69 N.Y. 322 | NY | 1877
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *324
The agreement bearing date the twelfth day of June, 1873, between the creditors of Hoffman Weinberg and Weinberg Brothers, was a sale and transfer of their claims upon the payment of twenty-five per cent. of the same in cash, and the giving of their notes for the same percentage endorsed by Hoffman and Weinberg, as provided. The subsequent agreement of July 21, 1873, recited that Weinberg Brothers had agreed to render services in effecting a settlement of the co-partnership debts of the firm of Hoffman Weinberg, and that in consideration of such agreement and of such services, Hoffman Weinberg agreed that if said Weinberg Brothers shall settle the co-partnership debts of said firm of Hoffman Weinberg, and obtain a release from the creditors of said firm, that Hoffman Weinberg will assign and sell to Weinberg Brothers all their stock of goods. Weinberg Brothers paid to the plaintiffs the amount stipulated in the agreement of the creditors, and there was proof to show that some of the creditors, including two who had signed the agreement first entered into, were paid a larger sum. The first agreement was an absolute sale *326
of the plaintiffs' demand, and the second was made over thirty days afterwards, as therein expressed, in consideration of the prior agreement and services rendered in making the settlement, and after the transaction with the creditors was closed. The testimony does not show an intention to establish a fund to pay all the debts, or to assume the payment of the same absolutely or otherwise than as the purchaser and owner under a valid sale and transfer, which conferred a perfect title to the purchaser of the same. The contract was a mere agreement by a creditor with a third person to accept a less sum than the demand in satisfaction of it, which the law regards as valid (Babcock v. Dill, 43 Barb., 584; Le Page v. McCrea, 1 Wend., 164-172), and is not brought within the principle that an action lies on a promise made for a valid consideration to a third person for the benefit of another. (See Lawrence v. Fox,
This defect in the evidence would be fatal to a recovery, even if a liability was otherwise established. The allegation of fraud is not established by the evidence, and it is nowhere shown that any false representation was made in obtaining a transfer of the property, and the case is not brought within the rule that false representations which affect the price of property, and are relied upon, render the contract void. (Smith v. Countryman,
The findings of the referee were insufficient to uphold the judgment, and the General Term were right in reversing the same. *328
The order must therefore be affirmed, and judgment absolute for defendants on stipulation with costs.
All concur, EARL, J., absent.
Order affirmed and judgment accordingly.