Von Bayer v. Ninigret Mills Co.

164 A.D. 698, 150 N.Y.S. 291, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8497
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 4, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 A.D. 698 (Von Bayer v. Ninigret Mills Co.) 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
Von Bayer v. Ninigret Mills Co., 164 A.D. 698, 150 N.Y.S. 291, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8497 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

The plaintiff has recovered a commission of two and a half per cent less certain credits, for amounts advanced, on the theory that pursuant to a contract of employment he procured a party ready, willing and able to make a loan of $50,000 to [699]*699the defendant. On a former trial plaintiff recovered on substantially the same basis, but the judgment was reversed and a new trial granted by this court. (149 App. Div. 578.) We held that the evidence then before the court failed to show that the plaintiff established a cause of action, and that the defendant had withdrawn its proposition to plaintiff to obtain a loan before there was an unqualified acceptance thereof by the party plaintiff claimed to have procured; and we also held that the preponderance of the evidence showed that the party was unwilling to make the loan unless subscriptions for the bonds of the company, which were to be issued to him for the loan, were first obtained.

The general nature of the case is sufficiently stated in the opinion of the court on the former appeal. The evidence with respect tb the agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant is the same as on the former appeal. The original complaint was fOr $20,000 damages for terminating the contract before the plaintiff was able to perform it, by which the plaintiff lost the benefit of the agreement and his time, to his damage in the sum claimed; but the first trial and recovery were had on the theory of commissions, without amending the complaint. We commented on this on the former appeal, and on the last trial the complaint was amended so as to claim com- ■ missions earned as for full performance. The first recovery was on the theory that the plaintiff procured one Sutro, who was ready, able and willing to make the loan, and that he tendered the money or a certified check, but that it was refused. We held that the evidence failed to show a tender, and that Sutro had only conditionally agreed to make the loan. On the new trial no evidence was offered with respect to a tender. On the former trial the plaintiff did not testify that he had notified the defendant before it withdrew its proposition that Sutro had accepted the proposition and was ready, able and willing to make the loan, and had authorized him to arrange a meeting for closing. On that trial, with respect to this, he merely testified that he arranged for an appointment between Sutro and the officers of the company, and that “there was a closing arranged at Mr. Sutro’s office,” and that he and Sutro were there but that no one appeared for the [700]*700defendant; that he telephoned to the defendant’s office, and its sales agent told him that the deal was off" and that the company had decided that it was not a money making proposition, and that he was requested to go to the defendant’s office with a view to making another arrangement; that he did go to the office and at his request a meeting was arranged for next day at Sutro’s office; that pursuant to this appointment the secretary and sales agent of the defendant met him and Sutro, and the secretary explained that the reason the company had determined to abandon the negotiations was, in effect, that instead of obtaining a straight loan, as was originally intended, the plan had resolved itself into an arrangement for underwriting the bonds in advance for the protection of Sutro, in which the company, through its officers and creditors, was to participate, which the company had decided was not a good business proposition and had, therefore, determined to abandon it, and that thereupon, without tendering money or a check, or saying that he would do so, Sutro asked the secretary if his certified check for $50,000 would be accepted, and the secretary and sales agent said that they would not take the check if offered. On the new trial, with respect to that interview, Sutro testified ■that he stated that he was ready, able and willing to make the loan, and that the representatives of the defendant refused to proceed further, and he was corroborated by the plaintiff; but the defendant’s representatives testified that Sutro refused to make the loan.

On the former trial it appeared that Sutro was unwilling to advance any money, and that he and the plaintiff entered into an arrangement by which it was expected that the money that he was to loan to the. defendant would be procured from subscribers to the bonds, and to that end he engaged plaintiff to go to Mystic, Conn., where the plant of the company was, and there obtain from officers, stockholders and creditors of the company and from others, subscriptions for the bonds on the understanding that ten per cent of the bonds, which Sutro was to receive from the defendant as a bonus, and fifty-one per cent of the stock, which he was also to receive as a bonus, were to be divided between him and the plaintiff and the subscribers [701]*701for the bonds, and that pursuant to that arrangement plaintiff negotiated with lien creditors of the defendant to take bonds in payment of their claims and obtained certain subscriptions for bonds, and that the defendant co-operated in obtaining such subscriptions. On the new trial the plaintiff testified that he induced subscriptions for bonds on an offer that the subscribers would receive from twenty-five to one hundred per cent of the amount of bonds subscribed in capital stock of the company; and some of the subscriptions, which are in writing, expressly show this, and others show it by a provision that the subscriptions were upon conditions or understandings verbally agreed upon between the subscribers and the plaintiff. Sutro, by his testimony in the record now before the court, denies that he agreed to share any part of his stock with the subscribers for bonds, and according to the testimony of the plaintiff in this record, he did not know whether the stock he had agreed to give the subscribers was to come from the stock to be given to Sutro as a bonus, or from the remaining forty-nine per cent of the capital stock of the company, or from'what source it was to come. There was no agreement on the part of the defendant to furnish or to deliver any stock other than the fifty-one per cent which was to go to Sutro as a bonus. Sutro testified that his purpose in exacting a bonus of fifty-one per cent of the capital stock of the company was to obtain actual stock control of the company, and that he intended to retain such control. It is manifest that the subscriptions for the bonds, which ran to the plaintiff, could not have been enforced without the delivery of the stock to the subscribers pursuant to the agreements made with them by the plaintiff, and inasmuch as defendant was not obliged to furnish the stock, and Sutro, according to his testimony, would not have done so, the subscriptions for the bonds would not have accomplished the purpose intended by Sutro. According to the testimony of Sutro he was ready, able and willing to deliver $50,000 to a trust company which it was expected would take the mortgage to secure the bonds; but he did not offer to defendant, or any one representing it, to do so, and he testified that he expected that the trust company, before paying ■over the money to the defendant, would pass upon the validity [702]*702of the subscriptions for the bonds which the plaintiff had obtained, and he would not have authorized the trust company to pay over the money to the defendant unless it found that the subscriptions were valid and enforcible, for he expected to be reimbursed from that source.

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164 A.D. 698, 150 N.Y.S. 291, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/von-bayer-v-ninigret-mills-co-nyappdiv-1914.