Van Beuren v. Wotherspoon

12 A.D. 421
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 12 A.D. 421 (Van Beuren v. Wotherspoon) 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
Van Beuren v. Wotherspoon, 12 A.D. 421 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Williams, J.

The action was brought to procure the valuation of certain lots and of the buildings thereon in the city of New York. The facts, so far as we need to refer to them here, are as follows : March 2, 1874, Mary S. Yan Beuren and Caroline Hoppoclc entered into a written agreement, under seal, wherein Mrs. Yan Beuren, party of the first part, leased to Mrs. Hoppock, party of the second part, the [422]*422lot in question for twenty-one years from March 1, 1874, at the yearly rent of $1,000, payable half yearly on the first days of March and September. The agreement contained the following provisions, among cithers: At the expiration of the term hereby granted, the said party of the first part, her heirs or assigns, shall have the full liberty and choice • either to grant a renewal of this lease for the further term of twenty-one years thence ensuing, at such annual rent, payable half yearly (but not less than the rent of the last preceding term), as shall be agreed upon by the said parties, their heirs, executors, administrators or assigns, respectively. * * * And in the event ofj their not agreeing upon ¡such rent, each party shall choose a disinterested person to ascertain the same, which persons so chosen shall themselves, respectively, be owners in fee simple of one or more lots of land in the neighborhood of the one hereby demised, and shall, mJmaking their award or determination, in the said premises,, undpr odth, appraise and value the said lot of land hereby demised, at its full and fair worth or price at private sale, considering the same as; an unincumbered vacant lot; and five, per cent on the amount of their said ¡appraisement or valuation shall be the annual rent of the said lot of land for such further term; and in case the arbitrators should differ in the amount of their appraisement or valuation, a's aforesaid, they shall then choose an .umpire, qualified as aforesaid, whose decision, under oáth, shall fix ' and determine the same. * * * Or to pay unto the said party of the second, part, her executors, administrators or assigns, the value of the front building now ¡thereon, or its substitute of similar character, if then standing, which value shall be ascertained by three disinterested persons, to be chosen as aforesaid. * * ■ * It is expressly understood that the party of the first part, her heirs and assigns, shall not be required to make her or their election in any case provided by this lease, until both the valuations herein provided shall have been made, unless the valuation be prevented by the fault of the lessor, her heirs or assigns, or her or, their arbitrator.”

Caroline ITo.ppock went into possession and occupied the lot, under this agreement, until her death November 23, 1890. She. left a will under which her interest in the lot and buildings and the agreement in question vested in the defendants, '.'either directly or by other wills or conveyances. Mary S. Van Beuren died August 9, 1894, and her [423]*423interest in the lot and buildings and agreement vested in the plaintiffs. Before the term of the lease or agreement expired, and as a result of negotiation between the parties, there was a failure to agree upon the value of the lot or buildings, and in February, 1895, each party selected an arbitrator, under the agreement, the plaintiffs selecting Mr. Jackson and the defendants Mr. Whitridge. March 4, 1895, two days after the expiration of the term, the arbitrators proceeded to act, and made efforts to agree with each other; and, finally, and in July, 1895, it was determined that they could not agree. The plaintiffs’ arbitrator appraised the lot at $100,000 and the building at $15,000. The defendants’ arbitrator appraised the lot at $80,000 and the building at $40,000. Thereupon, the plaintiffs’ arbitrator, under date of July 24, 1895, wrote the defendants’ arbitrator, sending a list of names of persons, proposed by him, from which to select the umpire, and a blank appointment, asking him to select one of the names, insert it in the blank, sign and return for the signature of plaintiffs’ arbitrator that day, so that the appointment could be made before he left for Upper Saranac lake to be gone several weeks. Fo answer was made to this letter until the next year, June, 1896.

Early in August, 1895, defendants’ arbitrator met with an accident and became seriously ill and unable to attend to any business. In October, 1895, as soon as he was able to be about, he went abroad and did not return until the middle .of May, 1896. In the meantime, and September 25,1895, plaintiffs’ attorneys wrote to defendants’ attorneys calling attention to the fact that the letter of July 24, 1895, by plaintiffs to defendants’ arbitrator had not been answered, and notifying him that this was a delay in the proceedings on the part of defendants’ arbitrator, and asking if he meant to refuse to proceed in the arbitration. To this letter defendants’ attorney replied September 27, 1895, informing plaintiffs’ attorney of the accident to and sickness of defendants’ arbitrator, and saying that he did not refuse to proceed, but was most anxious to go on with the arbitration, and would inquire as to the condition of defendants’ arbitrator and ascertain how soon it would be possible to proceed. October 2,1895, the plaintiffs’ attorney, by letter, asked defendants’ attorney to submit names for an umpire. October 3, 1895, defendants’ attorney wrote plaintiffs’ attorney that the agreement permitted the arbitrators to [424]*424appoint the umpire irrespective of the wishes of the parties, and that he could not speak for the defendants’ arbitrator; that so far as his clients were concerned any one of four persons, whose names he mentioned, would be agreeable; that he did not, by sending the names, intend to make any formal submission of names that would bind defendants’ arbitrator; and as the proceeding could not go on in the absence of the arbitrator it was useless to submit any names then. To this letter plaintiffs’ attorney replied, agreeing to accept one of the gentlemen whose names were submitted by defendants’ attorney, viz., Mr. Wickersham, as umpire, on condition that defendants would proceed at once before him alone, without either arbitrator, to determine the value of the lot and buildings; that plaintiffs’ arbitrator informed them two' days before, that defendants’ arbitrator had gone to Europe on account of his ill-health, and that their clients would not consent that the arbitration should stand over until defendants’ arbitrator was able. to proceed, but would consent that the papers appointing Mr. Wickersham umpire be signed by defendants or their attorney with the same force and effect as if signed by defendants’ arbitrator himself. On the same day defendants’ attorney wrote plaintiffs’ attorney that neither he nor his clients felt authorized or willing in the absence of their arbitrator to agree in his behalf upon an umpire, and certainly were unwilling to proceed before the umpire in the absence of their arbitrator; that, as he, the' -¡attorney, understood the law, the presence of each arbitrator was necessary to the validity of the proceeding, the agreement providing that the value of the building shall be ascertained by three disinterested persons, to be chosen as aforesaid ; that he regretted the delay, but that neither party could be prejudiced, as his clients were entitled to the possession ’of the premises, as tenants from year to year. October 31, 1895, plaintiffs’, attorney replied to the letter of defendants’ attorney of October 11,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 A.D. 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-beuren-v-wotherspoon-nyappdiv-1896.