215 A.D. 454 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1926
This controversy concerns the purchase made by the defendant on August 13, 1919, of seventy-six shares of stock
For several years prior to June 11, 1919, the plaintiffs and the defendant were copartners in business, under the firm name of Bayer Brothers, engaged in the purchase of cotton goods in an unfinished state or, as they were known, “ in the grey.” These goods were either resold in their raw state to the wholesale or jobbing trade or were converted and finished for the firm, and the converted and finished goods sold to the trade. The firm of Bayer Brothers consisted of the four plaintiffs, who collectively owned a seventy-one per cent interest in said partnership, and the defendant, who owned the balance, or a twenty-nine per cent interest therein. Of the partners, the plaintiff Samuel Bayer and the defendant Nathan Bayer were brothers. The plaintiffs Henry Bayer and Alexander Bayer were sons of the plaintiff Samuel Bayer, while the fourth plaintiff, Philip Bayer, was a brother of Samuel Bayer. The copartnership agreement was a verbal one, there never having been any written agreement between the participants evidencing the formation of the copartnership. Consequently no definite time was fixed for its continuance. In or about the month of September, 1913, the said copartnership acquired a two-thirds interest in the capital stock of the Montville Finishing Company, a New Jersey corporation. The capital stock of said company consisted of 240 shares of common stock of the par value of $100 per share. One hundred and sixty shares of said capital stock were thus acquired by the partnership of Bayer Brothers. The balance of the capital stock of the Montville Finishing Company, consisting of 80 shares, was owned by the two persons, William R. Booth and John J. Healion, who were actively connected with said finishing company from its organization. In the said 80 shares of stock owned by Booth and Healion, the copartnership of Bayer Brothers had no interest whatever. Owning two-thirds of the capital stock of the Montville Finishing Company, the plaintiffs, from the organization of said company, controlled its production. Bayer Brothers had some, but not all, of their goods finished at the mills of said corporation. The copartnership was naturally actively interested in the affairs of the finishing company and assisted said company financially. In June, 1919, the Montville Finishing Company was indebted to the copartnership of Bayer Brothers in about $205,000. In June, 1919, differences arose between the plaintiffs and the defendant “ with respect to the business and affairs of said copartnership.” On June 11, 1919, a meeting of the members of the copartnership was held at the
The trial court also found that prior to the 13th day of August, 1919, the defendant made efforts to secure from the plaintiffs a voting trust agreement whereby and wherein the defendant would be protected as a minority stockholder of the Montville Finishing Company and against the adverse control by the plaintiffs of the stock of said company upon division of the 160 shares of said stock owned by the copartnership and in which the defendant had an undivided interest as a copartner in said firm. The defendant and his attorney, .Mayper, both testified, in effect, that at this conference at the office of defendant’s attorney, the plaintiffs, through Philip Bayer, consented to the defendant’s purchase of the Booth and Healion stock and that in effect the said Philip Bayer told the defendant that if he distrusted his copartners and was afraid that his interest as a minority stockholder would not be protected he was at liberty to go out and buy up the Booth and Healion stock. The plaintiffs Philip Bayer and Alexander Bayer and their attorney, Silverstein, denied that such consent to defendant’s purchase of the Booth and Healion stock was given at such meeting. The testimony of said plaintiffs and their attorney, however, creates considerable doubt as to their veracity. Reference will hereafter be made to such testimony and the various inconsistencies thereof. The evidence showed that directly after the conference at the office of defendant’s attorney, for the purpose of protecting the defendant’s minority interest in the Montville Finishing Company, the defendant approached Booth and Healion with a view of purchasing a part or all of their stock holdings in said company. Booth and Healion were informed by the defendant that the copartnership of Bayer Brothers, formerly existing, was in process of winding up its affairs, and that he was afraid he would be “ put out on the street,” because upon the termination of the partnership affairs he would be so small a minority stockholder in the Montville Finishing Company. Booth and Healion were reluctant to dispose of their stock, but were willing to assist the defendant, if possible. They first offered to loan him some of their stock that he might vote the same and protect his minority interest in the finishing company. The defendant, however, insisted that the only way he could be protected would be by a purchase of their shares outright. Finally
I am of the opinion that the learned trial court erred in awarding the judgment appealed from. I am of the opinion that not only are the plaintiffs not entitled upon the evidence to judgment in their favor, but that said judgment is based upon findings of fact made by the learned trial court contrary to and against the weight of the evidence, and that the weight of the evidence clearly estab
It is difficult to differentiate the reasoning of the learned trial
Not only are we of the opinion that, upon the evidence, the court should have found that the purchase of the seventy-six shares of the Montville Finishing Company by the defendant was made with the consent of the plaintiffs, and that the weight of the testimony clearly established, and the court should have found, that the plaintiffs themselves were guilty of attempting to consummate the very acts for which they assail the defendant; and that, under the facts as found by the trial court, the plaintiffs were guilty of such inequitable conduct as should deny them relief in a court of equity, but, for reasons hereinafter stated, we are of the opinion that the purchase of the stock in question by the defendant was made after the firm of Bayer Brothers had been effectively dissolved and at a time when the defendant owed no duty toward the plaintiffs which denied him the right to purchase the shares in question.
