White v. Sheppard

41 A.D. 113, 58 N.Y.S. 563
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 41 A.D. 113 (White v. Sheppard) 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
White v. Sheppard, 41 A.D. 113, 58 N.Y.S. 563 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Spring, J.:

The Rochester Realty Company, a domestic corporation, owned an apartment house called “The Centropolis,” with the furniture therein, in the city of Rochester, subject to a mortgage of $33,000. The company was in failing circumstances and suits were pending against it. On the 18tli day of January, 1896, the directors of the company held a meeting and passed the following resolutions :

“Resolved, That the president of this company be, and he is hereby authorized to sell the premises known as The Centropolis,’ together with the furniture, fixtures and other appurtenances, for the sum of $10,000, subject to the mortgage thereon for $33,000 and interest from Nov.. 1, 1895, which the grantee shall assume and agree to pay.
“ Further, Resol/oed, Upon payment of said sum that the president of the company be, and he is hereby7 authorized to sign and execute, in the name of the company, a deed of said premises and attach the seal of the company thereto, and that the secretary attest the same, such deed to contain a clause by which the grantee shall assume and agree to pay said mortgage and interest.”

In attempted performance of the authority in him vested by these resolutions, the president of the company on that day conveyed and transferred to Jessie Dn Bois the said real estate and furniture, by a deed with a bill of sale therein executed on behalf of said company by him as such president and acknowledged by him, with the corporate seal of the company attached. This deed was delivered to •Misa Du Bois on that day. Judge Struble, the president of the company, was a friend of the Du Bois family, and had, to some extent, been their legal adviser, and he arranged at that time to take possession of the property for the Du Bois, as they resided in Pennsylvania, and did in fact do so. There was, on that day, therefore, an absolute delivery of possession of the real and personal property, by virtue of the conveyance and bill of sale. While Jessie Du Bois was the grantee named in the conveyance, yet the evidence umnis[115]*115takably shows she was acting as the agent of her father, the plaintiff, and that the purchase price was paid by him ; and on this day a deed from Hiss Du Bois to her father was prepared, corresponding precisely with that by which the property in form was transferred to her, and this was subsequently acknowledged and delivered to plaintiff by her.

On the 20th day of January, 1896, the defendant Bradley Sheppard recovered three judgments, aggregating over §6,000, against said realty company, and executions on that day were issued to the sheriff of said county, and a levy was made by him on the personal property in said apartment house, and the same was subsequently sold, in pursuance of the levy, against the protest of the plaintiff ; and this action is brought, under the transfer from the realty company, to recover the value of the property claimed to have been converted by the sheriff’s sale.

The contention is that no title was acquired by the vendee, as Judge Struble exceeded his authority in executing and delivering such conveyance. The grounds urged are: 1. The conveyance is not attested by the secretary. 2. There is no assumption of the $33,000 mortgage as provided in the resolution. 3. The purchase price was not paid in cash. While these objections are established by uncontroverted testimony, yet, from the view I take of the case, they do not invalidate the conveyance or transfer of the property.

The original plaintiff, Abel Du Bois, was in Pennsylvania at the time of the passage of the resolutions and the execution and delivery of the deed, and knew nothing of the manner in which they were brought about. The daughter, while in Penn Yan, where the occurrence took place, was equally without knowledge as to the form of the resolutions or as to the real authority conferred upon the president. She accepted the deed of the realty company with the corporate signature attached by the president, with his affidavit certifying it -was in conformity to the resolutions of the board of directors of said company and with the corporate seal thereon. There is not a shred of evidence upon which any fraud can be imputed to the plaintiff or his daughter, and the acceptance of the deed, executed as aforesaid, therefore, vested the title in her. (Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Yates County National Bank, 35 App. Div. 218; Whitney v. Union Trust Co. of N. Y., 65 N. Y., 576.)

[116]*116In the consideration of the other objections we must assume the president exceeded his authority in failing to impose the payment of the prior lien as a personal obligation upon the grantee and in omitting to require the purchase price to be paid in cash, precedent to the delivery of the deed. Hiss Du Bois paid $100 by check on the day of the delivery of the deed and gave her note for $9,575,. the residue of the purchase price, after deducting the paving tax against the premises, which she assumed and paid. This note was made to the order of Struble as president of the realty company, and was payable as follows: One thousand dollars in ten days from date, $2,000 in twenty days from date, and the balance in thirty days after date. The note was paid on the twentieth day of Hay thereafter, and the entire avails went to the credit of the realty company; that is, the grantee accepted the deed, paying $10,000 for the property described therein, and said sum was used by the grantor; and yet, after it has received and retained the full purchase price, it is now sought to avoid this conveyance and transfer, without disaffirming the contract, without refunding the moneys paid by Hiss Du Bois, and without a suggestion of knowledge on her part of the defects in the conveyance which are the basis of the attack upon the transaction.

The president as such possessed the power prima facie to execute the conveyance. (Davies v. The Harvey Steel Co., 6 App. Div. 166 ; Rathbun v. Snow, 123 N. Y. 343; Powers v. Schlicht Heat, Light & Power Co., 23 App. Div. 380.)

The fact he failed to comply with the resolution did not make the conveyance absolutely void ; at best it was only voidable. (Rogers v. Pell, 154 N. Y. 518; Barr v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co., 125 id. 263, 277; Thomas v. Brownville, etc., R. R. Co., 109 U. S. 522.)

Assuming Struble exceeded his authority, the realty company could have returned to the purchaser the money she paid and demanded the return of the property sought to be transferred; this would have rescinded the transaction and would have restored the parties to their original situation. The company could not, however, keep the consideration and then nullify the conveyance. Therefore, laying aside any question of ratification by the company, there could not be any impeachment of plaintiffs ownership [117]*117of the property without a rescission of the agreement by which she acquired the deed and bill of sale. The very essence of rescission is the restoration of the parties to their previous condition as nearly as may be; and that vital prerequisite has not been done with this purchaser. But the realty company is effectually estopped from impugning this transaction, as it confirmed the excess of authority of its president by its acceptance and retention of the-money. (Sheldon Hat Blocking Co.

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Bluebook (online)
41 A.D. 113, 58 N.Y.S. 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-sheppard-nyappdiv-1899.