119 N.Y.S. 1035 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1909
Lead Opinion
The complaint alleges that the plaintiff is a foreign corporation and the defendant s trust company organized under the laws of the State of Hew York and doing "business in the city of Hew York ; that prior to February, 1906, one Van Voorhis was the treasurer of the plaintiff corporation; that prior to the 23cl of February, 1906, an account was opened by the plaintiff corporation with the Central Trust Company of Hew York under an arrangement by which the checks drawn upon such account were to be signed by Van Voorhis as treasurer of the plaintiff corporation ; that between the 21st of April, 1906, and the 15th of June, 1906, Van Voorhis drew three checks upon the deposit account of the plaintiff corporation with the Central Trust Company, payable to the order of “ W. M. Greenwood or C. W. Van Voorhis,” signed “ Havana Central Bail-road Company, C. W. Van Voorhis, Treasurer,” aggregating over $59,000 ; that at the same time Van Voorhis, the treashrer of the plaintiff corporation, had an individual deposit account with the defendant upon which he drew "checks signed by himself individually; that Van Voorhis indorsed these three checks in blank and deposited them with the defendant trust company to the credit of his individual account and the checks were presented to the Central Trust Company by the defendant and duly paid and the. proceeds thereof received by the defendant; that the Central Trust Company charged these checks against the plaintiff’s deposit account; that subsequently the defendant permitted the said Van Voorhis to. draw upon his said account to which these checks were credited until the 7th of July, 1906, rvhen the account was closed by the presentation to and payment by the defendant to the said Van Voorhis of cheeks to the full amount appearing to his credit, which included the amount that the defendant had received from the Central Trust Company on account of these checks. The complaint then alleges that the said Van Voorhis deposited the said checks and each of them in his, bank account with the defendant and used the said checks and the proceeds thereof for his own uses and purposes without any right or authority so to do, and that the said checks and each of them were without any consideration whatever moving from said Van Voorhis to the plaintiff herein ;. that said Van Voorhis had no right or authority to draw upon the said
Defendant by the demurrer concedes that Van Voorhis, the plaintiff’s treasurer, having power to sign checks upon plaintiff’s deposit account with its bank, signed checks in the name of the plaintiff to his own order without authority; deposited these checks with the defendant to his own individual account; that the defendant received these checks for the defaulting treasurer’s individual account; collected the proceeds thereof and placed the same to the defaulting treasurer’s individual credit, .and subsequently paid out on Van Voorhis’ checks the amount of such deposits. It has been for many years established in this State that if a person holding money or property in a fiduciary capacity pays or transfers such money or property to a third party with notice of his relation to it for a purpose foreign to the trust, such third party cannot hold such money or property as against the true owner; and that in the case of money an action for money had and received will lie in favor of the true owner against the person who has received it with notice of its real ownership. If the defendant had knowledge that by drawing these checks Van Voorhis was misappropriating the corporation’s money" without its consent, and that the use to which Van Voorhis was putting the money was not the corporate use, an
In Gerard v. McCormick (supra) the plaintiffs owned buildings in Wall street known as the “ Glass Buildings.” One Boswell was the agent having authority to receive and deposit the rent for the
We are met in this case by an appeal to protect the financial institutions of Hew York city from the liability that will be imposed upon them by charging them with notice of the form of all checks received' on deposit. But if an exception is to be made in favor of large institutions because of the impracticability of examining all checks presented to them, it must be made by' either the Legislature or the court of last resort, as this court has merely to administer the law as it finds it.
It follows, therefore, that the judgment appealed from must be affirmed, with costs, with leave to the defendant to withdraw the demurrer within twenty days and answer on payment of costs.
Patterson, P. J., and Laugi-ilin, J., concurred; McLaughlin arid Scott, JJ., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. The judgment appealed from seeíñs to me to extend the responsibility of persons dealing with trustees not only beyond anything that has yet been judicially decided, but also beyond practicable limits. Of course there-can be no doubt that if the defendant'had received the checks in payment of an obligation due to it from Van Voorhis, whether by reason of overdraft or otherwise, it would have been chargeable, from the form of the checks, with notice that Van Voorhis was using jilaintiff’s money to pay his individual obligations, and was thus misappropriating plaintiff’s funds. ■ (Ward v. City Trust Co., 192 N. Y. 61.) In such á case the misappropriation would have been complete when the money was paid over, and the mere fact of its use for that purpose would establish the fact of its misappropriation. This case, however, is very different. There were two distinct periods at which defendant ■ acted : First, when it received the checks on. deposit, and, second, when it paid out the money on Van Voorhis’ drafts. The form of the checks which Van Voorhis deposited undoubtedly served to
The judgment should be reversed.
McLaughlin, J., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs,, with leave to defendant to withdraw demurrer and to answer.