendant was directed to and did deliver them to said Leary by the authority and direction and with the knowledge of the plaintiff; ” and also alleges that “said delivery was made to the plaintiff through his representative and agent, James D. Leary, who received them from the defendant by the direction and authority of the plaintiff.”

The written contract and the seven notes were prepared at the Hoffman House on the 25th of September, 1897, at a meeting of all the parties to the contract except the defendant, who was not present. The parties, except the defendant, then signed the contract, and the two Learys and McDonald indorsed the notes. The Learys retained the possession of the notes and contract, and on September 27th presented the contract to the defendant and he then signed it.

The 1,300 shares, of stock, the subject of the sale, were then held by the Chemical Bank as collateral to a loan of $30,000 made by the bank to the plaintiff. On the next day the bank delivered the stock to the plaintiff upon Mr. J. D. Leary’s promise to replace it with the $30,000 note, one of the seven - notes mentioned in the written contract. The plaintiff then delivered the stock to the defendant on Mr. J. D. Leary’s promise to plaintiff to procure the notes. The notes were not signed that day because they were in the custody of David J. Leary, who was not present, • but the note for $30,000 was signed by the defendant the next morning, September 29th, at the Hoffman House. The defendant testified that he received it from James D. Leary, signed it, then *270 handed it to Mr. Leary, who handed it to the plaintiff. The defendant further testified that the plaintiff then and there told him to give the balance of the notes to Mr. Leary, and that the plaintiff also told him at the Chemical Bank to give the balance of the notes to Mr. Leary when they were signed, and that the plaintiff there told Mr. Leary to keep the notes. The plaintiff did not contradict this testimony, and it was corroborated by other witnesses. The four notes, aggregating $55,000, were subsequently signed and deposited with the Knickerbocker Trust Compahy.

The defendant offered evidence tending to prove an agreement between the plaintiff and Leary by which Leary was to receive these two notes from the defendant and hold them as indemnity against his and D. J. Leary’s liability as sureties for the plaintiff as receiver of the Hoffman House corporation and also as sureties in an action against the corporation itself, and also to show the extent of that liability and how the plaintiff’s sale of this stock without some resulting indemnity would increa.se the risk assumed by the Learys. The evidence was excluded.

The Appellate Division sustained the exclusion because such a defense was not pleaded and because it was an attempt to vary by parol a written instrument under seal.

I do not think either ground tenable. If such an agreement existed it would account for the direction alleged by the defendant to have been given by the plaintiff to him to deliver the notes to Mr. Leary and thus add' credibility to the defendant’s testimony that the plaintiff did give him such a direction. If the plaintiff and Leary had made such an agreement, then the plaintiff’s direction to the defendant was an obvious consequence of it.

The court, in excluding evidence of the agreement between Stokes and Leary by which Leary was to receive the two notes, excluded the evidence tending to prove the agency of Leary to receive them, as between Leary and the plaintiff. Clearly the defendant would make a stronger case if, in addition to proving the agency as between plaintiff and himself, *271 he should prove it as between the plaintiff and Leary. It was not necessary to plead the plaintiff’s separate agreement with Leary, since it was not a defense, but it was a circumstance corroborative of the evidence which supported the real defense, namely, that defendant delivered the notes to Mr. Leary as the plaintiff told him to do. It was not necessary to plead the corroborative evidence.

The argument to support • a variance of the written agreement by the parol evidence will not bear scrutiny. It is true that the written agreement provides that the plaintiff shall deposit $55,000 of the notes with the Knickerbocker Trust Company to indemnify the two Learys and McDonald against their liability as sureties upon the plaintiff’s appeal bond in an action then pending upon appeal against him, but this agreement is in consideration of their guaranteeing all the notes — seven of them — aggregating $115,000. No doubt this guaranty was important, and it was also important to be able to show that it was made upon sufficient consideration, and, therefore, it was proper to insert it in the agreement. This written agreement left the plaintiff free to dispose of the other notes and of the cash part of the consideration of his sale of stock to whom he pleased and in any way he pleased, and if, before the written agreement or after it, he provided for such disposition, he simply provided for dealing with his own after it should become such ; that is to say, he appointed Leary to receive the notes and notified the defendant, thus making defendant’s delivery to Leary delivery to himself.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 N.E. 133, 164 N.Y. 266, 2 Bedell 266, 1900 N.Y. LEXIS 883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stokes-v-polley-ny-1900.