249 A.D. 348 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1937
The plaintiff appeals from a judgment dismissing its complaint on the merits. . As surety, it executed the official bonds for one Charles J. West, who was treasurer of the city of Hudson, N. Y., from January 1, 1923, to and including December 31, 1931, and who, between 1924 and 1930, stole more than $200,000 of city funds. The defendant, a national banking corporation, was the city depository during the time of West’s peculations. The plaintiff paid the loss suffered by the city and became the owner, through subrogation and by a written assignment, of any cause of action the city had against the depository. This action was brought for an amount in excess of $70,000, but plaintiff now claims to be entitled to recover $58,416.24 made up of the following items: $37,776.93, withdrawals from money on deposit upon checks or drafts signed only by West; $20,383.51, city money not deposited in any account but which was received by defendant and for which it issued forty-three negotiable certificates of deposit payable to West and fictitious payees, which were cashed by West who stole the money; $255.80, which it is claimed the city would have received as interest upon the amount represented by the non-interest bearing certificates of deposit had it been deposited in the regular city accounts.
The city charter
“ Hudson, N. Y., April 1, 1930 Claim No. 4500
“ To the Treasurer of the City of Hudson, N. Y.
“ Pay to the order of F. W. Konig...................$1t°ott
Amount Audited
Exactly $1 and 00 Cts..................Dollars
Character of Claim Gas CEMETERY COMMISSION
“ M. F. Troy
“ President
“ Countersigned
“ Florence A. Goffney,
“ Secretary.
To
The Farmers National Bank of Hudson Pay the Amount of This Warrant To Claimant Named Herein “ Charles J. West,
“ Treasurer City of Hudson.”
(Upon the face of this exhibit appears the stamp of defendant showing payment on April 8, 1930.)
The $37,776.93 of city funds obtained from the depository on drafts or checks signed only by West, was taken from four cemetery accounts carried in the interest department of the bank as dis
West embezzled the moneys from these accounts by means of checks or drafts upon which he wrote as the maker or drawer the name of the particular account and his own name as city treasurer. The orders were not signed by any other city official and did not contain a certificate concerning the audit or purpose of the expenditure. These he presented to the defendant and received either cash, certificates of deposit or New York drafts, drawn by defendant payable to West or to persons not creditors of the city of Hudson and who had no transactions with the city or any of its officials as such. The first of these withdrawals was $3,000 on December 12, 1925, the last on May 2, 1930, when four drafts were drawn
“ $707.50 Farmers National Bank of Hudson
“ Hudson, N. Y. Jan 27 1927 191..
“ Charles J. West City Treas has deposited in this Bank
the sum of $707 and 50 cts..................Dollars to the
credit of himself......................payable on the return of
this Certificate properly endorsed.
“ No. 3150 “ PETER MESICK,
“ Teller.”
(On left margin, “ Certificate of Deposit, not subject to check).”
(This exhibit is one of those upon which a recovery is sought. It was not indorsed but stamped “ paid ” by defendant on January 29, 1927.) Money for which a certificate was issued was not credited to the depositor’s bank account, but was shown as a bank liability in its certificate of deposit account. This would be discharged by paying the amount named in the certificate to any person who presented it properly indorsed. During the time that West was treasurer, he delivered to the bank over $200,000 of city funds which were not credited to the accounts of the city, but for which the defendant issued to him 271 certificates of deposit, each representing the amount which he delivered to the bank at the time it was issued. The majority of these amounts undoubtedly came from tax collections. Plaintiff seeks to recover the deposits represented by forty-three of these certificates. One of them for $1,500 has been mentioned earlier, it having been obtained with the proceeds of a withdrawal from one of the cemetery income accounts and the certificate later deposited in the Traver & West bank account. The sum of money represented by these certificates, less the $1,500 which has been included in the cemetery account defalcation, is $20,383.51. Three of these certificates, each issued during the month of March, 1927, were paid by the defendant on April first of that year and the money deposited on the same day in West’s personal bank account. One issued on June 7, 1927, for $758.44 was paid four days latSr and the money deposited in West’s personal account which, prior to that deposit, was overdrawn $84.22. The aggregate amount of these five certificates is $4,790.63. (This includes the $1,500 from the cemetery income account.) Appellant further calls attention that nineteen certificates aggregating $7,930.15 were paid, according to the records of the defendant, on days when no deposits were made in the city bank accounts, and that while five aggregating $2,914.44 were paid on days that deposits were made in the city general fund account, defendant’s records
