103 A.D. 554 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
Lead Opinion
The learned counsel for the appellant has insisted with much -of iteration that in the disposition of the case presented by this appeal the learned trial court omitted to examine all of the evidence in the case, and thereby fell into error in rendering the judgment from which the appeal is taken. In view of this
The court further found that the transfers, notwithstanding their form and the consideration recited therein, were not intended or understood by the parties to deprive Mrs. Blanchard of the beneficial ownership of the property which purported to be conveyed thereby, and that the defendant held the title to the property as the agent of
The argument presented by the learned counsel for the appellant that these letters when coupled with the oral testimony are to be regarded solely as having reference by both Mrs. Blanchard and
It is claimed by the appellant, however, that if this be so, yet the transfers were the free and voluntary act of Mrs. Blanchard, clear of any fraud or undue influence upon the part of Weld, and that, therefore, the parties are in pari delicto in a fraudulent scheme
The evidence leads fairly to the conclusion that during the lifetime of Mrs. Blanchard Weld acted towards her in the utmost good faith and evidently intended so to act. He was willing to execute any paper at any time restoring to Mrs. Blanchard her property. lie recognized as fully and completely as written words could the relation which he occupied to her and to the property, and had he continued to occupy such position after her death there would be no basis upon which to found a judgment in fraud against him at the instance of these plaintiffs. Holding this property, as we must conclude he did, as the agent and trustee of Mrs. Blanchard and for her benefit, it follows that the beneficial title to the same vested imme
The judgment which has been rendered, however, may not be sustained in its entirety. It provides for a personal judgment against the defendant for the sum of $128,667.20, with interest, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $131,977.16. It is also directed by the judgment that the instruments of transfer executed by Mrs. Blanchard be wholly set aside and canceled of record, and that the defendant convey and transfer to a receiver all of the property which he received thereunder. Such a judgment is not authorized. The defendant is liable for the property and for its proceeds if he has disposed of any, but the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover of him all of the property and also have a personal judgment for its value. The claim of the plaintiffs against the defendant will be entirely satisfied if all of the property of Mrs. Blanchard which the defendant has received is restored to the plaintiffs. Whatever loss has been sustained in connection with the defendant’s dealings with the property, for that he is personally liable and he is also liable for any accretions thereto. This covers the time embraced within the injunction period. As the defendant was obligated to restore the property to the true owners upon the death of Mrs. Blanchard, his refusal so to do was a wrongful act upon his part, and the plaintiffs were authorized to resort to any remedy which would protect the property and secure its return. They were, therefore, authorized to apply for and obtain an injunction, pendente lite restraining Weld from disposing of the property apd if during that period, by reason of a decline in the value of the
It necessarily follows, therefore, that the judgment should be interlocutory in form and that it should direct that an accounting be had in which the rights of the parties can be adjusted, both as to the amount and value of the property received from Mrs. Blanchard by Weld, and also the value and amount of the services which Weld rendered for her and for which he is entitled to compensation. It follows, therefore, that the judgment should be modified as indicated in this opinion, and as modified it should be affirmed, without costs to either party as against the other of this appeal.
Van Brunt, P. J., McLaughlin and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur with Mr. Justice Hatch, except in the discussion of the effect of the evidence as to the fraud of the appellant. It is quite possible, as stated by Mr. Justice Hatch, that that evidence would not justify a finding of fraud if there had been no confidential or fiduciary relations between the parties to the agreement by which the defendants acquired the legal title to substantially all of the testatrix’s property. The appellant was an employee of a firm of brokers who had the possession and control of a large amount of the plaintiff’s testatrix’s property, and because of that position and the relations that existed between the parties to the agreement there
As to the right of this appellant to recover compensation for the services that ho alleges he performed for her, I do not understand that any claim for compensation was made during her life. As before stated, he was in the employ of a firm of stockbrokers who had charge of her property and who were in the habit of making purchases and sales of stock for her account. When she was away she gave to the appellant discretion in relation to the purchase and sale of stock for her,'and he apparently made a profit for her; but
Judgment modified as directed in opinion, and as modified affirmed, without costs.