Rogers v. Wheeler

85 N.Y.S. 981 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903

Jenks, J.:

These are appeals from interlocutory judgments sustaining demurrers. In 1860 Mr. A. S. Wheeler and the predecessor of the plaintiff, Samuel T. Rogers, made a contract in writing to which there were two supplements. Mr. Wheeler was to invest the moneys of the plaintiff’s predecessor in realty sold for unpaid taxes, to do all of the business connected with purchases and management, and to pay semi-annually to the investor a proportion of the interest, retaining the balance thereof as his commissions and in consideration of his guaranty. The contract was made binding upon Mr. Wheeler’s executors, administrators and assigns. The venture was continued for many years after the death of Mr. A. S. Wheeler, and the defendants are the finals of the articulation of persons who, from time to time and in succession, have managed the business. I think that the relations of Mr. Wheeler and of his successors involve elements of trust and confidence beyond those incident to naked agency. Under the tax scheme as it existed in 1860, the property in arrears was sold for the lowest term of years possible that would secure the payment of the tax by the purchaser, and a certificate of such sale *437was issued. (Laws of 1854, chap. 384, tit. 5, § 26.) The owner, mortgagee or other person interested, at any time within two years; after the sale, might redeem the said land by paying to the; collector for the use of the purchaser the said purchase money, plus subsequent taxes paid by the purchaser, with fifteen per cent per annum in addition. (See Laws of 1860, chap. 158, amdg. Laws of 1854, chap. 384, tit. 5, § 29.) If there was not redemption, then the purchaser received a conveyance. (Consol. Act of 1854,* § 33.) Thus, it is evident that one who paid over money for such investments, content with a provision that he should have a certain part of the legal interest earned or a percentage of the profits, necessarily left much to the discretion, judgment and business integrity of his agent, and so must have put faith and trust in him. ' There flows out of such enterprise divers purchases for different sums, redemptions at different times, receipts of interest for different periods, allowances for subsequent taxes, reinvestments in other purchases; in fine, the turning over of money in different amounts with varying profits at uncertain periods. It is hard to conceive a venture in which the agent has a freer hand and more exclusive knowledge of the actual "profits, unless it be the so-called blind pools of the stock jobbers. The parties stand in a confidential relation which justified the calling for and the rendition of an account in equity. As is said by Finch, J., in Marvin v. Brooks (94 N. Y. 71, 75): Such a decree proceeds upon the ground that the defendant stands in the attitude of an agent dealing to some extent with the money or property of the other party; intrusted in a confidential relation with an interest which makes him a quasi trustee, and by reason of that relation knowing what the other party cannot know, and bound to reveal to him the entire truth.” (See, too, Schantz v. Oakman, 163 N. Y. 148, 157.) It is unnecessary to trace throughout the succeeding changes in the scheme for the sales of lands for unpaid taxes ; suffice it to say that whatever they were, necessarily there must have been a reliance upon or confidence in the manager of the business.

So far as the defendants Mr. Stoddard and Mr. Wheeler are concerned, their relation to the investment may thus be summarized. After Mr. A. S. Wheeler died, Mr. George S. Wheeler became hi*438s executor. Hr. A. S. Wheeler’s wife, Haney B. Wheeler, as his assignee and as his legatee and devisee, received the property, business and assets in question, and, in such capacity and also by her own individual agreement with the plaintiff who had succeeded to the interest of Samuel T. Rogers in the contract prior to. the death of A. S. Wheeler, carried on the business under the original contract. When she died, the said Mr. George S. Wheeler became her executor,. and both as such and by virtue of his individual. agreement carried on the business under the original contract. When he died, Mrs. Lucy E. Stoddard succeeded him las executor of Mrs. Wheeler, and as such and by her individual contract carried on the business. Upon the death "of Mrs.' Stoddard, the ' said defendants Mr. Stoddard and Mr. Wheeler became her executors, and as such and by virtue of' their own individual agreements carried on the business. The investments and the business management under the terms of the original contract liave been continued through the official and legal representatives of Mr. Wheeler and those who succeeded them respecti vely until the present day. '• '