There was both an implied and a stated contract between the city and defendant. When money was deposited the relation of debtor and creditor was created. The defendant, the debtor, only could discharge its obligation by paying its debt to or upon the actual direction of the city, the creditor. (Critten v. Chemical National Bank, 171 N. Y. 219, 224; Seaboard National Bank v. Bank of America, 193 id. 26, 30.) The stated contract under which defendant was employed as depository of city funds is found in the proposal by the bank, its acceptance by the city, the bond given by defendant, and the statutes applicable. (Matter of Niland v. Bowron, 193 N. Y. 180; Moore v. Mayor, 73 id. 238, 245; Parr v. Village of Greenbush, 72 id. 463, 472; Burns v. City of New York, 121 App. Div. 180.) Section 153 of the charter requires that before the depository shall receive any money it shall execute, acknowledge and deliver to the clerk of the city a bond “ conditioned that such depository shall faithfully keep such deposits, and shall on the last day of each month pay and account for the interest on such daily balances, at the rate in such accepted proposals stated, and shall faithfully pay all such orders as shall be drawn upon the treasurer of the city, and shall pay the same only on the order of the officials duly authorized.” This language contemplates that the orders or drafts signed by the mayor and other authorized officers are to be delivered physically to the depository; that while they are drawn upon the treasurer, they are not to be held by him, but to be transmitted direct to the depository. The identity of the officials who may sign drafts or orders to justify the payment of money thereon is stated. “ The city treasurer shall pay out said moneys only upon drafts signed by the mayor and countersigned by the city clerk to pay audits and allowances by the common council, and by the officer or by the president of any board or commission entitled to draw the same and countersigned by its secretary, but no such draft shall be drawn by or in behalf of any such officer, commission or board except for the purpose of paying for services rendered or materials
Defendant did profit in the sum of $255.80 interest which would have accrued had the city funds represented by the 271 certificates been deposited in the regular city accounts, and it received payment of a debt (the overdraft) from the proceeds of one of these certificates which West deposited to his personal account. According to my view of the case, the question of notice to the defendant that West was a thief is not of great importance, yet I do believe that it was placed upon inquiry through the transfer of moneys earmarked as trust funds in the cemetery account to the general fund account of the city; also through West’s conduct in connection with certificates of deposit, some being cashed the day they were issued, the majority within two or three days after issuance, the proceeds of others being deposited in his personal account and, of course, if it was placed upon inquiry, it was chargeable with knowledge of whatever an investigation would have disclosed.
As to acquiescence by the city in West’s irregularities, it does not appear that defendant ever acquainted any official of the city with the issuance of the certificates of deposit or the withdrawals from the cemetery accounts, and no record of these transactions was found in the treasurer’s office. It does appear that an examiner from the State Comptroller’s office believes that the members of
According to my computation the judgment should be for $58,416.24.. The plaintiff, however, by its requests to find asks for seventy-three cents less. This figure will be adopted.
The judgment of nonsuit should be reversed on the law and facts, with costs, and judgment for plaintiff directed, with costs.
Rhodes and Heffernan, JJ., concur; Crapser, J., dissents, and votes to affirm; McNamee, J., not voting.
Judgment reversed on the law and facts, with costs. Judgment in favor of the plaintiff directed for the sum of $58,415.51, with interest thereon in accordance with the direction hereinafter contained, with costs.
The court reverses the following findings of fact contained in the decision: Numbers 17, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30 and 35, and modifies finding 16 so far as it imports that the title of the funds in the cemetery accounts was not in the city of Hudson, and in so far as it suggests that the deposits were within the custody of the cemetery commission. The portion thereof which states that West, as treasurer, “ kept no record ” of the cemetery accounts in his office as city treasurer, is affirmed. The portion of finding 33 which states: “ The common council of the city made no examination, certification or audit of any such report ” is reversed. The findings of fact which appear in that part of the decision captioned “ Conclusions of Law ” are reversed. The following of the plaintiff’s requests to find are found: Numbers 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28-, 29, 30, 31, 32 and 36. Finding 34 is modified by striking therefrom the words “ misappropriated by West ” and by substituting therefor the following, “ Withdrawn in violation of the contract under which defendant acted as city depository,” and number 39 is modified by striking therefrom the words “ concealed from ” and substituting therefor “ not disclosed.”
The court makes the following new finding: “ That plaintiff is entitled to interest upon the amount of the judgment in accordance with paragraphs Second, Third and Fourth in that portion of plaintiff’s requests to find which is captioned ‘ Conclusions of Law.’ ”
Laws of 1921, chap. 669.— [Rep.