Judges: Brunt
Filed Date: 6/15/1894
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This action was brought to compel the specific performance of an alleged contract for the exchange of property in the city of New York. In the disposition of this appeal it is not necessary to state with particularity the facts which were developed by the testimony. It would appear from the evidence that the plaintiff was a mere dummy, if he ever had any substantial existence, and that his name was used for the purpose of concealing from the defendant the real parties with whom he was dealing. After a considerable number of negotiations, in which an unusual number of alleged brokers seem to have intervened, a payment on account of a contract to be entered into was made by the plaintiff to the defendant, and a receipt given, reciting generally the terms of the proposed contract, it appearing upon the face of this receipt that a more formal contract was to be entered into. At the time fixed for the execution of the formal contract, objections were raised upon the part of the persons pretending to represent the plaintiff, but really representing themselves, that certain leases were upon the premises, and that they would not execute the contract unless additional time was given them, and concessions made in respect to certain mortgages and payments. The evidence more than justified the finding that, at the time of the giving of the receipt in question and the making of the payment, the parties interested were told of the existence of these leases upon the defendant’s premises, and that this excuse in respect to the leases was availed of for the purpose of securing their wishes in reference to the change of terms, they having come to the conclusion that they had probably paid a little too much for the property in question.
It is urged that the receipt upon the part of the appellant was a complete contract, and that therefore the defendant could not show that the existence of these leases was known to the parties interested, and had been disclosed to them prior to the making of the receipt, upon the ground that it varied the terms of the contract. But it is apparent upon a reading of this instrument that it was not intended to be the contract between the parties, but that it was