3 N.Y.S. 37 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1888
Lead Opinion
I cannot concur in the conclusions arrived at by Mr. Justice Daniels upon this appeal, (post, 39.) It does not seem to me that interest, as matter of law, ran upon the $75,000 which Asa Worthingtons passed to his account in June, 1861. This amount was not considered even by him as a fixed and definite sum with w'hich Henry B. Worthington was to-be charged. It is apparent that it was only an approximation and estimate, and it is evident that this amount was to be subject to future adjustment. Asa Worthington says: “The sum of $75,000, now passed to my credit, appears to be near enough to the right one, under present appearances; but time-will determine whether these estimates are correct, and I must be debited or credited with the difference, as the case may be.” In another part of the entry he says: “It is now, however, involved in the assets of your business, and I do not consider that it is at present due and payable to me. Our fortunes- and business have been linked together up to the present time without any. agreement or understanding between us of our relative interests. You have-been involved by my imprudence in a large outlay of cash funds, resulting in your being compelled to take real estate heavily incumbered for your security. These incumbrances must be removed, and much time consumed, before you can realize from it. It would be evidently unjust for me or my heirs to demand payment of my claim before you had had reasonable time to realize from the assets out of which it arises. To your ingenuity and perseverance is mainly due this claim I hold against you, and should your assets (now more-doubtful than before the existence of our country’s difficulties) prove to be of less value, or yield less, than was contemplated when the accounts were adjusted, (31st December, I860,) it is but right that a due proportion of the loss- or depreciation should be deducted from my claim.” He then goes on and says: “If the assets you hold should prove worthless, for instance, I should have no claim upon you; and so in proportion to their depreciation I must bear a proportionate rate of the loss, charging me with the same until my share-of the net profits, or my compensation, rather, be no more than one-third of your net profits. And this adjustment, in case of my absence/I must and do-confidently, cheerfully leave with you.” The whole of this declaration shows that this interest was a mere estimate, dependent for future adjustment upon the realization of assets whose value had been estimated, and seems to have-been made simply for the purpose of establishing a rate of compensation whose-amount depended upon the amount realized from these assets. He further says that the amount is not only not due, but no demand could be made for its payment until after a reasonable time to realize upon the assets from which it arises had elapsed. It seems to me evident that there was no such adjustment of the accounts as would carry interest as matter of law. neither do I think that the referee erred in placing little credence upon the testimony of Carrington as to what transpired at the time of the interview of Mr. Worthington and his sister. An examination of his testimony shows that Henry B. Worthington not only did not pretend to read from the book about the waiver of interest, but that what he did say about interest was simply argument from what did appear in the book. The language used by the witness in testifying as to what Mr. Worthington said shows that he did not pretend to be reading from the book, but making a statement independent of the book. In fact, one version given by Carrington shows conclusively that the claim of reading from the book was an after-thought. He says, speaking of Henry B. Worthington reading from the book: “ He read the agreement that the father was to have $75,000, and this waiver,—to the effect that the father [reading from the book] could not claim it as a cash payment, because it was involved in the assets.” The portion that Worthington is here represented as reading from the book, and which the witness calls the waiver, is actually in the book, and there is no evidence that he read anything else as a waiver. The witnessCarrington, even, does not pretend that he did, and the word “waiver” is evi
Brady, J., concurs.
