13 N.Y.S. 760 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
It appeared from the evidence in this case that the Hong ICong & Shanghai Banking Company was a foreign corporation, and that the plaintiff herein is a commission merchant doing business in the city of New York; that the firm of Martin, Dyce & Co. were merchants doing business at Manilla; that the firm of Martin, Turner & Co. were bankers doing business at Glasgow, Scotland, the same persons composing the two last-mentioned firms. In September, 1883, at the city of New York, the plaintiff sold 4,000 bales of hemp to certain merchants in the city of New York, to be shipped from Manilla during the month of October and or November, 1883, to be paid for on arrival at the port of New York. Immediately after making said sales the plaintiff notified the firm of Martin. Dyce & Co. thereof, and that he had sold 4,000 bales for their account. In October, 1883, Martin, Dyce & Co. shipped 4,000 bales of hemp, and received from the master of the vessel bills of lading therefor in the usual form, declaring that the same was deliverable at the port of New York to the order of Martin, Dyce & Co. Thereafter said firm indorsed said bills in blank, and transferred them to said banking company, who on the faith thereof advanced to said firm over $18,000, and drew bills of exchange therefor on the firm of Martin, Turner & Co., of Glasgow. These bills were subsequently accepted by Martin, Turner & Co., and became due in May and June. At the time of such advances the banking company had no knowledge or notice of the sale of said hemp. Thereafter said firm of Martin, Dyce & Co. notified the plaintiff that they had shipped the 4,000 bales, which notification reached him in December, 1883. In February, 1884, said firms of Martin, Dyce & Co. and Martin, Turner & Co. suspended payment, and became bankrupt, leaving unpaid the said bills of exchange. Upon the arrival of the hemp at the port of New York the banking company took possession thereof as the transferee of said bills of lading. In March, 1884, the banking company wrote to the plaintiff, and inquired whether this hemp had been sold to arrive, and was informed by the plaintiff that it had been so sold for something like $4,000 over’its then value, and that the contracts had been made in his name. Up to this time the plaintiff had no knowledge or notice that the banking company was at all interested in the hemp in question. A few days subsequently, in March, 1884, the plaintiff wrote to the banking company rescinding his previous notification, and claiming the right to treat the sales as for his own account. The banking company in no manner changed its position on the faith of the plaintiff’s first no
In pursuance of this agreement the plaintiff took charge of the hemp, delivered it to his vendees, and received the profits, retaining his commissions and expenses, depositing in the Union Trust Company $17,950, and paying over the balance to the banking company. This deposit with the Union Trust Company was to be held in their hands subject to the joint order of James N. Platt and Alfred M. Townsend, or to be paid over in pursuance of the judgment of the court to be made in an action brought under said agreement. An action was brought in the supreme court to determine the question reserved in said agreement, in which action evidence was offered establishing the foregoing facts, and the circumstances under which the plaintiff was doing business with and for the firm of Martin, Dyce & Co., and which resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff to the effect that said Platt & Townsend do forthwith collect from the Union Trust Company the $17,950 deposited with
The defendants Palmer and the City National Bank answered upon their own behalf that the check was not indorsed by either Townsend or Platt, setting up the granting of the attachment, and that a copy had been served upon them with the usual notice, and that the check and the money represented by it was not the property of the plaintiff, and that they were under no legal obligation to deliver the check or pay the money to the plaintiff, so long as said attachments are a lien thereon.
Upon the trial of the issues thus presented, proof of the foregoing facts having been offered, at the close of the testimony a motion was made by the defendants Palmer and the City Bank that the Kong Kong Banking Com-: pony, and the attachment creditors and debtors, be brought in, and on behalf of said bank it was also moved that the complaint should be dismissed on the. ground that it contains no cause of action against the defendant;.that it was not a party to the agreement; that it entered into no contract with any one except to pay its certified check when indorsed according to the terms of the check; and that there was no evidence that it was not ready to do so. The-defendant Palmer moved to dismiss, upon the ground that if the action lies against the National .City Bank it must be on the ground that Palmer acted only as the agent of the bank, and that an agent cannot be joined with the principal; and, second, on the theory that he individually is not shown to have violated any obligation or failed to perform any duty. The defendant Townsend moved to dismiss upon the ground that the banking company was a necessary party as attaching creditor; that the attachment debtors or their assignees were necessary parties; that the sheriff was a necessary party; and that the defendant Townsend was not a party to the agreement for the deposit, and not a party to the judgment awarding the fund to the plaintiff, and that upon tile facts shown he was justified in refusing to indorse the check. The court found substantially the facts above stated, and gave judgment for the plaintiff in accordance with the prayer of the complaint, and from such judgment this appeal is taken.
