202 N.Y. 379 | NY | 1911
Lead Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *381 I am of opinion that the facts found by the trial court do not support the judgment. The foundation of the plaintiff's right to relief are the two findings:
"That it was not the understanding of the trustees that the transfer to a third person should deprive the plaintiff of its real ownership of the property.
"That it was the understanding and intent of the trustees that the property should be conveyed to a third person to hold for the church and lease to the theatre people, in order to cover up and conceal from the church members the fact that it was in reality leasing to them."
There is no finding that the defendant ever agreed to hold the lands conveyed to him in trust for the plaintiff, *383
and, on the contrary, there is an express finding to which I shall hereafter allude, which negatives any such promise or agreement. And even had such a promise been made, it not being in writing, the promise with the two findings I have quoted would be insufficient alone to establish the trust and entitle the plaintiff to relief. (Wood v. Rabe,
This finding of the trial court necessarily excludes any promise, agreement or assent on the part of the defendant to anything except that which is provided for in the written agreement. He distinctly defines his position and the terms on which he would accept the conveyance to the trustees of the plaintiff, and with full knowledge of those terms and conditions the trustees directed the conveyance to him and entered into the agreement the defendant proposed. It is to be noted that the agreement in one contingency, and only in one contingency, provides for a reconveyance of the property, that is in case the proposed lease should not be executed, and the agreement also provides that the defendant shall safeguard not only the plaintiff *386 but himself, by seeing that the lessees pay for the improvements they may make in the property. In the face of this agreement and the finding of the court as to it it seems to me idle to claim that the property was impressed in the hands of the defendant with any trust in favor of the plaintiff, or that the defendant's obligations and relations to the property were any wise different from those expressed in the conveyance and agreement. If there is any inconsistency between the finding quoted and the other findings made by the trial court, the appellant is, under the settled rules of practice, entitled to the benefit of the one most favorable to him.
I think also that the plaintiff, by its subsequent conduct, ratified and confirmed the conveyance to the defendant. The trial court found that in April, 1906, five years after the transaction, and within a few days before the expiration of the lease to the theatre company, the defendant wrote to the trustees of the plaintiff offering to pay $20,000 on the plaintiff's mortgage and asking, in consideration thereof, that the remainder be allowed to stand for four years, $5,000 to be paid each year on the principal, together with interest; that the trustees adopted a resolution that the request of the defendant be complied with, and thereupon the defendant paid to the plaintiff the sum of $20,000. It is very probably true that, no new consideration being advanced, the payment by the defendant of $20,000, already due on the mortgage, was not a sufficient consideration for its extension, and the plaintiff might have insisted on the immediate payment of the balance, despite of its receipt of the $20,000 on the condition stated. But the receipt of the money seems to me plainly an acknowledgment that the deed given by the plaintiff was effective to pass the title to the defendant and that the title was then in him. On no other possible theory could the plaintiff, under the facts then known to it, have been entitled to the money. If the defendant held title simply as the trustee or dummy of the *387 plaintiff, it was not entitled to money from him unless under its instructions he had sold the property on its behalf, of which there is no finding, and, on the contrary, the plaintiff claims to have been ignorant at the time of any sale.
Nor am I disposed to look upon the transaction as so unconscionable on the part of the defendant or prejudicial to the plaintiff as is contended. The members of the church empowered the trustees to sell the property, the use of which the church no longer required. No fraud was practiced upon them. The trustees had made diligent effort in that behalf and failed. The property was producing no income, and carrying it was a severe burden upon the resources of the church. Proposals were made to lease it for the purpose of a theatre, but the trustees, while they were not unwilling that it should be occupied for that purpose, were unwilling that the church should lease it for such a use, fearing dissatisfaction on the part of some of the church members. Thereupon the scheme was planned which was subsequently carried through and which resulted in the property being used as a theatre. In the adoption of this plan the trustees exhibited some moral cowardice, but committed no fraud. The plan was to convey the property to some one who would take it at its full value, the purchase money to be secured by a mortgage on the land, but without personal liability of the grantee. He was to make the lease to the theatre. If the negotiations for the lease failed, the property was to be reconveyed to the church. If the lease was made, the grantee was to pay, on account of the interest on the mortgage, only the amount of rent he might receive. By this arrangement the plaintiff was no worse off than it was before, for if there was no lease the property was reconveyed. If there was a lease the plaintiff would get just what it was willing to receive, had the trustees had the moral courage to rent the property for a theatre. The defendant became personally *388 liable for the rent he might receive, and if he failed to pay it, the mortgage to the plaintiff, which ran only for a year, could be immediately foreclosed. What the plaintiff undoubtedly did lose was the chance of the appreciation in the value of the property. On the other hand, the plaintiff got the defendant's obligation to collect the rent, look after the property, to care and superintend the improvements, and so arrange that there should be no charge against the property for the cost of such improvements by the failure of the lessees themselves to pay therefor. For these services the defendant could not recover any compensation from the plaintiff. The only inducement for him to do this work and assume the obligations was the chance that he might make a profit on the sale of the property, and it was doubtless due to the efforts of himself and Luther, with whom the court found he agreed to divide the profits, that a profit was finally realized. Often an option is given on real estate for a nominal consideration, in the belief or hope that the party to whom it is given may be able to effect a sale where the owner had been unable to do so. I am by no means certain that, taking the transaction between the parties solely as it appears on the face of the instruments executed by them, the transaction was not a beneficial one to the plaintiff and did not enable it to make a sale that by its own efforts it would have been unable to effect.
The judgment should be reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide event.
Dissenting Opinion
I vote for the affirmance of the judgment. The case differs from that of Hamlin v. Hamlin, (
HAIGHT, WERNER and WILLARD BARTLETT, JJ., concur with CULLEN, Ch. J.; VANN and CHASE, JJ., concur with GRAY, J.
Judgment reversed, etc.