14 N.Y.S. 31 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
This action was brought to obtain an accounting .and
to recover 200 shares of the capital stock of the Main Street So Humboldt Parkway Land Company, or the value of such shares, after deducting the purchase price and subsequent payments of assessments and interest thereon made by the defendants. The plaintiff and the defendants had been stockholders of this company for some time. On the 3d day of April, 1886, an assessment of $1,000 was made on the shares of the stock held by the plaintiff, and she, being unable to pay such assessment, was assisted thereto by the defendants, who loaned to her their indorsement upon her promissory note at 60 days, which was-discounted, and the proceeds turned over to the plaintiff, and applied to the payment of the assessment against her upon such stock. The note matured on the 5th day of June, 1886. It was not paid by the maker,—the plaintiff. It was protested for non-payment, and the defendants properly charged upon their contract of indorsement, by notice of such non-payment, and they in fact paid the note on the 17th day of June, 1886. At the time of the execution of the note the following agreement was made by the plaintiff, under seal, and duly acknowledged by her before a notary public: “Ear value received, I hereby sell, assign, transfer, and set over unto E. C. Longnecker, Jacob Davis, and August Baetzhold all my right, title, and interest in the annexed certificates of stock in the Main Street So Humboldt Parkway Land, Company, being certificates Nos. 30, 33, 34, and 35, representing two hundred shares of said stock. The said parties above named have this day indorsed my note for one thousand dollars, payable in sixty days from this date, for the purpose of enabling me to pay an assessment, for that amount on said stock. Now, I agree that, in case I do not pay said note at maturity, and said Longnecker, Davis, and Baetzhold do pay said note, that they shall absolutely own all my right, title, and interest in said shares of stock. Said shares of stock have heretofore been assigned to Peter Morgenhagen and the German American Bank, who have been paid in full, and said certificates now belong to me, free from all liens and claims. ” At the time that this agreement was made, and at the time of the loaning of their indorsement by the defendants, there was no market value for the stock in question, and its value was purely speculative. Upon these facts the learned judge at the special term held as conclusions of law that the transaction amounted to a sale of the stock upon certain conditions, and that the title to it vested in the defendants on the failure of the plaintiff to pay the note and on payment thereof by the defendants, and that, by reason of such failure of the plaintiff to pay and by the complete performance by the defendants, the latter became absolute owners of the stock under the contract. The learned counsel for the appellant urges upon us the argument that the transaction