Central National Bank v. Fort Ann Woolen Co.

57 N.Y. St. Rep. 316 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894

Order affirmed on opinion of the Court below, with costs and disbursements in each case.

All concur.

*317The opinion of Mr. Justice Fursman in the court below, is as follows:

Fursman, J.

This motion is made solely upon the papers on which the plaintiff’s attachment was originally granted, and various objections are urged to the sufficiency of such papers. The first is that the affidavit of Mr. Warren (President of the plaintiff) does not state the indebtedness of defendants to the bank to be over and above all counter-claims known to the plaintiff, as required by Section 636 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

The affidavit of Mr. Warren set forth that “ he is the president of the plaintiff,” that a cause of action exists in favor of the plaintiff against the defendants, describing it, and that “ the amount of the plaintiff’s claim is $6,000 * * * over and above all counter-claims and set-offs known to deponent.” The case of The Manufacturers' Nat. Bank v. Hall, 60 Hun, 466; 39 St. Rep. 463; is relied on in support of the contention that the affidavit is insufficient in. the particular suggested. In that case the affidavit was made by the president of a manufacturing corporation, and stated the indebtedness to exist “over and above all counterclaims known to deponent, or to the plaintiff,” but did not state that the affiant was president at the time of the transaction. Van Brunt, P. J., makes a distinction between the officers of trading and banking corporations, and holds that the chief officers of a bank may be presumed to be acquainted with its financial affairs, while in the case of a trading corporation, no such presumption exists. The remaining judges hold the affidavit insufficient, because it did not state that the affiant was president at the time of the transaction, but only that he “is president,” i. e., at the time of making the affidavit. The affidavit of Mr. Warren is like it in this respect, but a careful examination of the entire affidavit satisfies me that it sufficiently indicates that Mr. Warren was president at the time of the transaction, and is familiar with the financial affairs of the bank. He states that he is president; that he has known defendant Barnett, president of the Woolen Co., for years; that Barnett had been a customer of the plaintiff for several years ; that some two or three years ago desiring to extend his line of credit, and that of the woolen company, with the plaintiff, Barnett made to him (deponent) and to plaintiff’s cashier, the statements and representations set forth; that such statements were made to him and to the cashier from time to time, down to within three months of making the affidavit; that the defendants from time to time obtained loans from plaintiff, “because of the representations made as aforesaid”; and that such loans would not have been made, but for the reliance of the plaintiff thereon. There is enough here to justify the conclusion that the affiant was president of the bank at the time of the transaction, and that he has full knowledge of the entire indebtedness of the defendant to the plaintiff. A corporation, as such, cannot have knowledge. The knowledge of its officers must be attributed to it, and when, therefore, the president of a bank declares that he is its president, that for the purpose of inducing credit certain representations *318were made to him, that relying upon such representations the bank made loans which remain unpaid, and that the debt thus created is due the bank over and above all counter-claims known to him, it is sufficient. I am strengthened in this view by the case of Bliss Co. v. Opera Glass Co., 60 Hun, 438; 39 St. Rep. 332 ; and the cases there cited. Essex Co. Nat. Bank v. Johnson, 16 N. Y. Supp. 71; 40 St. Rep. 919; is also in poffit.

It is also insisted that the affidavit does not charge that the defendant, The Fort Ann Woolen Company, has been guilty of any fraudulent disposition of property, and that the allegations touching the fraudulent disposition of property by defendant Barnett are insufficient to sustain the warrant. As to the latter, the affidavit states in substance that Barnett’s wife held a mortgage of about $14,000 upon his real estate, which at her death she bequeathed to him, and that recently, intending thereby to place this mortgage beyond the reach of his creditors, and to make it appear to be a valid lien in their favor upon his real estate, he had transferred the same to the children of one' Yolney Dean Richmond, without consideration, upon the pretense that as to it there was a trust in their favor created by their grandfather’s will (Mrs. Barnett having received it from him), although he well knew that such alleged trust had been declared void by the judgment and decree of this Court. I think this is a sufficient statement of an attempted fraudulent disposition of property by Barnett. It is urged that such transfer must have been made by him as Executor (for such he was) of his wife’s will, but it is sufficient to say that so far as is disclosed the transfer was made by him individually. Moreover, if it was made by him as Executor, it was still an attempt on his part to place property in which he had a beneficial interest beyond the reach of bis creditors.

