41 N.Y. 34 | NY | 1869
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *36
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *37 The order of the General Term reversing the judgment in favor of the defendant, entered upon the report of the referee, states that it was made upon errors both of law and fact. This makes it the duty of this court to determine whether the judgment should have been reversed upon either ground. (Code, § 228.) The seal upon the bond was presumptive evidence only of a sufficient consideration, subject to be rebutted in the same manner and to the same extent as if not sealed. (1 R.S., 406, § 77.) This made the evidence given, showing the origin and consideration of the bond, competent. From that evidence it appeared that the defendant was duly incorporated in 1848, under the provisions of the act of 1847, entitled "An act authorizing the incorporation of rural cemetery associations." That after such incorporation, the trustees agreed, verbally, with one of their number, to purchase from him 125 acres of land, for the purposes of a cemetery, for the price of $20,000, to be paid by assuming and discharging a mortgage of something over $10,000, and by giving to the vendor the bond of the defendant for the balance. That it was further agreed by the trustees, including the vendor, that the consideration to be inserted in the deed should be $500,000, and that for the excess so stated, over and above the price of the land, eight bonds of the defendant for $60,000 each, containing a recital that the consideration thereof was a part of the purchase price of the land, should be made, which bonds should be divided among the trustees. That this agreement was carried out. The vendor conveyed the land to the defendant. The purchase price, $20,000, was paid and secured, as agreed, and the eight $60,000 bonds divided among the trustees, as agreed, one of the number receiving two, and the residue one each. That the trustees did not cause the deed to be recorded, thus keeping the transaction a secret from the public. That after consummating this transaction, the trustees proceeded to dedicate the land, *39 with great pomp and solemnity, for a cemetery, erecting over the entrance a statue of immortality, and to sell lots to the public. That the land was sold to the defendant for $20,000, I regard as conclusively established. That was the sum agreed upon as the price, and it was paid as agreed. The claim of the plaintiff that the land was sold for $500,000, and that the vendor made a present of the $480,000 to be shared among the trustees, is not worthy of serious consideration. It is repelled by all the testimony in the case, and would be scarcely credible if testified to by the entire seven worthy trustees. But none of them so testify. It was further proved that the trustees, afterward pursuant to resolutions passed by them, surrendered up and caused to be canceled the sixty thousand dollar bonds, and issued to themselves severally, the amount so surrendered respectively, in bonds of five thousand dollars each; that the plaintiff, after the death of the testator, found among his papers one of these last bonds, one-half of which was claimed by another person. The plaintiff thereupon presented the same to the trustees of the defendant, and proposed to surrender it and receive therefor two bonds of twenty-five hundred dollars each, payable one to himself and the other to the other person who claimed the one-half. This proposition was acceded to, and thereupon the bond in suit was issued to the plaintiff. The mere statement of this case determines it by applying thereto well settled principles. None of the bonds were negotiable, and the plaintiff is therefore in no better position than the trustees to whom it was issued. There was no consideration whatever for the bond for which the one in suit was substituted, and it is invalid upon that ground. There is no evidence showing how it came into the possession of the testator, or that he ever gave anything for it. This precludes all idea of any estoppel upon the defendant. To create an estoppel, it should have appeared affirmatively, that the testator paid value for it; that he took it in ignorance of its origin, relying upon the truth of representations made by the defendant to induce him to take it, and upon the faith of which he did take it. Nothing *40 of the kind was shown, and no claim of any estoppel upon the defendant was made by the plaintiff before the referee. It is claimed by the plaintiff, that the bond in suit is valid irrespective of the validity of the bond for part of which it was given, upon the ground that it was given upon the compromise of a disputed claim. The answer to this position is, that there was no evidence tending to prove any such fact; nothing showing that the claim had ever been disputed by the defendant, or was so at the time the bond in suit was given. If any interest was remitted at that time (which does not distinctly appear), it does not appear that it was done by way of compromising and settling any controversy in respect to the claim. The counsel for the respondent insists that the purchase by the corporation of one of the trustees was not void, but voidable only at the election of the corporation, and that to avoid such purchase the corporation must reconvey the land or offer so to do. In this, the counsel is correct as he is also in the further position that the corporation must make its election in a reasonable time after acquiring full knowledge of the transaction, but his conclusion deduced therefrom, that the plaintiff is entitled to recover upon the bond is not warranted thereby. That also assumes that the $480,000 in $60,000 bonds was part of the price paid for the land. This we have seen is entirely erroneous. The price agreed to be paid for the land was $20,000. This has been paid according to the agreement. It is against the bonds taken by the trustees for their own benefit under the false and fraudulent pretense that they constituted a part of such price with which, in fact, they had nothing to do, that the defendant is endeavoring to defend. To do this, it has no occasion to reject the contract for the purchase of or the conveyance of the land. Whether it can now do this is not involved in the case. The defence of want of consideration for the bond in suit is established. But the defence founded upon the fraud of the trustees in appropriating these bonds to themselves is equally available. It is said truly that the purchasers and owners of lots constitute all *41 the quasi stockholders, and that as there were none such at the time of this transaction, they could not be defrauded. It is therefore argued that as the trustees could not defraud themselves, that there could not have been any fraud in a legal sense committed. But the transaction was a palpable violation of the seventh section of the act under which the defendant was incorporated, and a gross fraud upon every subsequent purchaser of a lot not having knowledge thereof. That section, among other things, provides that after payment of the purchase money of the lands, all the proceeds of the sales of lots shall be applied to embellishing, c., the cemetery. The act of the trustees was designed to defeat this requirement, and was therefore void. In any view I have been able to take of the case, the plaintiff is unable to maintain any action upon the bond. The referee was therefore right in dismissing the complaint, and the General Term erred in reversing the judgment. I concur with the learned judge who delivered a dissenting opinion at the General Term in his estimate of the conduct of these trustees. The order of the General Term should be reversed and the judgment upon the report of the referee affirmed with costs.
All the judges (except HUNT, Ch. J., who did not vote), concurred. Order reversed and judgment of referee affirmed. *42