91 N.Y. 20 | NY | 1883
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *22
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *23 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *25 The question was whether the defendants were entitled to have the money in the hands of Donnell, Lawson Co. applied in discharge of their claims, or whether it should be paid to the plaintiff. The learned referee held in favor of the plaintiff, and his decision has been approved by the General Term.
In this conclusion there was error. It seems to be well settled that a mere check or draft does not operate as an assignment or appropriation of the drawer's deposit in favor of the payee before acceptance by the bank (Harris v. Clark,
The question would be different if there were two bona fide purchasers for value, claiming the same fund, but as there are not we are to look at the transaction as between the Mastin Bank and its corresponding banks, the "Emporia Bank" and the "Salina Bank" (or Morris), and as they stand on the same ground it will be convenient to speak of one only — the Emporia Bank.
I am unable to see why, on the first day of August, there was not a complete and consummated contract between that bank and the Mastin Bank. The Mastin Bank, up to that day, owed the Emporia Bank, and was requested to pay its debt by transferring funds then with Donnell, Lawson Co. They say by letter, "we will do so," at once charge the Emporia Bank, and credit themselves with $5,000; on the same day, by letter, they inform the Emporia Bank that this has been done, and in fact they direct Donnell, Lawson Co. to "pay to the order of credit, the Emporia Bank," the sum named. The Emporia Bank also credited the Mastin Bank with it. These circumstances *28
in the conduct of both parties establish an agreement, the effect of which, as between the Mastin Bank and the Emporia Bank, was to estop the former from setting up that so much of the credit to which they were before entitled from Donnell, Lawson Co. did not belong to the Emporia Bank, and the Emporia Bank from saying that so much of the debt before due from the Mastin Bank to it had not been extinguished. (Allen v. Culver, 3 Den. 284-292.) Written out, the contract indicated by the bank entries and the correspondence is one of assignment of so much of the credit, or funds then to its credit with Donnell, Lawson Co., to the Emporia Bank, and a discharge of a debt due by it to that bank. The whole was completed the moment the letter of the Mastin Bank to the Emporia Bank was placed in the post-office. (Graves v.American Ex. Bk.,
Nothing further remained to be done. If the Mastin Bank could transfer the fund, it did transfer it by those acts. The paper which is called a draft needed no indorsement by the Emporia Bank, nor was it intended for its hands. It was not delivered to any one as a bill of exchange, nor did it require acceptance by the drawees. (Morton v. Naylor, 1 Hill, 584; Lowery v.Steward,
In the ordinary case of a check or bill of exchange the banker determines whether the state of his customer's account will justify *29 him in complying with the request to pay. But if he pays he does so from his own money. Here by the act of the customer, the title to the account itself had passed from him, and the check, or order, as it may more properly be called, was, between the customer and the assignee — the Emporia Bank, of no importance. The bankers, by virtue of the assignment, owed the money specified in the account, to the Emporia Bank, and it was not a matter as to which they had any discretion to exercise. True, before notice they might have paid to the customer, or to his order, but that feature is not in the case. The conduct of the parties here had the same effect as the transaction suggested by Lord MANSFIELD in Heath v. Hall (2 Rose, 271, viz.: "If two men agree for the sale of a debt, and one of them gives the other credit in his book for the price, that may be a very good assignment in equity," and is within the doctrine which upholds, as a sufficient assignment, an agreement that a debt owing shall be paid out of a specific fund belonging to the debtor, or an order given by him to his creditor upon a third person owing money or having funds belonging to the giver of the order, directing such person to pay the creditor out of such funds. (Burn v. Carvalho, 4 M. C. 690.) That case is quite in point. The facts were that one Fortunato gave to Burn, his creditor, an order upon Rego, his agent, who then held goods or money of his (Fortunato's), directing him (Rego) to pay Burn his debt. Burn sent the order to Rego, but before it reached him Fortunato became bankrupt, and his assignees, Carvalho and others, insisted that because notice of the transaction had not reached Rego before the act of bankruptcy by Fortunato, the goods or funds remained subject to the order and disposition of Fortunato, as apparent owner at the time of the act of bankruptcy, and the assignees were entitled thereto. But it was held that Burn was the true owner and had a good title as against the assignees.
In the case before us, as in that, there was an existing fund in the agent's hands, and a distinct contract by the debtor with its creditor, to discharge the liability out of that fund, and to give directions for that purpose. That in this case directions *30 were sent to the agent by the debtor, and in the one cited, by the creditor, can make no difference. In neither case did it reach the agent before assignment.
I have not overlooked the contention of the respondent that the entries were mere matter of book-keeping for the convenience of the bank. It might be so if they stood alone. But taken in connection with the letters between the parties, and the order and letter of advice sent to Donnell, Lawson Co., they are equivalent to an actual transfer of credit, or account; to an assignment, therefore, at least in equity, of the fund in the hands of Donnell, Lawson Co. Somewhat similar circumstances were considered in Prince v. Oriental Bank Corp. (L.R., 3 App. Cas. 325), and were held insufficient to charge the bank making them, but it was on the ground that the banks whose acts came in controversy were in substance the same, each being a branch of one bank, yet the court assume that it would be otherwise if the parties were distinct, and the transactions had been communicated to the plaintiff — the party in interest, and in that case that the party making them would be estopped from saying it did not hold the money in question to his account. "But," they say, "no such communication was made, and before any thing was known beyond the walls of the bank itself," the order was canceled and withdrawn; — citing Simson v. Ingham (2 Barn. Cres. 65) where it was held that the entries by bankers in their own books did not amount to a complete appropriation until that fact was communicated to the party to be affected by it.
In Pratt v. Foote (
It follows that the fund did not pass to the assignee. (Hopkins v. Banks, 7 Cow. 650; Muir v. Schenck, supra;Osborn v. Thomas, 46 Barb. 514.) The assignment to him is dated August 3; it purports to transfer the property "and credits" of the Mastin Bank; of course it speaks as of the day of its date, and on that day the credit in question was not its property. It could not withdraw or change its application and so revive its indebtedness to the Mastin Bank, or that of the defendants to itself. It does not appear, however, that the Mastin Bank undertook to again deal with this fund, or to assign it to its trustee, nor, if it had been possible to do so, that it undertook to deprive the defendants of the benefit of the contract under which they claim. It follows from these observations that the learned referee erred in finding that the money in question passed by assignment to the plaintiff, and that the defendants were not its owners. The facts upon which the question turns are not disputed, and we reach this conclusion without impairing the rule which in case of conflicting evidence makes the decision of the trial court binding upon an appellate tribunal. The learned counsel for the plaintiff urges that there is a variance between the defendants' answer and their proofs, but it is not suggested that such objection was taken upon the trial, and it cannot be successfully raised now for the first time. (Fitch v. Rathbun,
The judgment appealed from and that entered upon the *32 report of the referee should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
All concur, except RAPALLO, J., absent.
Judgment reversed.