123 N.Y.S. 832 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
This action, was commenced by service of the summons on the Empire Trust Company on the 12th day of January, 1909. It is a suit in equity for the cancellation of an agreement between the defendants composing .the firm of Searing & Co. and the plaintiff and others who became subscribers thereto. The date of the agreement is blank as to the month and day, but the year 1907 is filled in, and it was signed by the plaintiff in the month of February of' that year. The agreement' contemplated the formation of a corporation to be known as the Delaware and Eastern Railway Company, and the object of the agreement, which may be termed a syndicate agreement, was the purchase of $6,000,000 of bonds of the company with a view to using the proceeds for the construction of the line of railroad from Hancock to Schenectady in the State of Hew York, and for acquiring the stock and bonds of the Hancock and East Branch Railroad Company and the Schenectady and Hargaretville Railroad Company, and all the rights, privileges and franchises of those companies, and also the Delaware and Eastern Railroad Company, which had then been constructed and was being operated. The plaintiff subscribed for bonds of the par value of $200,000. The action is based on allegations that the plaintiff was induced to become a subscriber to the syndicate agreement on false representations and on the ground of -failure of consideration- and abandonment of the enterprise. The syndicate agreement was assigned to the Empire Trust Company as security for a loan of $150,000 made by it to the firm of Searing & Co. The answer of the Empire Trust Company put in issue the material allegations of the' complaint, and set up five separate and distinct defenses, in which it is alleged that there is due and owing from the plaintiff to the Empire' Trust Company the sum of $150,000 for money loaned to the subscribers of the syndicate agreement and the firm of Searing & Co. This claim is made both on the theory that said firm was the agent of said subscribers in procuring said loan, and also upion the theory that
The plaintiff is a resident of the State of Pennsylvania, and a considerable part of his time is. spent in Texas. The defendants George and Searing are also non-residents of the State and reside in New Jersey. Pending the action a receiver of the firm of Searing & Co. has been appointed in bankruptcy proceedings in the southern district of Hew York, and also' for the Delaware, and Eastern.Railway Company, which was organized as contemplated. It was shown that the Empire Trust Company lias already expended the sum of $5,350 for counsel fees and disbursements in the defense and preparation for the trial of this action, and that it has incurred additional like obligations which will probably exceed the sum of $4,000. It further appears that the appellants would be greatly inconvenienced and put to extraordinary expense in the trial of the issues in another jurisdiction, and that it might be impossible to make personal service of process upon all the parties in another jurisdiction.
The only ground assigned for the discontinuance of the action is the fact that the defendants were pressing the case for trial at a time when it was inconvenient for the plaintiff to remain in attendance upon the trial. The Empire Trust Company has not in form pleaded a counterclaim, nor has it demanded any affirmative relief. Its only demand for relief is that the complaint be dismissed with costs. All of-the essential facts to constitute a counterclaim for a recovery against the plaintiff for the indebtedness which it alleges is due and owing to it from him are pleaded. As the pleading stands, however, these facts are. merely pleaded as - a defense-and if the plaintiff should default in appearing on the trial no affirmative relief could be awarded against, him: As the pleading stands; therefore, the plaintiff cannot he compelled to litigate any of the issues, nor can any judgment be rendered against him other than for a dismissal of the complaint with costs, without an amendment of the answers or his appearance upon the trial. If, therefore,' neither answer be amended by an appropriate demand for affirmative relief, the court' should allow the plaintiff to discontinue the action on such terms as justice requires. The circumstances of this
Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, Scott and Dowling, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion remitted to Special Term for rehearing in accordance with . . . Í opinion. •