Opinion
April Term, 1899.
Present — Van Brunt, P.J., Barrett, Rumsey, Patterson and O'Brien, JJ.
Judgment affirmed, with costs, on opinion of the court below.
The following is the opinion of the court below:
An act of the Legislature, passed in 1895, directed payment by the city of New York of certain assessments for opening streets, therefore levied and collected, but never disbursed, and directed that payment should be made to parties paying the same. It appears that in 1866, the plaintiff, Cyrus Clark, and one William R. Martin (the defendant's assignor) made a written agreement touching the purchase, holding and management of certain land in the city, a feature of which agreement was that the title should be taken in the name of Clark, and he should collect rents, pay taxes and assessments, etc., on the joint account of Clark and Martin, and that Martin and Clark should be chargeable therewith, the sum so disbursed to be refunded by the rents or sales or by the parties in proportion to their interest in the land. In 1873, and under this arrangement, Clark paid to the city $ ,364.38 on assessment for opening a street through lands so owned by Clark and Martin, the interest in which of said Clark was one-fourth and the interest of Martin three-fourths. The same year an accounting between Clark and Martin was had and this item was adjusted, Martin paying three-fourths and Clark one-fourth. The counsel for plaintiff Clark contends that there is here a question as to who made this payment to the city, as contemplated by the act of 1895. I cannot see that the undisputed facts admit of a question. While the payment was made by the hand of Clark he made it as agent for Clark and Martin, and they must be treated as the parties making it. The further contention of plaintiff's counsel, that the plaintiff has an equitable claim or lien upon the fund, which the court should recognize in this action, is more easily asserted than discovered. The relations between the parties existing when this assessment was paid ended in 1874, when a full settlement was had, and a conveyance of the title to Martin by Clark of an undivided three-fourths of this land was executed and delivered. Thereafter there existed no partnership relation between the parties. It is true, for a time they were tenants in common of land; that while so tenants in common Clark paid some taxes for which he might have brought action in contribution against Martin. It is also true that in 1876 an outstanding mortgage upon the land was foreclosed and a judgment for deficiency taken against Clark and Martin which Clark paid, and for which he had a right of action in contribution against Martin. Both of these rights of action have expired by limitation, but if they presently existed I do not see how they could be regarded as impressing a lien, legal or equitable, upon this claim against the city. The judgment in this case should direct the payment of the sum named, one-fourth to the plaintiff and three-fourths to the defendant Annie R. Platt, and that plaintiff pay the costs of the action.