Thompson v. Thompson

232 A.D. 488, 250 N.Y.S. 433, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13858

This text of 232 A.D. 488 (Thompson v. Thompson) 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
Thompson v. Thompson, 232 A.D. 488, 250 N.Y.S. 433, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13858 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Martin, J.

In this action the prayer for judgment demands the cancellation of both a contract and a release of dower executed by the plaintiff, and the return of 900 shares of the stock of Thompson & Norris Company, which company was dissolved after the action was commenced.

The court at Special Term rendered a money judgment against the defendant for the difference between the amount which the court found to be the fair market value of 900 shares of Thompson & Norris Company stock sold by the plaintiff to the defendant under the terms of the contract, and the price paid by the defendant to the plaintiff for such stock.

The complaint alleges that the parties hereto were married on October 23, 1913; that the plaintiff was the owner of 900 shares of stock of Thompson & Norris Company, a New Jersey corporation; that the defendant was an officer and director of that company; that he had full knowledge of the worth and value of its stock, and had access to the books, accounts and financial statements of the company; that the plaintiff did not have any knowledge or information of such value, and did not have access to such books and financial statements; that defendant falsely and fraudulently represented to plaintiff that the stock was of the value of not more than $75 a share, and that her dower interest in real estate owned • by the defendant was of the value of not more than $6,000, whereas the stock had a value of not less than $125 a share, and her dower a value of not less than $15,000; that such representations were made by the defendant knowing them to be untrue and with intent to deceive and mislead the plaintiff, and with the intent [490]*490to induce her to forbear making inquiries as to the value of the stock and the value of her dower rights; and that she was induced thereby to execute the agreement and transfer the stock and deliver the release of dower.

It is also set forth that by reason of the relations between the parties and the trust and confidence of the plaintiff in the defendant, her then husband, and by reason of her trust and confidence in his superior knowledge as to the value of the said stock and as to the value of the said dower rights, plaintiff was induced to and did rely upon the said representations and was thereby induced to and did forbear making any inquiries as to the value of the said stock and dower rights except as to the information furnished by plaintiff. __

It was admitted that the plaintiff received from the defendant $83,000, which sum she offers to return, with interest, upon the return to her of the 900 shares of stock and the release of dower. The plaintiff says she has no adequate remedy at law. The complaint demands judgment solely that the contract be canceled, the stock returned to her and the release of dower be declared void.

Evidence was produced upon the trial to the effect that in 1914, about a year after the parties hereto were married, the defendant husband made generous gifts to the plaintiff wife, including premises 1904 Foster avenue, in the borough of Brooklyn, city of New York, and certain furniture and stock, among which stock were 225 shares of Thompson & Norris Company, 160 first preferred United States Rubber, 25 preferred American Car and Foundry, 20 P. C. C. & St. L., 25 Western Union and 52 Southern Pacific. In consideration of these gifts the plaintiff executed and published her will wherein she devised to the defendant the premises above mentioned and bequeathed to him all the household furniture, all chattels of which she might be the owner at the time of her death, except jewelry and wearing apparel, and all the said stock, and in case they should be sold, the proceeds thereof, or the securities in which such proceeds should have been invested. The defendant was appointed sole executor. Simultaneously with the execution of the will the plaintiff entered into a contract with the defendant whereby she agreed not to revoke said will, which contract contains the recital that the gifts were made upon the understanding that she would immediately execute and publish a will wherein she should devise and bequeath to the defendant all the property aforesaid.

Thereafter the defendant made further gifts to plaintiff of bonds of the' Edison Portland Cement Company, which she sold for $67,000, sixty-one shares of Maltine Manufacturing Company of [491]*491London, nineteen shares Cosmopolitan Land Company, fifty shares Shinneeock Bay Realty Company, thirty shares G. W. Hornich Company, and twenty-five shares of Emerson & Norris Company, on which last-mentioned stock in one year she received dividends amounting to $1,900. After making these gifts the defendant had left only two hundred and twenty-five shares of Thompson & Norris Company, twenty shares of the Thompson & Norris Company of Canada, a one-eighth interest in a ranch in California, which interest he afterwards sold for between $11,000 and $12,000, and a one-eighth interest in real estate in New York having an aggregate value of about $60,000.

The Thompson & Norris Company thereafter declared a stock dividend and the plaintiff, as the holder of record of 225 shares, received an additional 675 shares, making 900 shares of that company standing in her name, but in which, under her contract and will, the defendant had an equitable interest. The defendant claimed that the gift of Thompson & Norris Company stock was made upon the express promise of the plaintiff that she would give him an irrevocable power of attorney to vote the stock; but the plaintiff, upon advice of counsel, refused to do so.

In November, 1925, the plaintiff decided to get a divorce and retained counsel to arrange a financial settlement, stating that she was worried for fear the Thompson & Norris Company might pass its dividend. Her attorney called up the attorney for the defendant to arrange a conference. After negotiations had been carried on for some time the plaintiff’s attorney proposed that the defendant buy the Thompson & Norris Company stock and was told that as the plaintiff had been given nearly everything defendant owned he was without means to buy the stock. The matter was then presented to an uncle of the defendant, and various conferences were held between the attorneys for the purpose of fixing a price. These conferences were without result, but the defendant’s attorney wrote plaintiff’s attorney under date of February 24, 1926, as follows: In reply to yours of the 18th instant I beg to say that the stockholder with whom I have been negotiating for the purchase of the 900 shares of stock of the Thompson & Norris Company will not pay $88,250 for the same. * * *

“ The only offer I can submit, therefore, is to pay $80,000.00 for the stock and to allow Mrs. Thompson $5,000.00 additional in lieu of alimony. If Mrs. Thompson prefers to keep the stock, I will agree to an allowance of $10,000.00 in lieu of alimony, all contracts between the parties to be canceled and she to release her inchoate right of dower. These are the best terms I can concede, and I cannot entertain any counter-offer.”

[492]*492Upon the receipt of this letter the plaintiff’s attorney showed it to plaintiff and informed her that this was an alternative proposition and that she could either take the $85,000 for the stock or she could keep the stock and get $10,000; he also told her she need not sell the stock if she did not wish to do so. She said she would think the matter over.

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Bluebook (online)
232 A.D. 488, 250 N.Y.S. 433, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-thompson-nyappdiv-1931.