Strong v. Strong

231 A.D. 428, 247 N.Y.S. 773, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 16069
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 30, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 231 A.D. 428 (Strong v. Strong) 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
Strong v. Strong, 231 A.D. 428, 247 N.Y.S. 773, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 16069 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Merrell, J.

Plaintiff brought this action to require defendant to transfer to plaintiff fifty-one per cent of the shares of the capital stock of a corporation known as Brownie’s Block Prints, Inc., which plaintiff alleges defendant agreed to post as collateral security for the payment of an indebtedness alleged to be owing by defendant to plaintiff. The pertinent facts upon which this case arose are as follows: Plaintiff and defendant are brother and sister. Prior to January 1, 1930, plaintiff and defendant were engaged as copartners in business in designing, printing, assembling, selling and generally dealing in greeting cards, stationery and similar articles under the firm name and style of Brownie’s Block Prints, having their principal place of business at 112 East Nineteenth street, in the borough of Manhattan, New York city. By mutual consent said copartnership was dissolved on January 1, 1930, by the withdrawal of plaintiff from said firm, and the sale to defendant of the assets and all plaintiff’s right, title and interest in said business. On January 29, 1930, a dissolution agreement in writing was made and entered into by plaintiff and defendant wherein it was agreed that defendant should pay plaintiff for his interest in the business the sum of $15,500, $5,000 of which was paid upon the execution of said dissolution agreement. The dissolution agreement provided that [430]*430the balance of $10,500 should be secured by non-negotiable promissory notes, without interest, said notes to be made by a corporation known as Brownie’s Block Prints, Inc., which was to be formed to succeed said copartnership, and which notes were to be indorsed by defendant and bear even date with said dissolution agreement, each of said notes to be payable at the Corn Exchange Bank Trust Company, One Hundred and Eighty-first Street Branch, borough of Manhattan, New York city, and to be seven in number. The first of these notes was for $500, and was to mature on March 1, 1930. The second note was for $1,500, and matured May 1, 1930. The third was for $1,500, payable August 1, 1930, and the fourth was for $2,000, payable November 1, 1930. The fifth of said notes was for $1,666.67, to become payable on January 2, 1931. The sixth of said notes was for $1,666.67, to become payable February 1, 1931, and the seventh or last of said notes, for $1,666.66, was to become and be payable March 1, 1931. It was provided in the dissolution agreement that the capital stock of the corporation should consist of 100 shares, of no par value, which shares were to be issued for the exact book value of the assets, effects and property of the copartnership after deducting therefrom the amount paid and obligations assumed toward plaintiff for his interest in the copartnership and after deducting the copartnership obligations. The dissolution agreement further provided that immediately upon the issuance of the said capital stock the defendant was to deposit with the Lawyers Trust Company, or any trust company in the city of New York, as trustee, fifty-one per cent of the capital stock of said corporation, to be held by said trustee in escrow as collateral security for the payment of all of the promissory notes above referred to. By the 5th clause of said dissolution agreement it was provided: It is further covenanted and agreed that upon default in the payment of any one or all of the aforementioned promissory notes, the balance of the notes then outstanding will become immediately due and payable, * * Pursuant to such dissolution agreement the copartnership theretofore existing between the parties was dissolved, the plaintiff receiving the said seven promissory notes made by Brownie’s Block Prints, Inc., and bearing on the backs thereof the name of defendant. On March 1, 1930, when the first of said notes, for $500, was, by its terms, to be paid, the same was paid by defendant. When the second note, for $1,500, became payable on May 1, 1930, the note was not paid, and under the terms of the 5th clause of said dissolution agreement, upon such default ' in the payment of the note for $1,500 on May 1, 1930, the balance of the notes then outstanding became immediately due and pay-[431]*431ab e, not at the option of plaintiff, but absolutely. Plaintiff did not, as he might have done, thereupon bring action against defendant, as guarantor, for the sum of $10,000, balance due plaintiff under said dissolution agreement, but sued on the $1,500 note alone, which became due and payable on May 1, 1930. Judgment was recovered thereon, which was subsequently paid by defendant. Thereafter plaintiff brought action to recover the sum of $8,500, the balance due on said remaining notes. Upon motion of defendant, made at Special Term of the Supreme Court, plaintiff’s complaint was dismissed for insufficiency, and upon the specific ground that pla'ntiff, by splitting a single cause of action and suing to recover on the $1,500 note, payable May 1, 1930, had forfeited all right to recover the balance of said indebtedness as represented by the remaining five notes. Judgment was entered thereon in favor of defendant, dismissing plaintiff’s complaint in said action. An appeal was taken to this court, and the judgment and order appealed from were affirmed (231 App. Div. 814).

It is the present contention of respondent that, notwithstanding the judgment dismissing plaintiff’s complaint for the balance of the notes unpaid, plaintiff, nevertheless, may compel defendant to deliver possession of the collateral agreed to be posted, but which, in fact, never was posted, as security for the payment of a debt which has been extinguished. In so far as the maker of the notes was concerned, neither of said notes was due at the time of the commencement of said action to recover thereon. The action was brought solely by virtue of the provisions of the dissolution agreement entered into between plaintiff and defendant whereby, upon defendant’s default in the payment of the stated installments, the entire indebtedness immediately, by virtue of the acceleration clause, became due. The whole difficulty seems to have arisen from the erroneous conception by the court below that defendant was an indorser of the notes in question. As matter of fact, the defendant was never technically an indorser of said notes. The notes were signed by her by using the name of the corporation which was to be formed and which was to take over the business theretofore carried on by plaintiff and his sister, she, at the same time, writing her name across the back of each of said notes. Under well-settled law, the defendant did not thereby become an indorser of said notes, all of which were, by their terms, non-negotiable and non-interest bearing, but, at most, assumed a relation of maker or guarantor of payment of the moneys represented by the notes, upon default in the payment of either on the date when the same, by its terms, was made payable. (Richards v. Warring, 1 Keyes, 576; McMullen v. Rafferty, 89 N. Y. 456; Cromwell v. [432]*432Hewitt, 40 id. 491.) The corporation signing the notes was not a party to the dissolution contract entered into between plaintiff and defendant. This contract alone contained provisions for the acceleration and for the posting of the collateral security for the debt accelerated. There was no right of acceleration as against the corporation and at the time when the action was brought to recover the balance unpaid on said notes, neither of them was due, so far as the maker of the notes was concerned. The acceleration clause bound defendant alone. The contract providing for the acceleration was between plaintiff and defendant, and the maker of the notes was not a party thereto.

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Bluebook (online)
231 A.D. 428, 247 N.Y.S. 773, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 16069, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strong-v-strong-nyappdiv-1931.