Townsend v. Meyers

123 N.Y.S. 1075
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 123 N.Y.S. 1075 (Townsend v. Meyers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Townsend v. Meyers, 123 N.Y.S. 1075 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

DAYTON, J.

This is an action for an accounting of partnership assets of the law firm of Townsend & Meyers. Plaintiff claims that the copartnership began in January, 1902; that the proceeds of a certain retainer accepted by the defendant in June, 1902, were partnership assets; and that on the subsequent dissolution of the firm the defendant on his accounting fraudulently omitted the proceeds of the said retainer. The defendant claims that the copartnership did not begin until February 1,1902, that the retainer was his individual business, and that the proceeds thereof were not firm assets. The retainer referred to was an employment of the defendant by one Bertha Strange to collect for her a claim for damages against a certain railroad company, and was effected on January 9, 1902, although the writing evidencing the agreement was not executed until later in January. Under this contract between Bertha Strange and the defendant, the latter was to receive 50 per cent, of any amount recovered by trial, com- . promise, or otherwise, in addition to costs and disbursements. This claim was adjusted at the sum of $10,000. and $500 counsel fee, and these sums were paid to the defendant about May 19, 1902, upon a general release executed by Bertha Strange. The partnership was dissolved on June 5, 1902, by an instrument in which the plaintiff, for a recited consideration of $78, and “other valuable considerations,” agreed to assign and transfer to the defendant all his right, title, and interest in and to the business jointly owned by them, “and the fees therefor, whether due in the past or future, and any and all cases belonging to said firm”; and, in consideration of the assumption by the defendant of liability for rent of the firm’s offices, plaintiff agreed to [1077]*1077pay the defendant the sum of $15 per month during the term of the lease.

I will dispose preliminarily of the objections that the $78, consideration received by the plaintiff under the dissolution contract, was not returned, and that, the bringing of this suit having been delayed for more than a year after the plaintiff acquired knowledge of the Strange re-» tainer, he (plaintiff) is barred by laches from recovering. Neither objection is tenable. The case is one in which the $78 are concededly due to plaintiff; it is a sum to which he would be entitled irrespective of his success or failure in this action. Staiger v. Klitz, 136 App. Div. 874, 122 N. Y. Supp. 107; Kley v. Healy, 127 N. Y. 555, 28 N. E. 593. In a case for the recovery of an item fraudulently omitted from an accounting, I think the period of statutory limitation only will bar the remedy; and, if that is not so, certainly there was no unreasonable delay under all the circumstances, and the defendant was in no way prejudiced by such delay as there was. Lightfoot v. Davis, 198 N. Y. 261, 91 N. E. 582; Bosley v. Nat. Mach. Co., 123 N. Y. 550, 25 N. E. 990; Cox v. Stokes, 156 N. Y. 511, 51 N. E. 316; Treadwell v. Clark, 190 N. Y. 60, 82 N. E. 505; Id., 73 App. Div. 473, 77 N. Y. Supp. 350.

This leaves for determination a pure question of fact: Was the Bertha Strange claim a copartnership asset, which depends upon the time of the commencement of the partnership, and were the proceeds of that claim fraudulently omitted from the partnership accounting by the defendant? The plaintiff testified that in the fall of 1901 he and the defendant had many conversations with respect to the forming of a copartnership between them, which culminated in a visit by the defendant to plaintiff’s home on Long Island on December 29, 1901, at which time the partnership agreement was made. No written articles were executed, but that a partnership actually existed at some time after December 29, 1901, is conceded, and the question is: Did it begin prior to the employment of the defendant by Bertha Strange? The plaintiff relies upon his own testimony and the acts of the parties immediately after the visit of the defendant to his home on December 29, 1901. Plaintiff swore that the visit of December 29, 1901, was the only one that the defendant ever made to the former’s home, and in support of his testimony as to such visit he introduced a guest book in which it was his custom to have guests at his home write" their names, and showed the names of the defendant and his wife therein, in the handwriting of the defendant, under date December 29, 1901. The defendant at the outset swore that his first conversation with the plaintiff with respect to a partnership was on January 5, 1902, on which occasion he was at plaintiff’s home on Long Island, and he was certain that he had not visited plaintiff’s home at any other time. He was so sure of this that he remembered the smallest details of the occasion, even down to the dishes served at dinner. In support of his claim to have visited plaintiff on January 5, 1902, he introduced a. copy of a telegram procured from the telegraph company’s agent at Oyster Bay, addressed to the plaintiff and bearing the figures “5/02,”' announcing that the defendant had missed a morning train and would arrive at a later hour in the afternoon; and then, upon being con:[1078]*1078fronted with the guest book above referred to, he receded from his former position and said he made two visits to the plaintiff’s home.

The plaintiff, though at first he had no recollection of the telegram, after consulting with his wife still maintained that there was but one visit, and that the telegram was sent on that date; that is, December 29, 1901. The discrepancy in this evidence cannot perhaps be entirely explained, but that the defendant visited the plaintiff on December 29, 1901, there can be no doubt. Subsequently to this visit, or to both visits, if there were two, the parties selected offices at No. 38 Park Row, and on January 8, 1902, executed a lease therefor, “individually and as copartners composing the firm of Townsend & Meyers and the said firm of Townsend & Meyers,” for two years and three months from February 1, 1902, and on January 8, 1902, the lessor received from “Townsend & Meyers” one month’s rent for said offices from February 1 to March 1, 1902. The offices were partially occupied pending alterations therein which were begun early in January. Firm stationery and cards were ordered by Mr. Meyers and were printed and delivered before January 9, 1902. In January plaintiff transferred some business from his old firm of Townsend & Mann to the firm of Townsend & Meyers. The Bertha Strange retainer was executed after January 8, 1902, upon a printed blank form of the firm of Townsend & Meyers, the words “Townsend &” being stricken out, and the words “Sidney S;” being interpolated before the word “Meyers” therein. The cards bore date “January, 1902,” and announced that the copartnership had been formed. Defendant says that the co-partnership was to begin on February 1, 1902, and that under his agreement with the plaintiff the latter was to give up his positipn as assistant district attorney on that date; but on June 5, 1902, when the firm was dissolved upon a sudden and hurried demand by the defendant, the plaintiff still occupied his position as assistant district attorney, and the cards announcing the partnership that was not to commence until February 1, 1902, described Mr. Townsend as “assistant district attorney.”

The positions of the parties and their relations to each other before the formation of this partnership have their bearing upon the probability of their respective stories. The plaintiff was an assistant district attorney, receiving a salary of $7,500 per year, had occupied that position through several administrations of the district attorney’s office, and was a man of long experience at the bar.

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Related

Kley v. . Healy
28 N.E. 593 (New York Court of Appeals, 1891)
Bosley v. National MacHine Co.
25 N.E. 990 (New York Court of Appeals, 1890)
Cox v. . Stokes
51 N.E. 316 (New York Court of Appeals, 1898)
Treadwell v. . Clark
82 N.E. 505 (New York Court of Appeals, 1907)
Lightfoot v. . Davis
91 N.E. 582 (New York Court of Appeals, 1910)
Treadwell v. Clark
73 A.D. 473 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1902)
Staiger v. Klitz
136 A.D. 874 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 N.Y.S. 1075, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/townsend-v-meyers-nysupct-1910.