More v. Rand
More v. Rand
Opinion of the Court
The judge on the trial refused to allow the defendants to prove the facts alleged in their answer as a counter-claim, on the ground that the cause of action for the fraudulent representation of the plaintiff, whereby the defendants were induced to enter into the contract of September 17, 1869, and to purchase the interest of Holley in the lease, furniture and business of the St.. Cloud Hotel, did not arise out of the contract or transaction, upon which the complaint is founded, and was not connected with the subject of the action. The action is brought for the dissolution of a copartnership between the plaintiff and defendants in the business of keeping that hotel in the city of New York, and for an accounting in respect to the copartnership business. The origin of the copartnership, and the circumstances under which it was commenced, are stated in the complaint, and in the findings of the judge. On and prior to September 17th, 1869, the plaintiff and one Holley were engaged as copartners under the name of More & Holley, in' conducting the hotel. They held a lease of the premises for a term of years at the annual rent of $32,000, and owned the furniture in the hotel, subject to a chattel mortgage for $64,500, to secure the notes of the firm, given on the purchase of the property. On that day the defendants entered into a written contract with More and Holley, whereby More and Holley agreed to sell to the defendants their interest in the furniture and property, and the lease and good-will of the business for $60,000, to be paid as follows : $31,000 to Holley October 1st, 1869, and $29,000 to More, a part in twelve months, and the balance at such convenient times as should
The complaint assumes, and the judge finds, that a copartnership was created between the parties under that agreement. The plaintiff sets out the agreement in his complaint, and claims to be allowed on the accounting the sum of $29,000, and in addition his share of the profits of the copartnership business. The defendants allege in their answer that they were induced to enter into the contract and to purchase the interest of Holley in the St. Cloud Hotel, and to engage in the business of keeping it, by false and fraudulent representations of the plaintiff, touching the amount of its business, the profits which More & Holley had derived therefrom and the cost of the furniture and property sold to the defendants; that he represented that the profits of the business for nine months prior to the making of the contract, were at the rate of $60,000 a year; that the furniture had cost $143,000, whereas it is alleged that the business was not prosperous, and yielded little if any profit, and that the furniture had cost much less, and was of much less value than the sum represented by the plaintiff. The defendants allege that they sustained damages by reason of the fraud, in that they were induced to pay to Holley a much greater sum than they otherwise would have paid, and much more than the real value of his interest, and there are other
But the right to interpose the counter-claim set up in the defendants’ answer, cannot be supported on the theory that the fraudulent representation of More directly induced the defendants to enter into the copartnership agreement and relation, which this action is brought to terminate. It is disclosed by the answer of the defendants, that they knew of the fraud at the time they elected to accept the plaintiff as a partner, and that the discovery of the fraud was the reason which induced them to decline to purchase the interest of More. But the
It is not a sufficient answer to the claim to set up the fraud in this action, that the right of action for the fraud is founded upon the representations made anterior to the contract of copartnership. It is true that the copartnership was not immediately created by the contract of September, but that contract made provision for a copartnership at the election of the defendants. It created the obligation which bound the plaintiff* as a copartner when that election was made. The action which the plaintiff brings for winding up the copartnership is, in a general sense, founded upon the contract of September seventeenth, which provided contingently for the copartnership subsequently created, and the fraud of the plaintiff, in inducing the defendants to enter into that contract, is so connected with the plaintiff’s cause of action as to make the damages sustained by them therefrom an available counter-claim in this action.
Nor do I perceive the force of the objection urged, that an action for an accounting is in effect a several action against each defendant, in which a several judgment, determining the rights of each copartner, is to be rendered, and that a claim for damages existing in favor of the defendants jointly cannot be interposed as a counter-claim. The plaintiff claims a right as against both defendants to a share in the common property, and to be allowed $29,000 as his contribution to the capital. The defendants have a common interest to diminish the claim of the plaintiff upon the fund to be distributed, and there is no practical difficulty in allowing the question
For the reasons stated, we are of opinion that the judge erred in refusing to allow proof of the counter-claim set up in the answer. It is manifest that the respective claims of the parties are capable of easy adjustment in this suit. It has been the policy of the law, in recent times, to allow parties to bring into a single action, so far as it can conveniently he done, all the controversies between them, for final and complete adjustment. The statute of set-off and the doctrine of recoupment have been from time to time extended and enlarged, in view of this policy.
The statute of counter-claim is a still further advance in the same direction, and should be liberally construed to accomplish the benign object of its enactment.
The judgment should he reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
All concur; Church, Ch. J., not sitting.
Judgment reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John H. More v. Thomas B. Rand
- Status
- Published