35 N.Y.S. 597 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
The order requiring the Gould Coupler Company and its officers to appear before a referee with its books, and submit to an examination, was made .upon the affidavit of Mr. Benjamin J. Walker, setting forth that a written contract was entered into between the two companies named in the above title, on the 26th day of January, 1891, by the terms of which contract the Erie Company granted the Gould Company the right to use all the processes which the Erie Company was using, or might thereafter use, in the manufacture of malleable iron, and furnish the services of Mr. Walker to superintend the construction of a malleable iron plant, which was to be erected by the Gould Company, and to furnish to said Gould Company all patterns for furnaces, plates, etc., required in said construction; in consideration whereof, the Gould Company agreed to pay, in quarter-yearly payments, to said Erie Company certain royalties mentioned and provided for in said contract, for the use of the processes mentioned, upon all the material which the
The affidavits of the president and treasurer contained allegations tending to show that the Erie Company had failed to perform the contract upon its part, and that the Gould Company had not used, to any extent, the processes mentioned in the contract. The contract referred to was made in the city of Buffalo, and the alleged cause of action arose in the state of New York. We are satisfied, after an examination of this case, and the authorities to which our attention has been called, that there is very little, if any, merit in the appeal. The facts present a case coming peculiarly within the provisions of sections 870-873 of the Code, which provide for such an examination of a person about to become a party to an action. While it is stated, in the affidavits of the officers of the Gould Company, that the Erie Company has failed to perform its contracts, and hence has no claim upon the Gould Company, that question should be litigated upon the trial of the action, and not upon the hearing of such a motion as this. The information sought is presumably within the exclusive knowledge of the Gould Company, and presumably is contained in its books. It was its duty to furnish to the Erie Company statements of the tonnage of metal produced, manufactured, and shipped under said contract. It is claimed by the appellant that an action in equity for an accounting might be instituted, and the facts set forth elicited upon the trial of such action. The respondent is not compelled to resort to that form of action. In order to intelligently frame a complaint
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with $10 costs and disbursements of the appeal. All concur.