128 N.Y.S. 539 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
Lead Opinion
This is a suit in equity to obtain the cancellation of two papers in the form of letters from the plaintiff to the defendants, one of which the defendants procured to be recorded in the office of the register of the county of Hew York and claim that the same is a lien upon and against two parcels of real estate situate in the county of Hew York owned by the plaintiff, and the other, which purports
According to the allegations of the complaint, the theory upon which the plaintiff deemed herself entitled to have the instruments, and the record of the one which has been recorded canceled, is that they were never delivered to the defendants, or to either of them; that her signature thereto was procured by fraud; that they were without consideration; that there has been a failure of consideration therefor; that the plaintiff has, on her part, performed the terms and conditions thereof and defendants have failed to perform said terms and conditions on their part and that one of said instruments was recorded wrongfully and through fraud in that it was attempted to prove the same by a subscribing witness who was not requested by plaintiff to be a subscribing witness and without her knowledge or consent. The trial court found that the plaintiff neither delivered nor authorized the delivery of the instruments to the defendants or either of them, and that there was no consideration, and that there was a failure of consideration ; and that plaintiff performed by executing the note, and that defendant failed to perform by giving the firm credit for the entire proceeds of the note and by failing to advance to said firm further moneys, and that plaintiff did not request Newman, who signed and proved the instrument which was recorded, to sign or prove the same as a subscribing witness, and the same was so signed, proved and recorded without her knowledge or consent and was not entitled to be recorded, but did not find that the plaintiff’s signature to either of the instruments was procured by fraud.
The judgment cannot be sustained on these findings, for in the absence of fraud in inducing the plaintiff to execute the instruments, which she concedes she signed, or mistake, she is chargeable with knowledge of their contents; and if she knew their contents then it is manifest that she intended that they should be delivered to the defendants, for they are addressed to the defendants, and one of them expressly relates, among other things, to the discount
“ This letter to cover any and all loans that may have been made or would be made to the firm of Irving K. Farrington & Co., provided the signatures of my two sons heretofore mentioned appear upon the same as additional guarantee, and of which said firm my two sons are connected with, and financially interested in.”
The plaintiff’s son Richard A. was a. member of the firm of Irving K. Farrington & Co., who were stockbrokers, conducting business in the city of New York. The appellant was a member of the defendant firm, and it does not definitely appear whether he was conducting business individually or only in connection with his firm. The business he was engaged in, however, whether individually oías a member of the firm, appears to have been the business of a private banker and broker. The plaintiff’s note for $10,000, to which reference has been made, was procured at the suggestion of the appellant, from whom or whose firm the firm of Irving K. Farrington & Co. desired a further loan. In the interviews constituting the negotiations on that subject between the appellant and Farrington and Richard A. Fitz-Gibbon, the appellant declined, according to his testimony, to make further advances to the firm of Irving IL Farrington & Co., on the ground that that firm was then indebted to him in about the sum of $40,000, and he claimed to have permitted the increase of the indebtedness to that amount largely on representations with respect to Richard’s coming into a large amount of property in the future by inheritance. The plaintiff’s note for $10,000 was made to the order of her son Richard,
It was entirely competent for the plaintiff to agree, as an inducement to appellant or his firm to discount her note for the benefit of her son or of his firm, to obligate herself to pay the existing indebtedness on the part of her son’s firm to the appellant or to his firm ; and if she knew and understood the contents of the two instruments which she seeks to have canceled, by executing them she so undertook to obligate 'herself and to pledge the real estate in question therefor. The plaintiff had advanced to her son’s firm at this time about $100,000. It may be that she would, as a condition of raising about $10,000 cash for her son on her note secured by property worth about a quarter of a million dollars, agree to become
It follows, therefore, that the judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Clarke and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur with Mr. Justice Laughlin in the reversal of this judgment on the ground that there could be no cancellation of these agreements unless the fraud alleged in the complaint was proved, but I do not concur in his statement that the evidence was sufficient to justify a finding of fraud.
The agreements were executed to secure the indebtedness of the plaintiff’s sons to the defendant. I think there was sufficient consideration in the discount by the defendant of the note given by the plaintiff at the time these instruments were executed and the subsequent extension of the payment of the indebtedness of plaintiff’s sons to the defendants. The fraud to justify a cancellation of these agreements must be fraud of the defendant. The evidence is undisputed that no representations were made to the plaintiff by either the defendant- or Newman, the lawyer, who accompanied
I concur, therefore, in the reversal of the judgment.
Scott, J"., concurred.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.