Erb v. Banco Di Napoli

152 N.E. 460 | NY | 1926

The Appellate Division has certified that we should review the law in this case. The agreed statement of facts was submitted to the Municipal Court, which gave judgment for the plaintiff. The Appellate Term reversed that judgment and dismissed the complaint. The Appellate Division has reversed the Appellate Term and sustained the Municipal Court. We have determined that the submitted facts do not go far enough to sustain the plaintiff's claim, and that the complaint should be dismissed. I will state our reasons.

The Kingdom of Italy issued bonds which were negotiated or sold in the State of New York. On their face they provided: "Such principal and interest will be paid at the office of the Banco di Napoli in the borough of Manhattan, city of New York, United States of America, *48 in gold coin of the United States of America, of the standard of weight and fineness existing on January 1st, 1920."

The coupons attached to the bonds read as follows:

"The Government of the Kingdom of Italy promises to pay to bearer at the office of the Banco di Napoli, in the Borough of Manhattan, City of New York, United States of America $32.50 in gold coin of the United States of America, without deduction for Italian taxes, present or future, being six months interest then due on the Government of the Kingdom of Italy, six and one-half per cent gold bond No. M2337."

The plaintiff possessed three of these coupons dated August 1, 1922, which were lost and destroyed by dropping through the trolley-slot of the Broadway Street Railway.

The Kingdom of Italy had provided funds to meet its obligations. The agreed facts contained this statement:

"That the Kingdom of Italy has supplied the defendant with the funds wherewith to pay these coupons in the City of New York, on their presentation, and surrender to it, but not otherwise. Defendant is without authority from the Kingdom of Italy to part with said funds for or on account of such interest coupons, except on their presentation and surrender."

In thus providing the defendant bank with money to pay the accruing coupons upon its bonds, did the Kingdom of Italy change the conventional relationship which exists between a bank and its depositor into one of trust so that the plaintiff, the holder of the coupons, can sue directly the alleged trustee having the funds?

The plaintiff has obtained a recovery upon the doctrine ofLawrence v. Fox (20 N.Y. 268). As has been repeatedly stated, the fundamental fact in that case was the agreement made upon consideration to pay money received to a third party. We find no such agreement to pay contained in the agreed statement of facts in this case. *49 Directions standing alone to a bank or to an agent do not constitute an agreement by the bank or the agent for the benefit of a third party. In AEtna National Bank v. Fourth NationalBank (46 N.Y. 82) it was decided that the relation of banker and depositor is that of debtor and creditor, and has in it none of the elements of a trust. For a breach on the part of the bank of its obligation, the depositor alone can sue. This court said: "Lawrence v. Fox (20 N.Y., 268) was upon an express promise, to pay a sum of money received by the defendant, from a debtor of the plaintiff, to the plaintiff; and the promise was the consideration upon which, and upon which alone he received the money. The money was appropriated by the debtor, to the payment of the debt to the plaintiff, and intrusted to the defendant upon an express promise to pay that debt."

The facts as presented in the statement bring these lost coupons under the rule applicable to notes and checks to pay which money has been deposited with or sent to a bank. The holder cannot sue the bank. (Baldwin's Bank v. Smith, 215 N.Y. 76, page 82.) The case of Noyes v. First National Bank of NewYork (180 App. Div. 162; affd., 224 N.Y. 542) seems to be directly in point. There it was held that money sent to a bank to pay interest coupons and entered by the bank in a special account for this purpose did not create a trust in favor of the holders of outstanding coupons. This was also the decision in StatenIsland Cricket Baseball Club v. Farmers' Loan Trust Co. (41 App. Div. 321), where the same element was lacking as pointed out here. "The defendant," said the court, "has entered into no agreement to pay the bondholders, nor has it made any promise that it would pay them." (See, also, Matter of InterboroughConsolidated Corp., 288 Fed. Rep. 334; Kelly v. Roberts,40 N.Y. 432.)

Holland Trust Co. v. Sutherland (177 N.Y. 327), cited *50 by the respondent, is distinguished and explained by SCOTT, J., in the Noyes case, while Ross v. Curtis (30 Barb. 238; affd., 31 N.Y. 606), quoted in the Appellate Division opinion in this case, dealt with a statutory duty imposed upon the defendant, a town supervisor.

As before stated, we find no fact which creates the Banco di Napoli a trustee for the plaintiff or justifies an action against it for the interest on the Italian bonds.

There is, moreover, another reason why this suit cannot be maintained. While the relation existing between a bank and its depositor, in a strict sense, is that of debtor and creditor, in discharging its obligation as a debtor, the bank must do so subject to the rule obtaining between principal and agent. It can pay out the money only in conformity to directions. (Crawford v. West Side Bank, 100 N.Y. 50, 53.)

The Italian government gave directions to the Banco di Napoli, its depositary agent, "to pay these coupons in the City of New York, on their presentation and surrender to it but not otherwise. Defendant is without authority from the Kingdom of Italy to part with said funds for or on account of such interest coupons except on their presentation and surrender." I do not see how any court can modify these instructions so as to protect the bank in its accounting with its depositor. The plaintiff did not have her coupons to surrender. Section 333 of the Civil Practice Act cannot enlarge or create the authority of an agent, however binding it might be upon a suable principal. (Gledhill v.Schiff, 224 N.Y. 593.)

I recommend, therefore, that the judgment of the Appellate Division should be reversed, and the determination of the Appellate Term affirmed, with costs in this court and in the Appellate Division.

HISCOCK, Ch. J., CARDOZO, POUND and McLAUGHLIN JJ., concur; ANDREWS and LEHMAN, JJ., absent.

Judgment accordingly. *51