Dissenting Opinion
The object of the action was to secure the settlement of accounts between Asa Worthington and Henry R. Worthington, his son, and to recover a balance alleged to have been due to Asa Worthington at the time of his decease. To maintain the action the fact is shown that the intestate had been engaged in the business carried on by his son Henry Worthington. But precisely how he was engaged in that business, whether as a partner, or as a person performing services for an interest in the profits, or whose compensation was to be graduated by the profits of the business, was not distinctly made to appear. But it was shown that a statement was made and subscribed by him in one of the books appertaining to the business on the 24th of June, 1861, by which there was stated to be owing to him for his services and attention to the business the sum of $75,000. A balance of another account was also carried to his credit, amounting to the sum of $2,420.21. A further claim was also made in behalf of the plaintiff as administratrix for an additional amount of moneys used in the business of Henry Worthington. The two preceding sums of money were made the "subject of the statement in writing, subscribed by the intestate on the 24th of June, 1861. The book containing this statement appeared sufficiently, from the evidence, to have remained in the possession of Henry R. Worthington, the testator, down to the time of his decease, which took place in December, 1880. And he is shown by the evidence of John W. Carrington, the husband of a daughter of the deceased testator, Asa Worthington, to have indirectly assented to this statement, and conceded the balance claimed by Asa Worthington as the amount due and owing to him out of the business. In the written statement, inserted and contained in the book, certain contingencies of business were mentioned from which the sum of $75,000 might be subject to increase or diminution. But no event appears to have occurred since the time when the statement was made, leading in any manner to a readjustment of this balance, but it continued to be what was apparently due to the intestate for his services and attention in the business, as that was made an adjusted balance in 1861. The other sum of $2,420.21 does not appear to have been subjected to any future change whatever. And these amounts having been settled and adjusted between the parties in this manner, subject to no changes as the events afterwards occurred, would entitle" the intestate to interest upon them under the ordinary legal principles applicable to the allowance of interest on liquidated balances. Little v. Banks, 85 N. Y. 258, 267; Winch v. Ice Co., 86 N. Y. 618. But in an interview which the witness Carrington testified took place in March, after the decease of Asa Worthington, which event occurred in November, 1875, with Henry R. Worthington, it has been stated that the latter informed the witness, and the children of Asa Worthington, who were present at the time, that interest on this balance had been waived by the intestate; that he had made payments upon the amount to the intestate, during his life-time, amounting to the sum of upwards of $62,000, and other payments chargeable against the balance; and in that manner reduced the aggregate sum due to the estate of Asa Worthington to the sum of $5,941.15. A small debt was left unpaid by the intestate, still further reducing the amount of this balance. The parties interested in the estate of the
The referee concluded this settlement to be binding upon the next of kin of the estate, and consequently held that there was no sum of money still due from the estate of Henry R. Worthington which could be recovered by the plaintiff as the administratrix of the estate of Asa Worthington; and in reaching that conclusion he declined to find as a fact that Henry R. Worthington read, or purported to read, to the plaintiff and her sisters, next of kin of Asa Worthington, that there was a waiver of interest in this balance of $75,000. If he had found that Henry R. Worthington, at the time when the statement of the final balance was made and accepted, had represented that there was a waiver of interest by his father on this balance, when in fact no such waiver had ever taken place, then a larger balance would have remained unpaid on the accounts, and that balance would have been very considerable in its amount. The chief point upon which the appeal has been taken is whether the referee was not bound, under the evidence, to find that such a representation had been made to the other next of kin by Henry R. Worthington; and if he had so found the. fact, then, as there was no proof that interest had been waived upon this balance, it would have followed that the final settlement as it took place was secured by a false representation. There was no contradiction of the evidence of Carrington relating to the fact of this statement having been made by Henry R. Worthington. He was not interested in the event of the action, and there was no fact or circumstance tending to subject his statements in the least degree to discredit, beyond his marriage with one of these next of kin. He was corroborated also by the statement contained in the book showing the balances relied upon in support of the action; and his evidence upon this subject, as well as what took place at the meeting of the next of kin of Asa Worthington, has been adopted and followed in other respects by the referee in his decision. It was also as to an important part of the interview sustained by the letter written by him soon afterwards to two of the next of kin, explaining to them the condition of the estate, as that had been represented by Henry R. Worthington, and, from the statement presenting his evidence in the case, he appears to have testified candidly, and without being unduly influenced by his feelings in favor of his wife, or of the other next of kin. There was, too, a probability supporting the truth of the statement made by him that Henry R. Worthington affirmed the fact to be that interest had been waived in the balance of $75,000; for if there had been no such waiver, the next of kin, who were present to ascertain the amount coming to them out of the business as the estate of their father, would naturally have suggested or required that interest should be allowed and computed upon this balance, or so much of it as from time to time remained, after the application of the payments which were made. But there was no such suggestion or claim; all reason for it having been removed apparently by the statement that the interest in fact had been waived by the intestate. The evidence of this witness, given and supported as it was in this manner, and not being in conflict with any other evidence in the case, was conclusive upon the referee, and should have been followed by him. Lomer v. Meeker, 25 N. Y. 361; White v. Stillman, Id. 541.
In giving his evidence that there was a waiver of interest on this sum of money, the witness Carrington was evidently impressed with the conviction that it had been read by Henry R. Worthington as a part of the statement