130 N.Y.S. 436 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
.The- cause, .of- action' alleged in the complaint is that the Union Bant of Brooklyn was absorbed or. merged in the Mechanics and Traders Bank, the latter assuming all of the obligations of the former; that on or about December 15, 1905, the plaintiffs entered into a contract in writing with the defendant .William R. Pearce, a copy of which contract, under seal, is annexed as Exhibit A of the complaint; that said Pearce Was at 'all the times mentioned in the complaint an employee of the defendant bank, and made and entered into the contract, set forth in the complaint as the agent of the said bank; that pursuant to said contract the property therein referred to was conveyed to said Pearce, who thereafter held the samé as trustee or agent of the said bank, and that the latter was bound'by the terms of said agreement; that the buildings referred to in said contract were completed and the property therein referred to was sold by said Pearce, acting in behalf of said banks as their agent; that the proceeds of such sale have been received by said Pearce, as such agent or trustee, together with various sums realized upon mortgages; that the contract referred to in the complaint, and which, provided that Pearce should-take title, advance the money necessary to complete certain buildings then in course of construction, and thereafter sell the same, repaying the moneys which had been advanced by the- banks, etc., and pay over any surplus to the plaintiffs' had been fully performed, except in respect to the payment over of the surplus. This is the substance of the allegations of the complaint, and the rélief demanded is “ that the defendants account to these plaintiffs for the moneys and prop-' ei’ties received by them under the terms of the contract heretofore set forth; and that upon the completing of such accounting-said -defendants be directed to pay to- these plaintiffs the amount of the surplus that may remain due and owing from said'defendants -to these plaintiffs under said contract, after making all proper deductions pursuant to.its terms, and for such' other and further relief as to the court shall seem just and proper,”
Although there is a clear intent on the part of the plaintiffs to state a cause of action for specific performance of the con
Great - stress is laid upon the fact that the plaintiffs have pleaded a state of facts which shows that the bank has had the
- The interlocutory judgment appealed from should be reversed, with costs.
Interlocutory judgment reversed, with costs.