We are of the opinion, furthermore, that the purchase by the defendant of the seventy-six shares of stock in the Montville Finishing Company held by Booth and Healion was not the purchase of property in which the partnership of Bayer Brothers
We are of the opinion that by a fair preponderance of the evidence presented at the trial it appeared that the plaintiffs consented to the purchase of the Booth and Healion stock by the defendant. The defendant testified that at a meeting held at the office of his attorney, Mr. Alexander A. Mayper, prior to August 13, 1919, on which last-mentioned date the Booth and Healion shares were purchased by the defendant, a conference was held, at which the defendant, his attorney, Mayper, the plaintiffs Philip Bayer and Alexander Bayer, and their attorney, Max Silver-stein, and also one Israel Unterberg, were present. The defendant and Mayper, his. attorney, both testified that this conference occurred some time prior to August 13, 1919, the date on which the defendant purchased the shares in question. The plaintiffs Philip Bayer and Alexander Bayer admitted that a conference was held at the office of the defendant’s attorney at which Mr. Unterberg was present, but testified that such conference was in the month of September, 1919, instead of early in August of that year. Their attempt to fix the date of such conference on a day subsequent to the acquisition of the Booth and Healion stock by the defendant was with the obvious purpose of supporting their version of what occurred at the conference and to destroy the legal effect of their consent to the purchase of the stock by the defendant. However, the learned court disbelieved the' said plaintiffs and found in accordance with the testimony of the defendant and his attorney that the conference occurred prior to August 13, 1919. The trial court found that one of the principal matters discussed at this conference was the distribution of the stock of the Montville Finishing Company. The court found that the defendant at this conference made efforts to secure from the plaintiffs a voting trust agreement whereby and wherein the defendant would be protected as a minority stockholder of the Montville Finishing Company against an adverse majority control by the plaintiffs of the stock of said corporation upon the division of the 160 shares of said stock owned by the copartnership and in which the defendant had an undivided interest as a copartner of the firm of Bayer Brothers. The court found that the defendant contended that the plaintiffs might buy enough of the stock to enable them to destroy his rights and dispose of the property and production of the mill as they saw fit, and thus deprive the defendant of a fair share of the mill’s production. The court also found that Philip Bayer said they would not do that and that the defendant asked him to sign an
Both the plaintiffs Philip Bayer and Alexander Bayer denied that such conversation took place. They, however, admitted that they were present at a conference at the office of defendant’s attorney during part of which Mr. Unterberg, a family friend, was present. As before stated, they attempted to fix the date of this conference as in September, 1919, instead of August. The court, however, disbelieved the testimony of the plaintiffs Philip Bayer and Alexander Bayer and found in accordance with the testimony of the defendant and his attorney Mayper, that the conference occurred prior to August 13, 1919, and prior to the time when defendant commenced his negotiations to acquire from Booth and Healion their shares of stock. I think the probabilities clearly accord with the testimony of the defendant and Mayper, his attorney, and support the finding of the trial court that this conferencé occurred prior to the defendant’s efforts to obtain the
We are also of the opinion that the finding of the trial court'that the plaintiffs were not at the time defendant was negotiating for the Booth and Healion stock or shortly thereafter, themselves attempting to purchase said shares for their own benefit was against the weight of the evidence. That the plaintiffs were attempting to acquire the Booth and Healion stock secretly for their own benefit was proven upon the trial by the testimony of two entirely disinterested witnesses, Booth and Healion. Having found that the plaintiffs had deliberately falsified concerning the conference at the
The foregoing observations relate more particularly to what we consider was the failure of the learned trial court to properly weigh the testimony presented at the trial, resulting in findings of fact upon vital issues which we think were clearly contrary to the weight of the credible testimony given at the trial. The decision of the learned trial court being thus against the weight of the evidence, as we view it, furnishes ample ground for the disapproval of the court’s findings, and leads to a reversal of the judgment appealed from and a direction of judgment in defendant’s favor.
