White v. . Reed

26 N.E. 1037, 124 N.Y. 468, 36 N.Y. St. Rep. 479, 79 Sickels 468, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1386
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 17, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 N.E. 1037 (White v. . Reed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. . Reed, 26 N.E. 1037, 124 N.Y. 468, 36 N.Y. St. Rep. 479, 79 Sickels 468, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1386 (N.Y. 1891).

Opinion

Bradley, J.

The plaintiff, Horatio Reed and Charles White, were equal partners in business from 1862 to August 4, 1876, when plaintiff sold out his interest to his partners. The plaintiff in 1881 brought this action against Reed and White to set aside the sale on the ground of allegeá fraud and for an accounting, with a view to the recovery of an additional sum by way of capital and profits. The court determined that the allegation of fraud was sustained, and by interlocutory decree set aside the sale and directed an accounting, which was had before a referee, upon whose report judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff for upwards of one hundred thousand dollars. That judgment was reversed by the General Term and a new accounting directed before another referee. (23 J. & S. 417.) - It was had and resulted in a report and judgment against the plaintiff for upwards of eight thousand dollars. The latter judgment was affirmed. This appeal is from that affirmance and from the order reversing the judgment entered upon the first report. The interlocutory judgment, and the facts and conclusions of law found by the court directing it, remain undisturbed and effectual as the ‘determination of the rights and liabilities of the parties,- so far as they are *471 dependent upon such decree. The business of the firm was. large and consisted of buying live hogs in Chicago and shipping them to the city of New York, where they were slaughtered and the product disposed of. The plaintiff resided in Chicago and had charge of buying and shipping the hogs to New York, where they were received by Reed and White, who had entire charge of the business there, and kept the books representing the accounts of the firm. In fact New York was its place of business. In June, 1872, Reed entered into a secret arrangement with one Bate to sell and deliver to the latter, from day to day in the name of the firm, a large quantity of slaughtered hogs, to be disposed of by Bate for the joint profit of him and Reed to the exclusion of the firm. To accomplish this a formal agreement was made between them on the one part and certain persons of the other part, whereby the latter agreed to make advances and take dressed hogs on terms particularly mentioned; and the firm of Charles White & Co. made sales and deliveries to Bate up to February eighth following of over three million pounds of dressed hogs amounting to $186,761.58. In June, when such arrangement wag made, Bate was indebted to the firm $24,722.71, and was then insolvent, of which Reed was advised when he entered into the agreement with him; and when the business with Bate was closed in February, 1873, his indebtedness to the firm had increased to $44,735.74. In August, 1876, the plaintiff expressed to Reed and White dissatisfaction with the conduct of the business in New York, and especially with the loss occasioned by the indebtedness of Bate, and he proposed to sell his interest in the firm for a sum certain. After some negotiation he sold out to Reed and White and agreed to take in cash and notes about $27,000, and one-third interest in certain real estate at a valuation of about $30,000, making together $57,000 for his interest. At that time a balance sheet was taken from the books which showed his credit balance- to be $70,818.40; and to induce him to make the sale for an amount less than such balance, the defendants represented to the plaintiff that the Bate account was of no value and ought *472 not to be taken into account. The court found that the representations in that respect were false to the knowledge of Reed, and were made with fraudulent intent on his part to induce the plaintiff to sell his interest for less than its value, and with the fraudulent intent of concealing from him the true state of the affairs of the firm to his disadvantage. The value of the indebtedness of Bate was in the liability of Reed to account to the firm founded upon his secret arrangement before mentioned with Bate; and in that view the interlocutory decree directed that in the accounting Reed be charged with the value of the merchandise delivered to Bate by the firm after June 15, 1872, and credited with payments made by him to the firm. The further direction for the accounting given by the interlocutory decree, was that the defendants account for the disposition by them of the partnership assets which were in their possession on August 4, 1876; and that an accounting be had between the parties in respect to their several interests in the assets or their proceeds, or in the amounts for which the defendants might be chargeable in their disposition of them; that an account be taken of the assets and liabilities of the firm existing on that day; that the defendants file an account and the referee make an inventory of such assets and liabilities; and that he ascertain and determine what were the obligations of the defendants to the plaintiff in disposing of the partnership assets, or any of them, after the sale by him, and the amounts with which the defendants were chargeable by reason of such disposition; and that on such accounting the plaintiff be charged with all sums of money withdrawn by him or paid to him by the firm in August, 1876, also the value of all property withdrawn by or transferred to him by the firm or by the defendants at that time. The referee determined that the plaintiff received something more than he was entitled to at the time of the sale to Reed and White. This was based upon the finding made by him of the value of the firm assets at that time, and the determination that the plaintiff then received fifty-seven thousand dollars for his interest. Both of those propositions of fact are *473 •contested by the plaintiff, who insists that he did not receive and should not account for or be charged with that amount. The one-third interest in the real estate before mentioned was not. conveyed to him, but an agreement was made by White, who held the legal title for the firm, to sell it to him and to make conveyance when requested to do so. In December, 1880, the plaintiff released White from the agreement to convey, in consideration whereof Reed and White paid the plaintiff nineteen thousand dollars. The plaintiff claims that he should not be charged with the $30,000, but only with the $19,000, as of the time he received the latter sum. And this is urged on the ground that 'when the sale by him to his partners, Reed and White, was set aside, the agreement to sell and convey such interest in the real estate referred to, fell with it, and he was chargeable in that respect with only what he received upon the release of it by him and as of the time he received the consideration of his release. That view does not seem tenable, as the fraud charged had no relation to the nature of .the consideration which he received in payment for the transfer of his interest in the partnership property. Before the commencement of this action, he had released his claim under White’s agreement to sell him the land for a specific consideration paid to him. And on this subject the interlocutory decree directed that in the accounting the plaintiff should be charged with all sums of money withdrawn by him from the firm in August, 1876, “ also with the value of all property withdrawn by or transferred to him by said firm or by the defendants at that time.” The estimated value then made seems to have been the amount for which the third interest in the land was taken by the plaintiff, and there is no other evidence and no finding or request to find upon the subject of its value at that time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 N.E. 1037, 124 N.Y. 468, 36 N.Y. St. Rep. 479, 79 Sickels 468, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-reed-ny-1891.