39 A.D.2d 698 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1972
Order, Supreme Court, New York County, entered on July 6, 1971, denying petitioner’s motion for enforcement of an order of settlement, unanimously reversed, on the law and on the facts, and the motion granted to the extent hereinbelow set forth. Appellant shall recover of respondent $50 costs and disbursements of this appeal. In January, 1969, petitioner instituted the instant proceeding to dissolve Tune-Time Fashions, Inc. (hereafter “Tune-Time”), because of irreconcilable disputes among the stockholders. Petitioner then owned 50% of the stock of Tune-Time with the remaining 50% held by the estate of Jack Helfand for ultimate distribution to Helfand’s three legatees, his wife, his daughter and his son Marshal Helfand (hereafter “Marshal”). Petitioner and Marshal agreed to settle the proceeding and a “Final Order” was entered thereon pursuant, to which, inter alia, petitioner sold to Marshal his 150 shares of stock in Tune-Time, payable $20,000 contemporaneously and the remaining $15,000 in six equal semiannual installments of $2,500 each, commencing May 10, 1970, against delivery by petitioner to Marshal of a proportionate number of his remaining shares of stock (i.e., 10% shares for each $2,500 semiannual payment). The final decretal paragraph of said order provided that “ should (petitioner) or (Marshal) fail to comply with each and eveiy decretal paragraph (thereof), then, and iñ that event, application may be made to this Court for ■ enforcement hereof.” The settlement was made on the supposition that petitioner owned 150 shares of Tune-Time outright. Such, however, was not the case. Petitioner and Jack Helfand owned only 100 shares each of Tune-Time in their own names, with the remaining 100 shares owned by Allen-A Sales Co., Inc. (hereafter “Allen-A”), another corporation owned