But we are of the opinion that, aside from the determination of the trial court of such vital issues, in no event did the plaintiffs prove a case entitling them to the equitable relief granted by the judgment appealed from. We are convinced that the facts proven by the testimony at the trial, and as found by the trial court upon the evidence, show conclusively that at the time defendant purchased the Booth and Healion stock the partnership had been fully dissolved; that such dissolution under the statutes of this State and -under the common law occurred on June 11, 1919, at the conference between the partners when the plaintiff Samuel Bayer announced that under no circumstances would the plaintiffs continue the partnership of Bayer Brothers as then constituted. Upon such dissolution of the partnership any fiduciary duty which the defendant owed toward the plaintiffs while the copartnership existed "ceased, and the defendant was free to purchase the Booth and Healion shares for his exclusive benefit, or to do anything else which he might cleem prudent for his own protection.
Assuming for the moment that the plaintiffs had any interest in the Booth and Healion shares of stock which the defendant purchased, or that the purchase of said stock was within the scope
We think the court clearly erred in making such finding. Upon every issue of fact the trial court found in accordance with the contention of the defendant, that the partnership had been dissolved prior to the purchase of the shares of stock in question by
We think the trial court clearly failed to distinguish the difference between a “ dissolution ” and a “ termination ’’ of the copartnership. The partnership of Bayer Brothers was one at will. It had no specific term to run. Being at will, it might be dissolved at the will of either of the partners on a moment’s notice. Whenever either of the partners refused to continue longer for the mutual benefit of all the partners and made known his intention to cease doing business with his associates, at that moment, under well-considered decisions at common law and under the statute law of this State, the copartnership was at an end. All that remained to be done was to wind up the partnership affairs and to terminate the same. In a copartnership of the importance and varied interests of Bayer Brothers, time, of course, Was required to terminate and wind up its affairs. At common law it is not unusual that the courts have failed carefully to distinguish between
It thus appears that the Legislature, following the clearer authority at common law, specifically distinguished between the dissolution and the winding up of a partnership business. A copartnership at will is dissolved at the moment when either of the partners expresses an intent not to continue longer, or when the partners decide to cease doing business for their mutual benefit. The partnership affairs, however, are not terminated until the winding up is completed. Their energies thereafter are devoted to the winding up of the business affairs of the copartnership and to reaching an agreement as to the distribution of its assets. Section 62 of the Partnership Law provides in subdivision 1 that dissolution is caused, without violation of the agreement between the partners, “ (b) By the express will of any partner when no definite term or particular undertaking is specified, (c) By the express will of all the partners who have not assigned their interests or suffered them to be charged for their separate debts, either before or after the termination of any specified term or particular undertaking.” (See, also, Uniform Partnership Act, § 31.) The will or intent of any of the partners to dissolve a partnership, or the mutual consent of all the partners to dissolve, may be shown by conduct as well as words. (Kennedy v. Porter, 109 N. Y. 526; Rowley, Modern Law of Partnership, 732 — 734.) The findings of fact made by the trial court based upon the evidence given at the trial show conclusively that the copartnership of Bayer Brothers was dissolved prior to August 13, 1919. Not only did the words of the parties show an intent to dissolve, but the conduct of the parties following the conference on June 11, 1919, clearly demonstrated that the copartnership was dissolved prior to August 13, 1919. Not only did the plaintiff Samuel Bayer announce at the meeting held June 11, 1919, when all of the partners were present, that the copartnership could no longer continue with the defendant, but the court made findings of fact showing that an immediate and complete dissolution of the copartnership did actually occur. The court made the following specific findings of fact:
“ Twenty-eighth. That in and during said month of June, 1919, differences arose between Samuel Bayer, his sons Henry and
“ Twenty-ninth. That at a meeting at the office of the said copartnersMp held on or about June 11, 1919, said differences were discussed and at such conference Samuel Bayer announced that under no circumstances would these plaintiffs continue the partnership of Bayer Brothers as then constituted. [Italics are the writer’s.] * * *
“ Thirty-first. That prior to the said conference, one Alexander A. Mayper had been, from time to time, acting as counsel and attorney for the said copartnership of Bayer Brothers.
