This case was tried to the court without a jury upon stipulated facts which are set out in full in the opinion of the district court reported in
Prior to the Act of June 25, 1930, 12 U.S.C.A. § 90, a national bank could not legally pledge assets to secure funds of a state or a political subdivision thereof; thereafter it could do so, if located in a state in which state banks had such power. City of Marion v. Sneeden,
In sustaining the validity of the pledge in suit, the district judge placed principal reliance upon amendments to the Town Law, Consol.Laws N.Y., c. 62, enacted subsequently to the closing of the bank. See Ch. 751, Laws of 1933 (effective January 1, 1934); Ch. 468, Laws of 1937, amending Town Law § 64, subd. 1. These amendments authorized the town board to require a bank in which town funds were deposited to give security, and the 1937 amendment purported to validate “all acts done pri- or to the effective date of this section which would have been valid hereunder.” Sec. 1, Ch. 468, Laws of 1937. They cannot be
*717
given retroactive
effect
as against the bank’s receiver. The appointment of a receiver in July 1933 seized the bank’s assets for “ratable” distribution in accordance with the provisions of 12 U.S.C.A. § 194. This requires that dividends be declared proportionately upon the amount of all claims as they stood at the date of insolvency. American Surety Co. v. Bethlehem Nat. Bank,
There remains for consideration the question whether dismissal of the complaint can be sustained under the defense of limitations. The appellant first contends that the order of November 10, 1933, entered upon the Town’s motion, tolled all statutes of limitations and required a demand by the receiver before any action could be commenced to reach the bonds or their proceeds. This argument must fail. The order provided that execution of the general bond power should prejudice none of the receiver’s rights; it contemplated
the
possibility of a suit in which it might “later appear” that the Town was not entitled to the bonds or their proceeds. A suit to recover possession of the bonds might have been brought the next day; the order contained no restraint. And if the district court could lawfully impose as a condition upon the receiver’s right to collect the bank’s assets that he first make a demand upon the Town (which we do not decide), the right to make such demand arose immediately and his delay in making it would not defer the running of the applicable statute of limitations. N.Y. Civil Practice Act, sec. 15(1); see Wood v. Young,
The Town has contended that the applicable statute is either section 65(3) of the Town Law, ch. 399, Laws of 1939, or section 48(1) of the New York Civil Practice Act. The former relates to actions against a town “upon or arising out of a contract.” We understand this to refer to actions upon or arising out of actual contracts, not quasi contractual liabilities. Th£ present action is of the latter sort. It is an action for money had and received which the defendant is under an implied obligation to return because its receipt was either forbidden by statute, 12 U.S.C.A. § 91, or obtained under a mistake of law. See Downey v. City of Yonkers, 2 Cir.,
So much of the receiver’s claim as is grounded on the receipt by the Town of dividends paid under mutual mistake of law is clearly not barred. These payments amounting to $2,749.93 were made less than six years before service of the summons and complaint on April 4, 1940. As to the rest of the claim the question is not so simple.
The Town argues that, if the pledge was ultra vires, the pledgee’s possession was tortious ab initio, the bank could have sued to recover the bonds without prior demand for their return, and the statute started running on December 28, 1931. It says that in any event there was a conversion when the bonds were registered in the name of the Town Supervisor on November 20, 1933, and no subsequent conversion by selling them on May 3, 1934 could extend the period of limitations. The receiver, on the other hand, contends that he had a choice of remedies: he could bring an action sounding either in tort for conversion of. the *718 bonds or in assumpsit for money realized on their sale. He chose the latter and, since the cause of action for money had and received did not accrue until receipt of the money, the six year period of limitations had not expired when his suit was commenced.
Whether the mere retention of possession of the bonds under an ultra vires pledge amounts to a conversion by the pledgee— a question much discussed in O’Connell v. Chicago Park District,
This thesis has been vigorously disputed by Professor Corbin in Waiver of Tort — Suit in Assumpsit, 19 Yale L.J. 221, 234 et seq. Neither writer cites any New York case precisely in point. Two early Massachusetts cases support Professor Keener, Lamb v. Clark,
The receiver relies heavily upon City of Fort Worth v. McCamey, 5 Cir.,
For the reasons above set forth we conclude that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the dividends paid under mutual mistake of law in the amount of $2,749.93 and interest thereon, but was barred from recovery of the proceeds of sale of the bonds. In view of the third party claim asserted against the surety company, the cause should be remanded for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
Notes
By ch. 558, Laws of 1936, the period of limitation for conversion was reduced to three years but the amendment de-dared that it was not to affect existing causes of action. See section 49(7), Civil Practice Act; Mintzer v. Windsor Lamp Mfg. Co.,
