Wright v. . Storrs

32 N.Y. 691
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 32 N.Y. 691 (Wright v. . Storrs) 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
Wright v. . Storrs, 32 N.Y. 691 (N.Y. 1865).

Opinion

Davies, J.

The defendant, Storrs, is the survivor of the firm of D. Burgess & Go., and the defendant Paine is the administrator of the deceased member of the firm,'D. Burgess. The action is commenced to recover the indebtedness of the firm to the plaintiff for moneys loaned, &c. ISTo objection was taken to the defendants, or to two causes of action being united in one suit, and none is now made.

The judge who tried the action, without a jury, found the ' following facts:

That before, on and after the 23d day of February, 1856, Daniel Burgess and the defendant Storrs were copartners, carrying on the business of booksellers and publishers, in the city of Sew York, under the firm of Daniel Burgess & Go.; that on or about the 23d of February, 1856, the said firm and the plaintiff entered into an agreement of that date mentioned in the case, and that under said agreement the plaintiff advanced several sums óf money to said firm, amounting in the aggregate, with interest thereon to June 14, 1856, to $14,043.63. By the terms of this agreement, Burgess & Co., ás security for said moneys, assigned to the plaintiff two contracts made by them with one Tower, of Boston, Mass., and the stereotype plates in the said contracts mentioned.

That the plaintiff* also, under said agreement, entered into the employment of said firm, and continued in such employment *692 up to the time of the death of said Burgess, on the 13th of May, 1856, and was afterwards in the employment of the defendant Paine as administrator, until July 1, 1856, and for his services in such employment he had been fully paid. That on the 29th of April, 1856, the said Burgess and the defendant Storrs entered into an agreement set out in the case. That by the terms of that agreement the said firm was to be dissolved on the 1st day of May, 1856, and said Burgess agreed to purchase all the property, effects and assets of said firm, and to assume and pay all the debts and liabilities thereof, and to indemnify and save harmless the said Storrs therefrom in all respects. That no notice of said last mentioned agreement was given, nor was the same known to the plaintiff until some time after the death of said Burgess, and before said Paine was appointed such administrator. That said Burgess died on the 13th day of May, 1856, and said Paine was appointed administrator on the 5th of June, 1856. That on the 6th of June, 1856, the defendant Storrs executed to the defendant Paine the agreement of that date, as set out in the case, and that by the terms thereof the said Storrs assigned to said administrator all his right, title and interest of, in or to the property or assets of said firm.

That on the execution of the agreement of February 23d, 1856, the two contracts therein mentioned with Tower, made by said firm of Burgess & Go., were immediately delivered into the actual possession of said plaintiff, who has ever since, and still holds the same. And that before and at the time of making said last mentioned agreement, the stereotype plates therein mentioned were in the possession of one Alvord,- a printer in said city, and that after the making of-said agreement, the plaintiff gave notice thereof to said Alvord, and he gave the plaintiff a receipt for said plates, to the effect that said plates were received from the plaintiff and were subject to his order.

That on the 16th day of June, 1856, the defendant Paine, as such administrator, and said Tower and Walker, entered into an agreement of that date, as set forth in the case, by the terms whereof said Paine, as administrator, sold and *693 assigned said two contracts between Burgess & Go. and Tower, and said stereotype plates (subject to the lien or interest of said plaintiff, Wright, therein), to said Tower and Walker, who, in consideration thereof, assumed and agreed to pay to said Wright said indebtedness of Burgess & Co. to him, amounting to §14,043.62, with interest from June 14, 1856. On the 18th of June, 1856, by an agreement of that date, reciting the two contracts between Burgess •& Co. and Tower, and the said agreement between Burgess & Co. and Wright, said Tower and Walker sold and assigned to the firm of Sanborn, Carter & Bazin, of Boston, the said two contracts between Burgess & Go. and Tower, and the said stereotype plates, subject to the rights and claims of the plaintiff, Wright, therein, under said agreement of 23d of February, 1856. "And said Sanborn, Carter and Bazin agreed to' pay said Wright said sum of $14,043.32 and interest, in semi-annual payments.

That on the said 18th day of June, 1856, the plaintiff and said Sanborn, Carter & Bazin entered into and executed an agreement of this date, whereby, after reciting 'all the above mentioned contracts, and also reciting that the plaintiff held the two contracts so assigned to him, and had the said stereotype plates in his actual possession, and that Sanborn, Carter & Bazin had acquired the rights of Burgess & Go. therein, subject to the rights and claims' of the plaintiff in and to said two contracts, and said plates as security as aforesaid, the payment of which moneys had been assumed by said Sanborn, Carter & Bazin, it was witnessed, that in consideration of the premises and of one dollar, and in consideration of the plaintiff permitting Sanborn, Carter & Bazin to use said stereotype plates, they, the said Sanborn, Carter & Bazin, agreed to pay the said debt due to the plaintiff, in semi-annual installments, by notes at four months, until the whole sum due was paid, the plaintiff to retain possession of said two contracts and of said plates, but to permit them to use said plates, and reserving to himself the right to repossess the same upon any breach of said contract. That on the 18th of June, 1856, the said Cornelius Walker exe *694 cnted and delivered to the plaintiff, under seal, a guarantee for the payment of his debt, by said Sanborn, Garter & Bazin, within two years and six months, and promising to pay any balance due at the expiration of that time. And the said justice further found, that on said 18th day of June, 1856, the plaintiff made an order of that date on said Alvord for said stereotype plates, requesting the delivery of the same to said Sanborn, Garter & Bazin; and on the same day the said defendant Paine, as such administrator, also made an order on said Alvord, requesting the delivery of said plates to said Sanborn, Garter & Bazin; and that, vpon said two orders, the said Alvord, on or about the same day, delivered the said plates to the said Sanborn, Carter & Bazin. That all said agreements and instruments were negotiated and made in the city of Sew York, with the knowledge of all the parties to this action, and without objection from or by any of them.

That at the time said agreements were made, the contracts and plates held by the plaintiff as pledgee, under and in pursuance of said agreement of February 23, 1856, were in danger of deteriorating in value, and of becoming valueless, or nearly so, and that it was necessary, in order to preserve their value, to make some arrangements by which they might be placed in the hands of a responsible publisher.

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.Y. 691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-storrs-ny-1865.