“ Thirty-second. That at or about the time of the conference the plaintiffs herein secured other counsel, to wit: one Max Silver-stein, and then and there discontinued the services of the said Alexander A. Mayper as counsel for the said copartnership, and that the said Mayper continued as the attorney for Nathan Bayer, the defendant herem.
“ Thirty-third. That prior to the said meeting in June, 1919, and for many years theretofore, defendant’s principal duties, as a member of said copartnership, mcluded the purchase of merchandise for and in behalf of the said copartnership.
“ Thirty-fourth. That shortly after said meeting in June, 1919, tMs defendant, Nathan Bayer, was notified by Philip Bayer, one of the plamtiffs herein, that he must no longer purchase merchandise for and in behalf of the said copartnersMp.
“ Thirty-fifth. That pursuant to the notice given to this defendant to cease purchasing merchandise, tMs defendant did not purchase any merchandise for and m behalf of the said copartnership at any time after the said meeting in June, 1919.
“ Thirty-sixth. That after the said meeting in June, 1919, this defendant was not permitted to continue the full performance of his duties as such copartner. * * *
“ Thirty-eighth. That durmg the months of July, August, September, and for the better part of the month of October of 1919 and up to the date of the execution of the October agreements, heremafter referred to, said copartnersMp of Bayer Brothers made no purchases of merchandise for the conduct of its said copartnership business; and entered into no contracts for the purchase of merchandise.
“ Thirty-ninth. That prior to the said meeting in June, 1919, all checks of the copartnersMp were signed by either Samuel Bayer or Nathan Bayer, and the said Nathan Bayer had been duly and fully authorized and had been granted full power to sign and
“ Forty-second. That the only checks signed and executed by the defendant after the said meeting in June, 1919, were not exceeding approximately five certain personal checks, constituting personal withdrawals of said defendant Nathan Bayer, and chargeable against the said defendant personally on account of his interest in the assets of said copartnership.
“ Forty-third. That shortly after the said meeting in June, 1919, the said copartnership and its members devoted and continued their efforts towards winding up the partnership affairs.
“ Forty-fourth. That the business interests of the said copartnership were extensive and that the said copartnership had been conducting business on a large scale.
“ Forty-fifth. That its merchandise inventory was substantial; that its bills receivable and other items in the copartnership assets aggregated hundreds of thousands of dollars and that the said business required several months for the process of winding up. * * *
“ Forty-seventh. That at said meeting in June, 1919, the differences were of such serious nature that it was apparent to all in attendance that said copartnership would no longer he continued. [Italics are the writer’s.] * * *
“ Fifty-second. That after the month of June, 1919, this defendant, in fact, did not bind the copartnership or assume any obligations in its behalf, nor did he perform any duties as such copartner, except in so far as to render such service and assistance as was required by the plaintiffs or otherwise required in the process of winding up the copartnership business.
“ Fifty-third. That prior to the 13th day of August, 1919, and in and during the month of August, 1919, a conference took place at the office of Alexander A. Mayper, at which were present Alexander A. Mayper and Nathan Bayer on the one hand, and Philip Bayer and Alexander Bayer and one Max Silverstein, their attorney, on the other hand, and also one Israel Unterberg.”
