Edward G. Murray Lighterage & Transportation Co. v. Warren

Lyon, J.:

This action is in replevin. The defendant was the sheriff of Washington county. As such, in June, 1914, he levied under an execution issued upon a Supreme Court judgment in the action of Funston v. Murray Transportation Company, upon a canal boat named the John H. Murray of New York. The question involved in this litigation is whether the canal boat belonged to the judgment debtor, hereinafter referred to as the transportation company, or to the plaintiff, hereinafter referred to as the lighterage company. The defendant claimed that the two transportation companies were in fact one and the same concern, having no separate or distinct identities, and that both were owned and controlled by Edward Gr. Murray, who was the president of the lighterage company and the assistant treasurer of the transportation company. At the close of the evidence the defendant moved for the dismissal of- the complaint, both as to the right of possession of the property, as well as to damages for detention, and the plaintiff moved for the direction of a verdict for the delivery of the boat to the plaintiff. The motion of the plaintiff was conditioned, however, upon the court holding that the plaintiff was entitled to damages. The court held that the plaintiff was not entitled to damages and granted the defendant’s motion for the dismissal of that portion of the cause of. action. The court thereupon directed judgment for the plaintiff for the return of the property. The defendant excepted to such direction, and asked for permission to go to the jury upon the question whether the lighterage company and the transportation company were one and the same concern, and whether the latter at the time of the *698levy had a financial interest in the boat equal to or in excess of the amount of the judgment. The court denied the request, and to such denial the defendant excepted. Plaintiff’s attorney thereupon asked that the jury find the value of the property to be returned, and the court thereupon directed that the jury find the value to be $3,000, but no damages. From the judgment entered upon the verdict under the direction of the court, and the denial of defendant’s motion to set aside the verdict, this appeal has been taken. The rule that upon an appeal from a judgment entered upon the direction of a verdict, all evidence favorable to the defeated party and all inferences which may be legitimately drawn therefrom are to be resolved in his favor, is too well known to require the citation of authorities.

Following this rule the jury had the right to find from the evidence that all the capital stock of the lighterage company was owned by Edward Gr. Murray, who was the president and secretary of the company; that all the capital stock of the transportation company was owned by his brother, and that Edward Gr. Murray was the assistant treasurer of that company; that the two companies occupied as an office the same room at No. Vl South street in the city of New York; that the directors of the lighterage company were Edward G-. Murray, his father, John H. Murray, and one Bord; that the directors of the transportation company were the three brothers of Edward Gr. Murray; that Edward Gr. Murray had full authority from the transportation company to contract bills and to arrange for their payment, and as assistant treasurer had signed notes, and signed and indorsed checks of that company; that although he received no compensation whatever from the transportation company therefor, he devoted about one-third of his time to its business in making contracts, soliciting freight and traveling about, making, among other contracts, that with one Hunt, introduced in evidence by defendant, of date May 21, 1913, for chartering from him a tug with a captain and an engineer for the Champlain canal season of navigation, which contract bears the signature “ Murray Transportation Co., per E. Gr. Murray, party of the first part; ” that the lighterage company leased its boats, usually at the price of six dollars per day, to the transportation company, which never had

*699any boats of its own, although at one time in 1914 it had about forty boats working, more than one-half of which it hired of parties other than the lighterage company; that some of the boats claimed to belong to the lighterage company and to be leased by the transportation company were repaired and the bill paid by the transportation company; that, representing the transportation company, Edward Gr. Murray wrote to Funston, the judgment creditor, regarding the payment of the judgment upon which the execution was issued and the levy made; that at the time the boat was levied upon it had taken a load of coal to the Fort Miller Pulp and Paper Company, upon payment of freight by that company to the transportation company, and that at the time of the levy the transportation company was in possession of the boat.

The only witness called by the plaintiff was Edward Gr. Murray, and the only corroborating evidence offered by the plaintiff was a bill of sale of the boat in question of date March 23, 1911, transferring the boat from Edward Gr. Murray to the lighterage company.

Under all the evidence and in view of the fact that the burden of establishing the ownership of the boat in the plaintiff, and of satisfying the jury that the interests of the lighterage company, the transportation company and Edward Gr. Murray were not in fact one and the same, as claimed by defendant, was upon the plaintiff, we think the question of the ownership of the boat should have been submitted to the jury. The judgment and order appealed from must, therefore, be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.

All concurred.

Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event.