198 N.Y. 261 | NY | 1910
This is a singular case. In March, 1875, and for some years previous the plaintiff had been the owner of several school bonds issued by various counties in the state of Kansas, aggregating in amount the sum of $4,000. These, together with a memorandum stating the numbers and other details of the bonds, he kept locked in a bureau drawer. At the time mentioned, during the plaintiff's absence, the drawer was broken open and the bonds abstracted by the defendant's testator, the plaintiff's father-in-law and a banker in the village of Lima in this state. No suspicion seems ever to have attached to the deceased during his life. The plaintiff made every effort to discover the bonds and who had purloined them. The only record of their numbers was the memorandum taken with the bonds. He was, therefore, unable to stop their payment or to trace them. He had bought these bonds originally through the deceased, and immediately after their loss gave him notice of that fact. In response the deceased wrote him: "I am going to Hamilton Station to-morrow. If you will bring over all the records you have of the lost bonds I will look at them and will try and notify the districts of the loss and stop payment." The plaintiff was never able to obtain any further information as to the bonds. They matured within a few years and the interest as it accrued and the principal was collected by the deceased. Upon his death in 1899 there was found among his papers the memorandum which had been stolen from the plaintiff, and an examination of his books showed that he had collected the bonds. Upon the discovery of these facts, the plaintiff brought this suit against the defendant, as administrator with the will annexed of the deceased, praying judgment that the defendant "may account and pay over to him the amount of said bonds and the income thereof if it can be traced, and if it cannot be traced that he may have judgment against" the defendant as administrator for the sum of $16,000. The answer denied any knowledge or belief as to the facts charged, and interposed both the six and ten years' Statute of Limitations. The referee before whom the case was tried found all *264 the facts as hitherto recited, and awarded judgment to the plaintiff for the principal of said bonds and the interest thereon. The learned Appellate Division reversed the judgment on questions of law alone, leaving undisturbed the facts as found by the referee. It held on the authority of Allen v. Mille (17 Wend. 202) and Burt v. Myers (37 Hun, 277), that the plaintiff's claim was barred by the Statute of Limitations, despite his ignorance of the fact that the deceased had purloined the bonds.
The principle involved in this case is a far-reaching one. During the last thirty years there have been a number of bank robberies where by burglary very large amounts of securities have been stolen, and it has frequently proved impossible to detect the thieves or secure a return of the stolen property except in some cases by negotiations through "fences" or agents of the criminals. These securities are often, if not generally, long-time bonds not maturing until after the expiration of the six-year statutory period for bringing actions for conversion. If it be the law that a thief by avoiding detection and concealing the stolen property during that period may acquire title to the property or secure immunity from suit for its proceeds in case he has sold it, certainly we should call the attention of the legislature to the defect in the law in order that it might be remedied. In my opinion, however, since the adoption of the Code of Civil Procedure in 1876 the law is in no such unfortunate condition and appeal for legislative relief is unnecessary.
The first question to be considered is whether the lapse of time would have vested a good title in the defendant's testator had he remained in possession of the bonds until the time of his decease, for if such is the law, it is clear that he did not become liable because, instead of retaining the bonds, he collected the money due thereon. The law is settled in this state that while the Statute of Limitations may bar the remedy, it does not cancel or discharge the debt. (Hulbert v. Clark,
At the same time it is declared, and the declaration constantly reiterated in text books and decisions, that a thief can acquire no title to the stolen property. (Silsbury v. McCoon,
We must now consider whether the plaintiff has lost his right to redress by the fact that the defendant's testator collected the money due on the bonds more than six years prior to the plaintiff's discovery of that fact and the institution of this action. That an action of conversion for the original taking of the bonds was barred by the statute is settled by authority. It was so held in Allen v. Mille (17 Wend. 202), which has never been overruled. Whether on discovery of the possession of the bonds by the defendant's testator the plaintiff might not have made a demand for their surrender and predicated a new conversion on that refusal, it is unnecessary to consider. But though a party may have lost one remedy by lapse of time, it is entirely possible that others may be open to him. In Ganley v. TroyCity Nat. Bank (
"TROY, N.Y., 3d April, 1865.
"Received this day of Margaret Ganley for safekeeping for her account two U.S. 7-30 treasury notes, $500 each, Nos. 166,338 and 9, to be delivered on surrender of this receipt.
"G.F. SIMS, "Cashier."
The notes matured in August, 1866, and at the request of the husband of Margaret Ganley, plaintiff's intestate, the bank sold the notes and paid the proceeds to him. In August, 1879, Margaret Ganley having died, her administrator brought the action to recover of the bank the amount collected on the *269 notes. One defense was the Statute of Limitations. The court held that though the action for trover was barred, the plaintiff could rely on the contract under which the bonds were deposited; that the cause of action thereon did not arise until demand made and the tender of the receipt to the defendant, though long subsequent to the conversion, and that that claim was not barred. As to the prior conversion the court said: "In such a case a tort-feasor cannot allege his own wrong for the purpose of defeating an action upon the contract. In Angell on Limitations (5th ed. § 72) it is said: `An action of assumpsit may not be barred by the statute, when, to an action for a tort upon the same demand, the statute may be pleaded.' Again, `where there has been a tortious taking of his property, the injured party may bring trespass or trover, or he may waive both and bring assumpsit for the proceeds when it shall have been converted into money; and if he choose the latter mode of redress, the tort-feasor cannot allege his own wrong for the purpose of carrying back the injury to a time which will let in the statute." (p. 494.)
Under the old Code (§ 91, subd. 6) it was prescribed: "An action for relief on the ground of fraud, in cases which heretofore were solely cognizable by the court of chancery, the cause of action in such case not to be deemed to have accrued until the discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts constituting the fraud." Under this provision it was held that the only cases in which the running of the statute was postponed to the discovery of the facts constituting the fraud were those in which equity had exclusive jurisdiction. (Foot v.Farrington,
Had the plaintiff been able to trace the proceeds of his bonds to the estate of the deceased, the right to recover would be clear. In Newton v. Porter, (
Holmes v. Gilman (
In cases like the one before us there are two distinct elements of fraud — 1st, the original larceny; 2nd, the subsequent concealment of the stolen property and of its sale and the receipt of its proceeds. Assuming (but only for the argument) that under the first no bill in equity could be maintained, I think the second affords a good ground for the interposition of equity, and, as already stated, though the plaintiff failed to identify in the estate of the deceased the proceeds of his bonds, he was still entitled to what would *273
be a personal judgment were the original wrongdoer still living, for in equity it is the general rule "that the relief to be administered will be adapted to the exigencies of the case as they exist at the close of the trial." (Spears v. Mayor, etc.,of N.Y.,
There remain to be considered certain authorities which may be cited in opposition to the views which I have expressed. InMatter of Cavin v. Gleason (
I think the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the judgment of the trial court affirmed, with costs in both courts.
HAIGHT, VANN, WERNER, WILLARD BARTLETT, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, etc.