Notwithstanding the foregoing findings of fact, which we deem conclusive as showing a dissolution of the partnership immediately upon the conference between the partners on June 11, 1919, the court refused to find that there was any dissolution of the partnership at that time. At common law we think such dissolution took place at and immediately after June 11, 1919. It is difficult to see how the partners could have more effectively acted to show an intent and understanding that the partnership of Bayer Brothers was at an end as a going concern, than they did from
The copartnership being at an end prior to August 13, 1919, the defendant was permitted to purchase the Booth and Healion stock, and the fiduciary obligation theretofore existing toward bis associates was at an end. (Lindley Partnership [8th ed.], 365; Kennedy v. Porter, 109 N. Y. 526; 30 Cyc. 459.) Cyc. thus states the rule: “ With the dissolution of the firm, the confidential relationship of the partners ceases, so far as new transactions are concerned, and the former partners are at liberty to compete with each other,
The case of Tygart v. Wilson (39 App. Div. 58) sustains in principle the contention of the defendant, appellant, herein. In that case the copartnership agreement provided that either partner might dissolve the partnership at the end of the fiscal year upon giving three months’ written notice of such intention. In April the plaintiff orally notified the defendants that he was going to withdraw from the firm on the first of May following. On May first the plaintiff in accordance with the partnership agreement gave formal written notice to the effect that he would withdraw from the firm on December first following. After the giving of such notice and prior to December first the defendants entered into negotiations with the landlord for a renewal of the former lease and secured such renewal prior to December first. The plaintiff brought action similar to the action by the plaintiffs at bar to have the defendant declared a trustee of the renewal. The court held that inasmuch as the plaintiff had given notice that he would retire from the firm on December first, the defendants were free to take a renewal of the lease for their own benefit even though such renewal was obtained before December first. In distinguishing certain decisions in opposition to the holding of the court the Appellate Division said (at p. 62): “ In the case before us the partnership, like that in Struthers v. Pearce [51 N. Y. 357], was not fixed and definite, but it was to continue during the pleasure of the parties; unlike that case, however, notice had been given by the plaintiff of the termination of such partnership at a fixed time, and at the time of the negotiations the partnership existing between the parties was not ‘ a continuing partnership of undetermined duration.’
“ In this case the lease would expire on the first of May. Prior to, or about, the first of April the plaintiff notified the landlord that the copartnership existing between him and the defendants would terminate on May first; that he would withdraw from the firm on that date, and that he would not be responsible for the rent of the premises after that time. He also, before the first of May, notified the defendants that he would retire from the copartnership May first; ascertaining or recalling the fact, however, that he could only do so under the articles of copartnership, at the end of the fiscal year and by giving three months’ written notice, he on the first day of May gave them written notice that he would withdraw from the copartnership on the thirtieth day of November or the first of December, and he again, on November nineteenth, notified the landlord that the copartnership contract would expire November
“ After giving these notices I do not see how it can be claimed that he could expect any renewal of the lease for his benefit. It seems to me that they constituted an abandonment of the so-called ‘ tenant’s ’ right of renewal.”
The foregoing language of the Appellate Division well illustrates the rule that the fiduciary duty which one partner owes to another may cease even before an actual dissolution if notice of an intent to dissolve the copartnership be already given and if the parties understand and intend that the firm is to be dissolved. Whether, in the case at bar, the firm of Bayer Brothers had been technically dissolved or not- when the defendant purchased the Booth and Healion stock, nevertheless, both by word and by the conduct of the copartners it was understood by all, as the trial court found, that as soon as the business of the partnership could be wound up and the terms of the distribution of its assets agreed upon, the copartnership was to be finally terminated. Even though there was not a technical dissolution at the time defendant purchased the shares of stock, we think the defendant was free to make such purchase for his exclusive benefit, and that at that time he owed no duty to the copartnership to purchase the shares for its benefit. Under the finding of the trial court that by the acts of the parties they manifested an unequivocal intention to dissolve their previous relations and that the partners, immediately after the June meeting, proceeded to wind up the affairs of the copartnership and thereafter transacted no business for which the partnership was created, we think there was no legal or moral obligation on the part of the defendant to purchase said shares for the benefit of the firm. From and after June 11,1919, the plaintiffs on the one side and the defendant on the other proceeded to make arrangements to carry on each an individual business and took whatever steps each deemed best for his and their welfare. Even though we assume, contrary to the facts as we shall hereinafter point out, that the purchase by the defendant of the Booth and Healion stock was within the scope of the copartnership affairs, and assuming that such purchase was made without the consent of the plaintiffs, nevertheless, such purchase occurred after the dissolution of the copartnership, and the trial court erred in impressing a trust on the shares purchased by the defendant for the benefit of his former firm.
