19 N.Y.S. 721 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1892
This is an appeal from a judgment rendered upon the report of a referee in an action brought to compel an accounting by the defendants of the property and effects of a copartnership firm which, prior to the 31st of July, 1876, consisted of the parties plaintiff and defendant. That partnership expired by limitation on the day named, and it appears in the testimony that subsequent thereto, and before October, 1886, an action has been brought by the plaintiff against these defendants for an accounting, but such action was compromised and discontinued, and an agreement was entered into with reference to the disposition of the property and assets of the firm, and the rights of the parties thereto were defined in the agreement. It further appears that among the assets and property were certain fixtures contained in the store in Thirty-Ninth street, and in the store in Thirty-Fourth street, and real estate and buildings at Newport, in Rhode Island, and also merchandise and other personal property in the cities of New York and Newport, and goods consigned to various persons for sale. By the terms of the compromise agreement which was made for the purpose of winding up the copartnership affairs, it was provided that the plaintiff was to receive a certain portion of the merchandise, as shown in an inventory dated the 31st of July, 1876, and the fixtures in the store in Thirty-Ninth street were to be valued by appraisers, and the plaintiff was to receive in full payment, for his interest, one quarter of fourteen fifteenths of the value as determined by the appraisers; that as to the Twenty-Fourth street store he was also to receive one quarter of the value of the fixtures, to be determined by appraisers, and that he was to take as his share one quarter of one portion of the retail stock in that store as shown by an inventory of the same date, and that as to another portion of the stock it was to be divided. After deducting one fifteenth, the plaintiff was to receive one quarter of the remainder, and for any deficiency in his share the defendants were to pay Caswell the inventory value thereof. As to the Newport store and buildings, their value was fixed at $20,000, and the interest of Caswell therein was agreed to be $5,000; and upon the payment of that sum Caswell was to convey to R. N. Hazard, one of the defendants, an undivided quarter of the land free from incumbrance, and to transfer his interest in the stock and trade of the copartnership property at Newport. It was further agreed that the defendants were to have charge of collecting outstanding accounts and the settlement of copartnership debts, and that they alone should sign in liquidation, and upon payment of the co-partnership debts, and allowing R. N. Hazard, one of the defendants, for the interest he had in the stock in the Thirty-Ninth street store and in the Twen
The answer generally denies all the allegations of the complaint, and also that the defendants have neglected or refused to account, on request, by the plaintiff, for the debts due and collected, and for expenditures claimed to have been made by the defendants on account of the firm. By consent of the parties, the action was referred, and upon the reference an account was presented by the defendants; and upon ah examination of that account, and upon the testimony presented to the referee concerning its items, he held that both the defendants were chargeable with the sum of $1,629.25, with legal interest from the date of the commencement of this action, June 14,1878, for an amount which appears to have been admitted by the defendants as a balance due the plaintiff. He also found that the plaintiff was entitled to judgment against the defendants for the sum of $3,103.04, with interest from the date of the commencement of this action, that principal sum representing the plaintiff’s share of the value of returned and consigned goods, and also that the plaintiff was entitled to recover against the defendant Rowland N. Hazard, individually, the sum of $9,333.47, with interest from the 25th of March, 1878, that being one fourth of $39,567.71, which he found to be an erroneous credit to the defendant named, which he caused to be made upon the books of the copartnership in liquidation. The ground upon which the referee so found was that this whole sum should have been charged to the individual account of Rowland N. Hazard, and did not represent an amount "chargeable against the firm; and he also held that the plaintiff was entitled to judgment against the defendant Rowland N. Hazard for the sum of $2,-748.49, with interest from March 25, 1878, that being also an amount erroneously debited to the plaintiff’s personal account in favor of the defendant Hazard; the result of his report being that a judgment was directed against both defendants for $8,045.37, including interest, and against the defendant •Rowland N. Hazard for the sum of $19,858.33, including interest. There were also involved in the trial before the referee certain claims which were made by the defendants for credits not allowed by the referee, and a great many requests to find facts were denied by the referee, and, upon an exam
The judgment appealed from must be affirmed, with costs. All concur.