Court Opinion

ID: 8333720
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-17 21:47:52.865813+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:45:30.249662
License: Public Domain

Sedgwick, Ch. J.
The action was by plaintiff as payee, against the defendant as maker of the following instrument:
“ In consideration of the payment by Robert W. Forbes of the sum of $1,100 for the rent now due of the Colosseum Company, I hereby promise and agree if the said Robert W. Forbes is not repaid the sum of $1;100 within two months from date to pay him the sum of $500, with interest from date, on demand.
“ Dated New York, March 11, 1885.
“ Fred’k Haas.”
The defense was that the plaintiff had been repaid the rent in the sum of $1,100. To sustain this defense the defendant proposed to prove an arrangement that had been made before the instrument was signed. The arrangement, it was conceded, had not been made when the plaintiff was present. The defendant took the position that in ma, the plaintiff was bound by the arrangement, because one party to it was Charles Forbes and that Charles Forbes then acted as the agent of the plaintiff.
The court was right in overruling questions asked to show what was the arrangement. At the time the questions were asked, no facts were in evidence which tended to show that Charles Forbes was the agent of the plaintiff in respect of the matter in controversy.
The defendant’s counsel, moreover, declared, that what he desired to prove in connection with Charles Forbes was that at the time the defendant agreed to contribute $500 to the rent “ it was understood that the payment of the rent was to have a prior lien to all orders under a mortgage,” for $20,000 made by the company, and that that arrangement was made with Charles Forbes. The counsel also said that the understanding prior to the time the note was given was, that moneys to be advanced by the different parties to the payment of rent was to have a prior lien on this $20,-000 mortgage to Charles Forbes as trustee, and that he was to see ^hat anything brought in first from the company, any collections that might be made, should be first applied to the payment of this .rent.
*109It is manifest that such an arrangement would not be payment of rent, or result in that, until collections had been made and applied to repay the amount that had been paid for rent
There was another claim on the trial. It was that in July, after the making o£ the instrument, the plaintiff had surrendered to the company his claim against it for his payment of rent on his receiving certain bonds and mortgages and shares of the company. The evidence was conflicting as to whether the plaintiff received the bonds and shares from the company as payment or as collateral security. The jury competently found for the plaintiff on this issue.
The judgment and order are affirmed, with costs.
Freedman and O’Gorman, JJ., concur.