Further, even if we assume that there was no dissolution prior to August 13, 1919, and that the partnership continued until the execution of the agreements and the distribution of the assets on October twenty-second and twenty-fifth, and that the partner
“ It seems to their Lordships that the judgment of the Court of Appeal is not well founded. The purchase was not within the scope of the partnership. The subject of the purchase was not part of the business of the partnership, or an undertaking in rivalry with the partnership, or indeed connected with it in any proper sense. * * *
“ Now if the purchase from Hollard had been completed so far as to make the partnership the absolute and unincumbered owner of the 5,500 shares in the Sigma Syndicate, and if those shares had been divided between the three partners and registered in their separate names, any one of the three Would have had as good a right to buy any property of the syndicate Which the directors might think fit to offer for sale as any other shareholder in the syndicate or any member of the general public.
“ The Court of Appeal appears to have regarded the purchase in question, though not expressly prohibited by the partnership articles, as a breach of good faith and consequently as a violation of the fundamental condition of the partnership. Suppose it had been forbidden in express terms, what would have been the result? The other partner or partners discovering the breach of contract might have claimed immediate dissolution, or even damages, on proof of actual loss to the partnership. But a claim to share in the profits of the forbidden purchase would not have been warranted by principle or precedent. And here there was no loss to the partnership; only a disappointment to the partner left out in the cold, * *
In McKenzie v. Dickinson (43 Cal. 119) the plaintiff and defendant were partners and the defendant for a counterclaim to plaintiff’s action pleaded that the plaintiff had secretly bought up a judgment against the defendant, and that the plaintiff had obtained knowledge of such judgment in the course of the partnership business, and that upon such judgment thus obtained by the plaintiff the plaintiff had caused execution to be levied upon the defendant’s interest in the copartnership and had the interest sold, and had purchased said interest for his own benefit. It was the claim of the defendant that the plaintiff had thus breached' his fiduciary relation to the defendant and that the plaintiff held the
“ Necessary or indispensable parties are those without whom the court will not proceed to any decree, even as to the parties before it.
“ This class includes all persons who have an interest in the controversy of such a nature that a final decree cannot be made without either affecting their interests or leaving the controversy in such a condition that its final termination may be wholly inconsistent with equity and good "conscience. * * * The term ‘ necessary parties ’ also includes persons who, while not necessary or indispensable on account of their own interest, yet are so connected with the subject matter of the controversy that it is necessary to have them before the court for the proper protection of those whom the decree will necessarily and directly affect.”
In Mahr v. N. U. F. Ins. Society (127 N. Y. 452) the Court of Appeals was considering an action to restrain the insurance company from paying out the amount of the loss to the assured or his assign, the plaintiffs claiming to be equitable owners of the policy. The insured resided in Iowa. He sent the plaintiffs the policy as a collateral for a loan, but had never formally assigned the policy to the plaintiffs. A fire occurred which destroyed the property, and the insured made a formal assignment of the policy to one K. in Iowa. The plaintiffs in their action here made personal service upon the insured and the insurer, but not upon K., the assignee, in Iowa. The defendant pleaded a defect of a necessary party defendant. In the meantime K. brought action in Iowa against the insurance company on the same policy. The insurance company obtained an order here requiring K. to be a party defendant in the action in this State. The plaintiffs served K. by publication, but not personally. The trial court held that the assignment to K. was void and that he had no interest superior to the plaintiffs’. Judgment was entered restraining the insurance company from paying out the amount of the policy to any one save the plaintiffs. In reversing the judgment the Court of Appeals said (at p. 458):
“ The main question left for decision is whether Kelly was a necessary party, as the defendant company alleged in its answers
“It is not enough for the court to direct that the necessary parties be brought in, but it should refuse to proceed to a determination of the controversy, so as to affect their rights until they are in fact brought in. * * *
“ The general rule in equity requires that all persons interested in the subject of the action should be made parties, in order to prevent a multiplicity of suits and secure a final determination of their rights. * * *
“Not only all persons whose rights may be affected by the judgment should be brought into court, but all whose presence is essential to the protection of any party to the action.”
We are of the opinion that Booth and Healion were not only proper but indispensable parties defendant to a complete adjudication herein, and that the failure to make them parties precluded the granting of the judgment appealed from.
For the reasons above stated, the judgment appealed from should be reversed, with costs, and plaintiffs’ complaint dismissed, and judgment directed for the defendant, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., Finch and Martin, JJ., concur; Burr, J., dissents.
Judgment reversed, with costs, plaintiffs’ complaint dismissed, and judgment directed for the defepdanii, with costs. Settle order on notice.