The defendants demur, saying that the plaintiff has attempted to unite two or more causes of action in that she sets forth eight or nine separate causes of action against each individual and each representative in the succession stated. I am not prepared to admit that there are t.wo or more causes of action. The learned counsel for the appellant cites us to the discussion of a cause of action in Wiles v. Suydam (64 N. Y. 173). In the opinion, Church, Ch. J., commends the discussion of Professor Pomeroy upon this subject. That discussion is long and learned, and cannot be presented or summarized in this opinion, but I make this quotation from that .author’s work on Code Remedies*: The result of this analysis of the necessary elements which enter into every action is simple, easily t’o be understood, and yet exceedingly important; and the principle I "have thus deduced will serve as.an unerring test in determining whether different causes of action have been joined in a pleading, or whether one alone has been stated. If the facts alleged show one primary "right of the plaintiff, and one wrong done by the defendant which involves *439that right, the plaintiff has stated but a single cause of action, no .matter how many forms and kinds of relief he may claim that he is entitled to, and may ask to recover; the relief is no part of the cause of action. In applying this test, however, it must be observed that the single primary right, and the single wrong, which, taken together, constitute the one cause of action, may each be very complicated. For example, the primary right of ownership includes not only the particular subordinate rights to use the thing owned in any manner permitted by the law, but also similar rights to the forbearance on the part of all mankind to molest the proprietor in such use. The facts which constitute the delict complained of may embrace not only the wrongful obtaining, and keeping possession, in such a case as the one last supposed, but also the procuring and holding deeds of conveyance or other muniments of title, by which such possession is made possible, and to appear rightful. These suggestions are necessary to guard against the mistake of supposing that a distinct cause of action will arise from each special subordinate right included in the general primary right held by the plaintiff, or from each particular act of wrong, which, in connection with others, may make up the composite but single delict complained of.” (See, too, Donnelly v. Lambert, .62 App. Div. 189, 191 et seq. ; Skidmore v. Collier, 8 Hun, 50; Day v. Stone, 15 Abb. Pr. [N. S.] 137; Haines v. Hollister, 64 N. Y. 1.) It may well be said that the facts alleged show one primary right, namely, that of an accounting for this fund, and one wrong done by the defendants, namely, the failure to account for it after having it in their charge. All that the plaintiff seeks is an accounting. It is immaterial that others may heretofore have had it in their charge, so long as the defendants ultimately came into its possession with the liability to account, .and whether the obligation arises from their official succession, or that coupled with their individual agreement is simply a question of their grounds of liability.- The distinction between liability founded upon the obligation of the defendants in their representative capacities and perforce their individual agreements need not obtain in this -case.

In Fellows v. Fellows (4 Cow. 682, 698) Woodworth, J., says: '“lam clearly of opinion that this is not a case within the rule relied on by the appellant; but must be considered as falling within *440' that class of cases where there is a common interest among all, centering in the point in issue in the cause. Lord Redesdale, in Whaley v. Dawson (2 Sch. & Lefr. 370), observes, that in the English cases, where demurrers, because the plaintiff demanded in his bill matters of distinct natures against several defendants not-connected in interest, have been overruled, there has been a general right in the plaintiff covering the whole case, although the rights of’ the defendants may have been distinct, In such cases, the court proceeds on the ground of preventing multiplicity of suits, where one general right is claimed by the plaintiff against all the defendants. A demurrer lies where the subjects of the suit are, in themselves, distinct. Here the subject is the property of John Fellows,, in the hands of the defendants. The case does not afford ground for a demurrer within the authorities cited.” (See, too, New Work & New Haven R. R. Co. v. Schuyler, 17 N. Y. 592, 606; Mahler v. Schmidt, 43 Hun, 512.)

