97 N.Y.S. 104 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
This is an appeal from an order vacating a warrant of attachment on the ground that there is no competent or sufficient proof in the papers upon which the warrant was granted to show to the satisfac
The contract attached to the complaint is in the-form of a letter addressed to" the plaintiff and signed by R. L. Edwards, upon which is indorsed: ‘‘ I agréeHo the aforesaid proposition arid accept the same;” signed by plaintiff. It states': ‘‘ If -you will forthwith, deposit 2,000 shares in the Treasury of the Corporation' I will agree to, purchase your entire holdings in the Hygienic Soap Granulator - Co. of Hew York City, say Forty-five hundred shares for the sum i of $15,000, upon the .following terms and conditions: The said 4,500 shares of stock of said ‘ company, in negotiable form, to he deposited with Post Bros. & Go. of the City of Hew York,, and there remain, subject to the following instructions and conditions : I
“ In case the second payment shall have been paid and default made on the third and last payment, the'said Post Bros. & Company shall then deliver 1,250 shares additional to said B. L. Edwards or his order for the $10,000 already .paid, and the balance of the stock, say 2,050 shares, shall be returned to the original depositor, and this_ agreement or writing shall be declared null and void in so far as the stock unpaid for is concerned.
“ When all the payments shall have been made within the dates above specified, amounting to $15,000, the said Post Bros. & Company shall then deliver all the balance of say 2,050 shares of said stock to the said B. L. Edwards, thereby completing the transaction and releasing Post Bros. & Company and all concerned from any further obligation.”
The plaintiff was also to give an irrevocable proxy to vote for two years the 4,500 shares deposited as aforesaid, and his resignation as director and vice-president of said corporation.
■This contract exhibits an intent that Jones shall part with 6,500 shares of stock, 2,000 to be returned to the treasury of the corporation, and 4,500 to be delivered to Edwards, from time to time, as payments are made, for $15,000.
The question is what was the nature of the holding by defendant company of the 2,000 shares pending the completion of the contract between Jones and Edwards. The plaintiff says the language is clear; that the words are to be taken in their plain, ordinary and every-day sense; that the words “ if yon will forthwith deposit 2,000 shares in the treasury of the corporation,” are to be read in connection with the words “ the said 4,500 shares of stock of said company * * * to be deposited with Post Bros. & Co. * * *
The rule to be applied on the motion to vacate is laid down in Romeo v. Garofalo (25 App. Div. 191). 'as follows: “The general rule is (as was held in Furbush v. Nye, 17 App. Div. 326, and in Johnson v. Hardwood Door & Trim Co., 79 Hun, 407), that the court Will not consider the merits of the action upon a motion of; this character and thus determine whether the plaintiff can succeed or
Mr. Justice Barrett in Guarantee Savings Loan Co. v. Moore (35 App. Div. 421) said : “ The question then is; Are the plaintiff’s papers here hopelessly bad ? ” To the same effect Goodyear v. Commercial Fire Ins. Co. (58 App. Div. 611 ) ; Stewart v. Lyman (62 id. 182). In Goldmark v. Magnolia Metal Co. (28 App. Div. 271) Mr. Justice O’Brien used this language: “ Upon a motion to vacate an attachment, the sufficiency of the complaint is not to be discussed and treated with the same elaboration as when the question of its sufficiency is presented upon a demurrer. Undoubtedly it is the duty of the court to examine the pleading with a view. to seeing if it is frivolous or so barren of substantial averments that no reasonable arguments can be urged in its support.”
The complaint is perfect in form and properly alleges an action in conversion. The sole doubt is raised by the terms of the contract attached thereto, the language of which by the plaintiff is sought to be interpreted according to its plain and ordinary meaning, and by the defendant to be interpreted by giving to its plain .words quite a different and certainly not an obvious meaning. It cannot be said that the defendant has established that the plaintiff’s papers are “ hopelessly bad,” nor that they are “ so barren of substantial averments that no reasonable arguments can be urged in (their) gupport.”
The order appealed from should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and attachment reinstated, with ten dollars costs.
O’Brien, P. J., Patterson, Ingraham and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.