But as to the Woolen Company, the affidavit is clearly insufficient. It nowhere charges any fraudulent act of the company, and the fraudulent acts of Barnett in disposing of his individual property, cannot be attributed to it. They are separate and distinct entities, possessing separate and distinct rights, powers, and privileges. They are each citizens owning property severally, and subject to separate liabilities. The corporation exists as an individual body distinct from all others, and must continue thus to exist until dissolved by judicial decree. It is of no importance whether Barnett does or does not own practically the whole of the capital stock of the company. The situation is not thereby changed. They each have an independent existence notwithstanding. If Barnett has attempted to fraudulently dispose of his1 property, there is no evidence that the company has made any such attempt as to its property, and the act of Barnett does not justify an attachment against the company. Bogart v. Dart, 25 Hun, 395; Edick v. Green, 38 Hun, 202-209.

If, therefore, this motion was made by the woolen company, or by a judgment creditor of that company, I do not think it could be resisted. But it is made by a subsequent attaching creditor, and to be successful it must appear that the papers upon which the subsequent attachment issued were themselves suf*319ficient. Hodgman v. Nat. Broadway Bank, 60 Hun, 156; 38 St. Rep., 578.

The affidavits upon which the attachment in favor of- the moving party herein was issued, are as barren of any allegation of a fraudulent, or attempted fraudulent disposition of property by the Woolen Company, as are those of the plaintiff, unless the affidavit of Edward Wall aids them in this particular. This was frankly conceded by counsel on the argument. That affidavit is clearly insufficient for the purpose of charging the Woolen Company with any fraudulent act. The only part of the affidavit pertinent to this question is the statement that on the morning of June 3, 1893, he saw a load of wool drawn to and unloaded at the railroad station at Fort Ann; that one Sweet, an employe of a certain wool dealer at Troy, was in charge of this wool; that it was shipped by express instead of by freight, and that Sweet told him (Wall) that it came from the factory of the Woolen Company. The affidavit also states that the business of the company is the manufacture of wool into cloth, and that it does not deal in or vend manufactured wool. Assuming the truth to be that this wool came from the company’s factory and was being shipped away, there is nothing in that fact inconsistent with an entire honesty of purpose on the part of the Woolen Company. There is nothing to show that this is an unusual occurrence, and it may well be that this particular wool was being returned to the seller as not being of the quality ordered, or that the seller finding the company to be in failing circumstances, retook the wool before the company had acquired actual possession of it. A fraudulent or dishonest purpose in such a case, is not to be presumed. There must be some evidence from which it can be justly inferred. I do not think this affidavit contains such evidence; °but there is a fatal objection to the sufficiency of this affidavit in this respect. The statement of Sweet to the witness that the wool came from the factory of the company is the clearest hearsay. Neither of them were at the time in any way connected with the Woolen Company, or engaged in its business. It was the mere statement of a third party to one in no wise interested in knowing the facts. No one is, or ought to be, bound by the words of a stranger. It is not a part of any res gestee because it does not appear that anything was being done at that time by the Woolen Company, or in its name, or on .its behalf. The most that can be said for it is that Wall heard, from one not authorized to speak, that the wool came from the company’s factory. This is not evidence. Moreover, the affidavit of Sweet is not produced, nor any reason given for its non-production. Farley v. Shoemaker, 17 St. Rep., 205; Steuben Co. Bank v. Alberger. 78 N. Y., 252.

This affidavit being insufficient, the papers on which the attachment of the Glens Falls Bank issued are no better or stronger in respect to the Woolen Company than are those upon which the plaintiff’s attachment was granted. The motion is, therefore, denied, with costs.

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