67 N.Y.S. 382 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
This action was brought upon a contract of agreement entered into between the plaintiff and the defendant, by which the plaintiff leased to the defendant a building in New York known as the “Hotel San Remo.” The agreement is set forth in full in the complaint, and the judgment demanded is that the defendant account to the plaintiff regarding the affairs and assets under the said agreement, and of their respective rights and interests therein, and to recover judgment for the amount found due on the accounting. The defendant admits the signing of the agree
We think that under the peculiar provisions of this agreement the plaintiff was entitled to maintain an action for an accounting. The plaintiff was to be paid a certain fixed sum for rent of the premises leased. He was also to be paid a certain additional sum upon condition that there were profits realized from the business conducted at the hotel. It is true that that sum was to be paid to him as an addition to the rent that the defendant agreed that he should receive; but the amount that was coming to him as such additional rent depended upon the proceeds of the business to be conducted as a hotel, and only in the event that the business so conducted yielded a profit was he to receive anything. Whether the plaintiff should be entitled to receive an amount of the profits of the business could only be determined after an accounting, and .either party to the agreement was entitled to have the accounts of the business adjusted. It is not necessary to determine whether or not the parties to this agreement were partners. It was an agreement in the nature of a joint adventure, by which the business of the hotel was to be conducted, and after certain specified expenditures the profits should be ascertained, and a certain portion of them paid to the plaintiff. It is difficult to see how, under such an agreement, the plaintiff could have maintained an action at law to recover any stated amount under the contract. There would be nothing due to him except it should be ascertained after an accounting that there was a profit over and above the expenses of conducting the business, including the amount to be paid to the plaintiff for the use of the premises, and the amount paid to the defendant for his services in conducting the hotel. It was only in case profits resulted that such profits, not exceeding a sum specified, were to be paid to the plaintiff. He was entitled to a portion of the profits as such; and to determine whether he should be entitled to anything under an agreement as before stated, an accounting as to the business was necessary. An entirely different question is presented in the cases relied on by the- defendant, where a person is employed, and his compensation is to be fixed by a percentage of the sales or profits of a particular business; for there, by the contract of employment, the employé is to be compensated for his services rendered, the amount of the compensation, however, to be determined by the amount of such sales or the amount of the profits of the business. Here the relation between the parties was different. That relation was one of trust and confidence, and the question as to whether the plaintiff would be entitled to anything would depend upon the existence of profits; and, in that event, a determination
Upon the whole case I think that the plaintiff was entitled to an interlocutory judgment, and the judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs. All concur, except VAH BRUNT, P. J., and HATCH, J., who dissent.