43 N.Y.S. 196 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
The defendant contends that upon the complaint no recovery could be had against her, except upon an accounting in respect to the property in question and of the proceeds thereof, and of .the business carried on by Rockwell, Brisbin and Peck with it. We do not think this is so. The complaint, after reciting the details of the transactions resulting in vesting the title to the personal property in question in William W. Rockwell, the plaintiffs’ testator, and Daniel Peck, the defendant’s testator, alleges in substance that¡ in the spring of 1881, Rockwell and Peck were owners of the property, Rockwell having the prior right to receive 82,200 from it or its proceeds, and Peck having the sole ownership of the remainder, and that thereupon Rockwell and Peck made an agreement by which Peck should have the sole possession and management of the property with power of disposition; that he should manage and dispose of it promptly to the best advantage, and out or the proceeds pay Rockwell the $2,200 and interest due him, and that then Peck should be the sole owner of what was left; that the property was worth upwards of $4,000; that Peck, under this agreement, took sole possession of the property, sold and disposed of it all, but not promptly or in a business like way, and applied the proceeds to his own use and never paid Rockwell anything. The complaint does not allege that-Peck did actually receive proceeds enough to pay Rockwell. For this breach of agreement by Peck, Rockwell was entitled to recover damages, and the measure of his damages was the loss the breach caused him. It would be unjust to permit Peck to waste or misapply the property and then be credited with the amount lost by such waste or misapplication.
The answer alleged that an accounting was necessary between Rockwell, Brisbin and Peck, but the evidence did not make a case for such accounting. Rockwell, Brisbin and Peck were separately accommodation indorsers upon the notes of Pope & Kellogg, the assignors of the property in question to them. Pope & Kellogg were manufacturers of shirts, collars and cuffs at Glens Falls. Rockwell’s liability as their indorser was $2,200, Brisbin’s, $1,100, and Peck’s, $2,600. Rockwell and Brisbin had a chattel mortgage upon the property as security for their respective indorsements, and Peck held a junior chattel mortgage as his security. Pope & Kellogg, May 26,1881, in consideration of Rockwell’s, Brisbin’s and Peck’s respective agreements each to pay the'notesupon which he was indorser, sold to them the tools, appliances and stock of their manufacturing business, the bill of sale stating that as between Rockwell, Brisbin and Peck, Rockwell'and Brisbin should first be paid out of the proceeds of the property, and the balance should belong to Peck. Each paid the notes indorsed by him. Immediately after their purchase, Peck, fear
The defendant also contends that the answer sets up a counterclaim, and that the same stands admitted because no reply to it was served. The answer does allege a claim against Rockwell and Brisbin growing out of the business, which the answer alleges they carried on with the property in question; but this is not a counterclaim against Rockwell individually, and no other force can be given to it than as an alleged defense to the cause of action set forth in the complaint.
The defendant alleges error in the reception of testimony given by the assignor of the property in question to Rockwell, Brisbin and Peck, under whom Rockwell and Peck derived their title, concerning personal communications and transactions between the assignor and Peck, the defendant’s testator, subsequent to the assignment. It is plain that the cause of action here alleged was not derived from the assignor, hut arose out of the subsequent transactions of Rockwell and Peck in relation to the property assigned to them. Section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure does not, either in letter or in spirit, apply. All concurred.