Williams v. . Taylor

24 N.E. 288, 120 N.Y. 244, 30 N.Y. St. Rep. 646, 75 Sickels 244, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1254
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 N.E. 288 (Williams v. . Taylor) 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
Williams v. . Taylor, 24 N.E. 288, 120 N.Y. 244, 30 N.Y. St. Rep. 646, 75 Sickels 244, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1254 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

*248 Vahtt, J.

The learned General Term based its affirmance of the judgment rendered at the circuit upon the following cases: L. O. A. & N. Y. R. R. Co. v. Mason (16 N. Y. 451); Howlcmd v. Edmonds (24 id. 301), and Tuckerman v. Brown (33 id. 297). One of the learned judges, however, in his concurring opinion, said: “ To hold that the cause of action accrued before the subsequent payments were required to be made, is not consistent with the agreement between the defendant and the company when he subscribed for the stock; * * * but the authorities cited in the opinion -* * * sustain the power of the court to disregard the terms on which the parties made the money payable, and to hold the contract to be one for the absolute payment of so much money at once. They are controlling, although they do violence to the agreement and annul the intention expressed in it.”

The same authorities were relied upon by the counsel for the respondent in his argument before us, and in addition thereto he cited the case of White v. Haight (16 N. Y. 310).

After a careful examination of these cases we recognize them as well decided, but do not think that they are applicable to the case under consideration.

In L. O., A. & N. Y. R. R. Co. v. Mason, the action was brought to recover the amount of the defendant’s subscription to the plaintiff’s articles of asssociation for twenty shares of its capital stock.” The subscription specified “ no condition of time of payment,” but th‘e act under which the plaintiff ivas incorporated provided that the directors might “ require the subscribers to the capital stock to pay the amount by them respectively subscribed in such manner and in such installments as they may deem proper.” (Laws of 1850, chap. 211, § 7.) This section further pro Added for a forfeiture of all previous payments in case of neglect to pay any installment after personal notice to the subscriber requiring him to pay at a time and place named. The section authorizing subscriptions to be made, hoAveArer, did not specify Avlien or Iioav they AArere to be paid. (Id. § 1.) The court held (p. 464) that *249 notice of calls for the payment of subscriptions was necessary only to authorize a forfeiture of the stock, and that section seven was “designed to apply exclusively to proceedings” taken for that purpose; that the obligation to pay and the time and manner of payment must be sought for in the contract itself, and that, as the subscription was to pay generally, it was payable presently, the same as a general promise to pay for goods sold or money loaned.

In White v. Haight, the defendant had given a note to- a mutual fire insurance company, whereby he -promised to pay it the sum of $500 “ in such portions and at such time or times as the directors of said company may agreeably to their act of incorporation require.” The question to be determined as stated by the court (p. 321), was whether, under the act pursuant to which the company was incorporated (Laws of 1849, chap. 308), “the note sought to be recovered is to be considered as payable absolutely, or whether it is to be taken to be a guaranty and only recoverable to the extent of a just proportion of the losses and expenses.” It was held that “the note was absolute and payable at all events, without an assess, ment,” not because it so provided, but because the statute (§ 5) pursuant to which it was given and to which it referred, so required. The decision was based wholly upon a construction of the statute and not upon the form of the note.

Howland v. Edmunds involved a note of the same kind, given under the same statute, and it holds that as the note was one required, by the charter of the company to make up its capital, the statute fastened upon it the character of an obligation payable on demand or at the mere will of the holder. The court in discussing the subject said: “ Where the thing promised is the payment of a sum of money, no actual demand will in general * * * be necessary, notwithstanding the terms of the contract, but it is, nevertheless, in the power of the parties to so frame their engagements as to make a preliminary demand essential. And so, likewise, though there be nothing in the terms of the instrument to take the case out of the general rule, the attending circumstances and the nature *250 of the duty may be such that the words which mention a demand or request will have a special significance and will require a preliminary demand to be made.” The note upon which Tuckerman v. Brown was based was the same in origin, form and purpose and in that case it was alleged and proved that an assessment had been made. (303.)

It is obvious that those cases differ essentially from the one now under review. In three of them a statute was part of the contract and controlled the decision of the court (Savage v. Medbory, 19 N. Y. 32, 33), while in the fourth the promise to pay was general, not on time, or on call, written or oral.”

The agreement that we are called upon to construe was not an ordinary stock subscription, for the stock of the company-had all been taken and paid for and was in the hands of the stockholders. For, the purpose of raising money, a part of which was to be used for working capital as it was needed, and a part paid over to themselves, they had placed 9,000 shares of their paid-up stock in the hands of a trustee, subject to the control of the directors who had ordered that a part thereof should be sold. The stockholders thereupon made a proposition to invite subscriptions for the purchase of 6,000 shares, offering it at $50 per share, and specifying the conditions of payment. The terms were that one-third was to be paid down, as soon as all the stock was taken and the remainder was to be paid in such installments as the board of trustees should call for it for the purposes of the business. The subscribers agreed to pay for their stock according to the terms set forth in said proposal, upon which they are presumed to have relied in consenting to purchase.

We think that the parties to this contract did not intend that the entire amount should be paid down, for they agreed that one-third should be paid down. Their intention in this regard would scarcely have been clearer if they had said that one-third only was to be paid down, because the provision that a part was to be paid at once necessarily implied that the remainder was not to be paid at once. By fixing a certain time for the' payment of one-tliird they excluded any obligation to *251 pay the other two-thirds at the same time. To hold otherwise would convict the parties of providing that a portion should be paid at once and the rest immediately. The large sum called for is a circumstance to be considered in this connection, as bearing upon the probable intention.

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.E. 288, 120 N.Y. 244, 30 N.Y. St. Rep. 646, 75 Sickels 244, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-taylor-ny-1890.