59 N.Y.S. 51 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
On the trial of this canse a verdict was directed for the plaintiff and the defendant’s exceptions were ordered to be heard in the first instance at the. Appellate Division. The plaintiff brought replevin to recover ten bonds which it claimed to own and which it alleged the defendant wrongfully detained. The answer' put in issue the ownership of the bonds and set up as an affirmative defense that they were negotiable securities; that they were jffedged to the defendant by one Pell, nine of them being so pledged as collateral to a loan of $7,500 and delivered to the defendant at the time the loan was made, and .the tenth being given as additional security some time after the loan, was actually made, and that $7,000 of the money loaned had not been repaid, wherefore the defendant claimed the right to retain the securities. The sheriff took the bonds under the writ and delivered them to the plaintiff. There can be no doubt that the plaintiff is entitled to the tenth bond, and indeed no claim to the contrary is made by the defendant.
The material facts áre the following : The securities in suit were part of an issue of bonds made by the city of Yonkers under authority of an act of the Legislature (Chap. 297, Laws of 1875), in which, among other things, it was provided (§ 1) that “said bonds shall be signed by the mayor and pity clerk and the corporate seal of the city shall be attached thereto, and they shall be registered in the city clerk’s office in a book to be kept for that purpose.” The bonds were executed in the manner .required, and some time thereafter, and apparently about the 16th of February, 1896, they were delivered by the authorities of the city of Yonkers to, and they became the.property of, the plaintiff. A record was made in a book kept by the financial officer of the city of Yonkers of the numbers of the bonds issued to the plaintiff, and in one of the columns of that book in connection with the bonds is an entry “ Bonds Nos. 531 to 550 inclusive, owned, by Manhattan Savings Bank.” The ten instruments in suit bear numbers within,that series.
In none of the bonds issued by the municipality was there inserted the name of the payee, but there wás left in each a blank space for the insertion of such name. They all recited that the city of Yonkers “ is justly indebted to or -in the sum of one thousand dollars lawful money,” etc. They were all coupon bonds and had
The defendant’s title is derived mediately from the thief. It is a hona fide holder. It parted with value for the instruments before their maturity. It is not denied that a good title to them was acquired if they are negotiable instruments; and whether they are such is the principal question before us. They are under seal, and were required to be so by the law authorizing them, but municipal bonds do not lose their negotiable character or quality simply because they are sealed instruments (Bank of Rome v. Village of Rome, 19 N. Y. 20), nor do other corporate bonds executed in that manner if they are otherwise negotiable in form. (Brainerd v. N. Y. & Harlem R. R. Co., 25 N. Y. 496: Chase National Bank v. Faurot, 149 id. 532.)
Nor were these bonds made non-negotiable by force of the statute under and by which they were authorized. The requirement of the law was only that they should be registered in the city clerk’s office in a book kept for that purpose. That did not restrict the power of the city to emit bonds to one particular class or such only as should upon their face make title in a named obligee, who alone could transfer that title by assignment. The registry was required for the protection of the city. The law imposed no limitation upon its. ability to issue bonds payable either to bearer or to a named payee, or to his order or to his assignee, or to issue them with or without interest coupons payable to bearer or to the holder thereof on presentation.
It is contended, however, by the plaintiff that when these bonds came into the possession of the defendant they appeared upon their face to be incomplete, and that in that condition they were not negotiable. Undoubtedly, if the incomplete instruments had been
Thus it .would .appear that these bonds were negotiable instruments. The plaintiff retained them in that form, and could have transferred them without filling in the blanks, and thus continued their negotiability. The fact that they were stolen only threw upon the defendant the necessity of showing the circumstances under which it obtained them, and that such circumstances constituted it a bona fide holder. (Northampton Nat. Bank v. Kidder, 106 N. Y. 221.) That it did. The transaction in which it acquired the notes was one entered into in the ordinary prosecution of its business as a bank. It parted with value before maturity of the bonds, and without notice of any fact that would affect the title of the pledgor. It acquired a special property in them to the extent of its lien upon them; that is to the amount of $Y,000. We are unable to hold that the defendant was bound to take notice of an advertisement of the loss of bonds, published by the plaintiff in newspapers eighteen years
The defendant obtained a good title as pledgee to nine of the bonds in suit. ■ The exceptions must be sustained and a new trial ordered, with costs to defendant to abide the event. .
Yah Brunt, P. J., O’Brien, Ingraham and'McLaughlin, JJ"., concurred. ;
Exceptions sustained, new trial ¡ordered, costs to defendant to abide event.