But let us assume that there is more than one cause of action ; nevertheless, I am of opinion that they , can be united under subdivision 9 of section 484 of the Code of Civil Procedure, because they arise out of transactions connected with the same,subject of action.. Transaction ” means “ The doing or performance of any business;; the management of an affair.” (Bouvier Law Dict.) Professor Pomeroy adopts and approves the definition of Worcester: “The act of transacting or conducting any business; negotiation; management; * * * a proceeding.” (Pom. Code Rem. [3d ed.] § 473.) The Century Dictionary defines the word as “ The management or settlement of an affair; a doing or performing.” The-words “subject of action” in their present significance are, I. think, well defined in McKinney v. Collins (88 N. Y. 216, 221),. where the court, per Dan forth, J., say: “ What do the words-‘subject of the action’ mean? That they are words of limitation and qualification is plain from the language of both subdivisions 3 and 4.* Evidently they are not identical with the words ‘ cause of action,’ and are not satisfied when the court lias: before it merely the obligation of a contract. They seem to have relation to some property,or thing concerning which the proceeding is instituted and carried on, and the changes to be effected by it. *441Similar words are found in section 167 (formerly section 143), as. amended in the laws of 1855, chap. 392,* providing, that the plaintiff may unite in the same complaint, several causes of action, whether they be such as have been heretofore denominated legal or equitable, or both, where they all arise out of the same transaction or transactions connected with the same subject-matter.’ ”

True, very learned judges have handled the phrase gingerly, e. g., Comstock, J., in New York & New Haven R. R. Co. v. Schuyler (17 N. Y. 592); Church, Ch. J., in Wiles v. Suydcum (64 N. Y. 173). Professor Pomeroy, after his general discussion, concludes as follows : “ I can conceive of no other interpretation which will apply to the phrase and meet all the requirements of the context. ' Subject-matter of the action ’ is not the cause of action,’ nor the ‘ object of the action.’ It rather describes the physical facts, the things real or personal, the money, lands, chattels and the like, in relation to-which the suit is prosecuted. It is possible, therefore, that several different transactions ’ should have a connection with this subject-matter,’ or, what seems to me to be the same thing, with this subject. of action.’ The whole passage is, at best, a difficult one to construe in such a manner that any explicit and definite rule can be= extracted from it. I remaVk, in bringing this analysis of the language to a close, that the latter clause of the subdivision —' or transactions connected with the same subject of action ’ — can probably have no application to legal causes of action, and can only be resorted to in practice as describing some equitable suits which involve extremely complicated matters. In fact, Hr. Justice Com-stock’s position is doubtless correct, that the entire subdivision finds its primary and by far most important application to equitable rather than to legal proceedings.”

The plaintiff is suing but for an accounting under the original contract, alleging that upon the death of the original promisor it •was carried out by these defendants by virtue of their respective legal successions and their individual agreements.

But if it be further contended that there are causes of action 'against the defendants individually and as representatives, the *442answer is that section 1815 of the Code of Civil Procedure permits this, provided the causes arise out of transactions connected with the same subject of action. I have heretofore attempted to show that such is the case. So far as the defendant Hr. Sweeney is concerned, it is alleged that he is the executor of the said Hr. George S. Wheeler (who was executor of both Mr. A. S. Wheeler and Mrs. Nancy B. Wheeler), who continued the business after her death, both as her executor and perforce of his individual agreement with the plaintiff. In equitable actions the causes of action are not required to affect all the defendants to the same extent or in the same way.” (Gray v. Fuller, 17 App. Div. 29, 36.) The causes of action do not require a different mode of trial, forasmuch as they all center around an accounting for a specific investment in a particular business, and they are not inconsistent in that the defendants may have conducted the business either in their representative or their individual capacity.

. The interlocutory judgment should be reversed and the demurrer ■overruled, with costs, with leave to the defendants to plead.

Goodrich, P. J., Woodward and Hirsohberg, JJ., concurred.

Interlocutory judgment reversed, with costs, and demurrer overruled, with costs, with leave to the defendants to plead over upon payment.

Laws of 1854, chap. 384, tit. 5.— [Rep.

3ded. § 455.— [Rep.

Code Proc. § 135, subds. 3,'4. — [Rep.

See Code Proc. § 167, as amd. by Laws of 1852, chap. 392, and Laws of 1863, chap. 392.— [Rep.

Pom. Code Rem. (3d ed.) § 475.— [Rep.