25 N.Y.S. 1023 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
This action was brought upon an alleged account stated. .The answer, while admitting the copartnership of the plaintiffs, as alleged, denied that any account had been stated between the parties, but admitted that an account had been rendered by the plaintiffs upon the day upon which it was; alleged the account had been stated, showing the balance claimed, and alleging that he had not then the means of ascertaining whether the same was correct or not; and he denied that he ever assented to the correctness thereof. The answer further set up various defenses and counterclaims, by which the defendant claimed to surcharge the said account stated for errors in respect to interest, and demanded an accounting, claiming a large balance to be due. To the counterclaim a reply was duly interposed. The issues thus raised having been referred to a referee to hear and determine, after the trial the referee reported in favor of the plaintiffs for an amount much below that which was claimed in the complaint, and from the judgment' thereupon entered this appeal is taken by the defendant. No evidence is presented, and this appeal must be considered, therefore, upon the judgment roll alone, and the only question which it is necessary to consider is whether the findings of fact made by the referee support his conclusions of law.
It is claimed upon the part of the respondents that every presumption exists in favor of the judgment, and since the appellant has failed to print the evidence, or any part of it, it must be assumed that it would not have benefited him to do so, and that the record not only sustains the findings of fact actually found, but is also sufficient to sustain any additional findings required to support the conclusions of law, unless those conclusions are in conflict with the findings of fact; and they cite the cases of Kellogg v. Thompson, 66 N. Y. 38; Murray v. Marshall, 94 N. Y. 616; and Gardiner v. Schwab, 110 N. Y. 650, 17 N. E. Rep. 732. Those cases pointedly sustain the contention of the respondents. Our attention is, however, called by the appellant to the case of Rochester Lantern Co. v. Stiles & Parker Press Co., 135 N. Y. 209, 31 N. E. Rep. 1018, in which case the court held that upon an appeal in an action tried by the court or a
The referee finds that on the 6th of November, 1868, an agreement was entered into between the firm of Dowley, Corners & Co., on the one part, and the defendant, Alexander Mackey, and one Muller, on the other part, providing for a business adventure, in which both parties should be interested; Dowley, Corners & Co. to furnish the refinery therein mentioned, and capital sufficient for working the same, and the defendant and Muller to furnish their patents, and entire time and services; all outlay of money connected with the property, and the working thereof, to be borne by the business, except in the case of additions in the shape of entirely new improvements; the interest on a mortgage of $20,000 then on the premises to be borne by the business, and no rent or commissions upon purchases or sales to be charged, unless actual!)' paid out; and profits and losses to be divided or borne at the end of each year in the proportion of two-thirds to or by Dowley, Corners & Co., and one-third to or by the defendant and Muller. The agreement was to continue in force for three years from its date, at the end of which time Dowley,'Corners & Co. were to have the privilege of extending it to the expiration of the patents, or for a shorter period, by increasing the interest of defendant and
As conclusions of law, the referee found that, under the contract, interest was not chargeable to the business on the working account, nor on the improvement account, although, in this last particular, there may be room for doubt, inasmuch as the contract failed to make it the duty of either of the parties to supply improvements not chargeable to expense account. But interest was at all times chargeable to the business upon the $20,000 represented by the mortgage, and without regard to payments of principal thereof by Dowley, Corners & Co., or by the plaintiffs. The referee also found, as conclusions of law, that “the discontinuance of the business by the plaintiffs in the year 1880 was without fault on their part, such as to subject them to liability to the defendant for either penalty or damages. Moreover, the action of the defendant preliminary to, and concurrent with, the discontinuance, left him no right of subsequent complaint.”
The referee also found, as conclusion of law, that “in view of the receipt by the defendant of the series of accounts rendered to him by Dowley, Corners & Co., and the absence of objection by him thereto, and of the dissolution of the firm, and the succession to the same by the plaintiffs’ firm of Corner Bros, & Co., with material changes in membership and proportionate rights, and without notice that the accounts were in any wise unacceptable to the defendant, it would be inequitable to permit the defendant to now impeach these accounts for the purpose of charging the plaintiffs with a balance to defendant’s credit at the time of the succession larger or other than the balance then appearing in his favor by the accounts so theretofore rendered to him;” and, further, that the sums charged by the plaintiffs upon the working and improvement account were erroneously charged, and that, notwithstanding the great delay of the defendant in objecting thereto, nevertheless correction of the errors can now properly be made for the period since the 1st of January, 1875; that being the date when the plaintiffs succeeded to the firm of Dowley, Corners & 'Co.
The appellant, upon this appeal, contends that the referee erred in deciding that the appellant could not question the erroneous charges for interest made against him prior to January, 1875, and in holding that interest upon the $20,000 mortgage which had ex
In respect to the interest upon the $20,000, it seems to us that, when the plaintiffs paid that mortgage, they became subrogated to the right to receive the interest on the $20,000, which, under the agreement between the parties, was to be borne by the business. It is true that the agreement provided that interest on the mortgage of $20,000 then on the premises was to be borne by the business, and that the mortgage was satisfied by the payment out of their own pockets by the plaintiffs of its amount. But, as already suggested, they clearly became subrogated to the right to receive interest, as reserved in the mortgage, upon the $20,000 advanced by them, and charge it to the business. There seems to have been no error committed by the referee which calls for a reversal of the judgment appealed from, and the same should be affirmed. All concur.