The points presented upon this appeal are that upon the complaint, the evidence, and the findings at the trial it appeared that there was a defect of parties defendant; and that by a recovery in this action, without bringing in attaching creditors, the judgment of the general term and of the court of .apr peals is practically nullified; and, further, that the complaint states no cause-of action against the National City Bank, and that it was not a necessary, party. We are of opinion that none of these grounds are well taken. It op-pears from the foregoing statement of facts that, according to the judgment
To sustain the claim that the plaintiff is not entitled to draw that money, it would be necessary to hold that an attachment against these foreign firms could be levied against the private account of this plaintiff, the attaching creditors claiming that the plaintiff is indebted to the foreign firms; because, as has already been stated, by the terms of the agreement and the judgment of the court, this deposit of money became the property of the plaintiff, and the bank was holding it as his trustee. Therefore, instead of the judgment rendered by this court nullifying the judgment of the general term and of the court of appeals, a contrary judgment would have absolutely reversed the adjudication which placed the title to this deposit in the plaintiff. The relation between the plaintiff and these foreign firms was that of consignor and commission merchant. The commission merchant had this fund in his hands, the proceeds of property which may have belonged to-his consignors. He claimed that his consignors were indebted to him in a larger amount than these funds in his hands. How can any attaching creditor of the consignors prevent him from doing what he pleases with the money thus belonging to him, constructively in his possession, where it would have been actually, had these depos
But it is said that no case was made out against the City Bank, and therefore the complaint should have been dismissed as to it. The honesty of this claim is sufficiently characterized by the answers put in by the City Bank and its cashier. Those answers are: If the claim is urged against the bank, the contract is the cashier’s; if the claim is urged against the cashier, then it is the bank’s contract. And this was the position which these defendants assumed upon this record, as shown by the grounds of the motion to dismiss the complaint. It is plain from the whole transaction that Palmer was acting in his representative capacity as cashier of the bank in these negotiations, because it was part and parcel of the agreement that the bank should pay these checks under certain circumstances, without the indorsement of Platt & Townsend, and certainly Palmer did not intend to agree individually to that condition. In agreeing to that condition of the agreement,which he did when he promised to hold this money pursuant to the provisions of the agreement, he was agreeing upon the part of the bank, as the representative of the bank, and not as an individual. It is probably true that as an individual he was not a necessary defendant. But it is far from true, in view of the position taken upon the trial, that he was an improper party. There was no method in which this agreement could be carried into effect was not Palmer acting for the bank, and the parties to the agreement, as well as Mr. Palmer, knew it perfectly. When he signed his name to that receipt as cashier, he intended to hold out that he was acting on behalf of the bank of which he was cashier. He intended to bind himself in his official capacity, and thereby to bind the bank; and, under all the circumstances of the case, it would seem that the claim that Palmer was acting as an individual has not the slightest foundation. It is urged that the court should not have granted costs and allowance against Townsend, for the reason that he was not a party personally to the agreement between the plaintiff in this action and the banking company. With all due deference to the learned counsel for the appellants, we think the record shows otherwise. It is true that individually he did not sign the agreements, and that it was only as agent of the banking company that he signed them. But he knew their contents. 1-Ie knew what the trust was that was reposed in him. He assented to and acted upon these agreements when he indorsed the check drawn upon the Bank of Commerce, and he accepted the position of trustee in reference to the indorsement of this check when he, with personal knowledge as agent of the banking company, signed the agreement, and conducted the transactions and negotiations to the point where the money was deposited in the National City Bank to the credit of the banking company, and the check drawn to the order of himself and Platt, and given to the cashier of the National City Bank. He cannot say after having participated in this transaction from beginning to end, when he is called upon to perform the duty which he voluntarily undertook: “I did not sign the agreement, and therefore I can be guilty of as much bad faith as I please, without being required to pay any penalty therefor.” The defendant was in a court of equity, and we do not think equity will tolerate for a moment any such position upon the part of a defendant who is subject to its jurisdiction. The court below was entirely right in imposing upon him the costs of this litigation, because he was the party who openly and defiantly resisted the decrees of this court. It is claimed upon the part of the plaintiff that he should be entitled to interest from the National City Bank from t.he time at which he originally made the demand. In this form of action, and in the form of the judgment which has been taken, we do not think this claim can be supported; because it seems to be assumed in the judgment in favor of the plaintiff that the only method of reaching this money is upon the surrender to the bank of this check duly indorsed by Townsend and Platt. Without adopting that