38 N.Y. 201 | NY | 1868
It appears, from the order reversing the judgment and ordering a new trial, made by the General Term of the Supreme Court, that it was made upon questions both of fact and law. The Code, section 268, makes it the duty of this court, upon appeal therefrom, to determine whether it was correctly made upon either ground. In 1852, when the grant was made to the plaintiffs and their assignors, the mayor and common council of the city of New York had no power to make the grant in question. (Milbau v.Sharp,
I also think, the statute of limitations was a bar to the plaintiffs' action. The grantees made a conveyance of the grant to the company more than six years before the commencement of this action. That conveyance was by an instrument under seal, and it is claimed by the counsel for the plaintiffs, that this brings the case within the limitation of twenty years, the time prescribed for the commencement of actions upon sealed instruments. But the action is not upon the instrument. That contains no covenant on the part of the company to pay the plaintiffs or their assignors any thing. The action is upon the promise of the company, express or implied, to pay in consideration of the conveyance. This clearly falls within the six years' limitation. It is also claimed, that the resolution passed by the board within six years before the commencement of the suit, acknowledging a debt to the plaintiffs and their assignors of $200,000 for the grant, takes the case out of the statute. The answer to this is, that a majority of the board passing the resolution were grantees, and, that, if they could not as directors buy the grant of themselves for the company, they cannot create, revive or continue a debt against the company to themselves, by passing resolutions as directors.
Again, it is claimed, that, if the company repudiate the acts of the directors in purchasing the grant of themselves for the company, they must restore the grant. The answer to this is, that the plaintiffs have not asked any such judgment. Their claim to recover was based entirely upon the validity of the acts of the grantees as directors, and the judgment of *205 the referee was based upon that only. These acts being invalid, that judgment was rightly reversed, and the order appealed from must be affirmed with costs, and judgment final given against the plaintiffs.
Judgment affirmed. *206