308 N.Y. 313 | NY | 1955
This suit was brought because of defendant’s default in carrying out this promise:
“ March 4th, 1949
Mr. Erhart Ruegg
24 West 40th Street
New York City, New York
Dear Sir:
At the request of Mr. William S. Arnold, we hereby agree to pay to you, for the account of Mr. Arnold, the sum of Twelve Thousand ($12,000.00) Dollars within thirty (30) days after certain Bonds No. 16-2548/9-47*316 issued by the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company for William S. Arnold and John Stum, have been cancelled and all the collateral now pledged to secure said bonds has been released by the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company and returned to our affiliated company.
Very truly yours,
FAIRFIELD SECURITIES CORPORATION By Ralph E. Still
Vice-President ”
There is no dispute as to the execution of that writing, or as to the signer’s authority to execute it on behalf of the corporate defendant, or as to defendant’s failure to pay. The sole attempted defense at the trial was that plaintiff’s proof did not establish a consideration for making the promise, and that question in turn boiled down to a dispute as to whether it was sufficiently proven at the trial that a certain telephone conversation testified to by one Korn, attorney of record for plaintiff-respondent, was actually a conversation had with Ralph E. Still, vice-president of defendant, who signed the letter sued upon.
In earlier litigation in this "cause (see 281 App. Div. 1023), it had been determined that the complaint’s allegations meant “ that defendant promised to pay in consideration of plaintiff’s intestate’s forbearance and that there was such forbearance or reliance on the promise ”, and that this sufficiently pleaded a cause of action. In other words, it was substantially agreed, when the case came to trial, that the only dispute was as to whether any consideration, for the promise, ran from plaintiff’s intestate to defendant, and it was further substantially agreed between the parties at the trial that plaintiff’s intestate’s promise to forbear entering judgment against one Arnold would be sufficient consideration for the agreement in the letter, provided defendant knew that such was the purpose of the letter. Thus, the trial concerned itself with the fact question as to whether defendant’s officer Still did know that the letter signed by him was being given to procure such forbearance by plaintiff’s intestate. That, in turn, resolved itself into a trial of the issue as to whether there was a telephone conversation in which Arnold told defendant’s vice-president Still that the letter was being given in return for,
The Appellate Division unanimously reversed, and, in its judgment of reversal, specifically reversed the lower court’s finding, stated in the latter’s opinion, that plaintiff had failed to prove that defendant knew that its promise to pay would be used to procure forbearance. In lieu of that finding, the Appellate Division made new findings, as contained in its opinion, that the conversation which attorney Korn listened to was by Arnold with defendant’s officer Still. Judgment reversing the judgment
We are persuaded, as was the Appellate Division, that this record is sufficient to prove that Arnold was talking to Still when Arnold stated, in a telephone conversation made in Korn’s office and in Korn’s presence, that the letter which Still was about to sign, and did sign, was being given in return for plaintiff’s intestate’s forbearing to make use of a confession of judgment which plaintiff’s intestate had received from Arnold. If we are correct in that, it is the end of the case, and the judgment appealed from is correct.
There is little dispute as to the facts. In 1948, one William S. Arnold, the nature of whose business and the nature of whose connection with either plaintiff’s intestate or defendant is not
All of the above is undisputed. The trial really concerned events of March 3 and March 4,1949, while Ruegg was still alive, but after he had turned over the unpaid note to Charles Korn who was decedent’s attorney and is now the attorney for his estate. Korn testified that, on March 3,1949, Arnold, the debtor, came to Korn’s office and that there was then and there a discussion between Korn, the creditor’s attorney, and the debtor Arnold, about the unpaid note, during which discussion Arnold not only accepted service of the summons and complaint in the suit on the note and gave Korn the confession of judgment above described, but also, according to Korn’s undisputed testimony, made an arrangement whereby $12,000 (which was, apparently, computed as the balance after the deduction for the estimated value of the boat security) would be paid by defendant Fairfield Securities Corporation, the relations of which corporation with Arnold were, so Korn testified, explained to Korn by Arnold but are not described in the record. It seems from documentary evidence that Arnold and others were defendants in a mail fraud criminal prosécution brought by the United States in a Federal court in Michigan, and that in March, 1949, this criminal prosecution was pending, that the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company, not a party hereto, had put up bail for Arnold in that
The consideration for the letter was afterwards forthcoming in fact, since, up to the time Ruegg died on March 2,1950, almost a year after the delivery of the letter, judgment had not been entered and it was only after his death that any attempt was made to collect on the letter promise. In the meantime and by the end of 1949, apparently, the bail bond collateral held by the bonding company and worth far more than $12,000 had been released by the bonding company to defendant Fairfield, except some $3,300 in cash, but defendant Fairfield paid nothing to Ruegg or his estate. It appears, although there is no express finding on this and it is not essential for the decision of this case, that when the letter sued upon was written, Fairfield had received a pledge, presumably from Arnold, of $12,000 worth of securities. It was also shown on the trial that at the time the letter sued upon was given, Fairfield owed Arnold at least $24,000. All of this tends to explain why defendant Fairfield, through Still, was willing to sign the letter sued upon.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Conway, Ch. J., Dye, Fuld, Froessel, Van Voorhis and Burke, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed.