10 N.Y.S. 555 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
The action was brought to recover interest upon deposits of money belonging to the city and county of New York made with the defendant. These deposits commenced about the first of the year 1861, and interest was paid by the defendant upon the deposits to the chamberlain of the city of New York up to and including the time of the enactment of chapter 623 of the Laws of 1866.
But the omission to pay the monthly amounts accruing on these balances for interest from the end of November, 1871, to the month of May, 1873, did not arise out of any denial on the part of the defendant that it had become bound to pay this interest on the daily balances of the deposits. There was no denial at that time, or in the subsequent dealings between the financial department of the city and the bank, of its having obligated itself by agreement to pay this interest. But the failure to pay the interest arose out of a disagreement between the comptroller of the city and the chamberlain, the former denying the right of the latter to collect the interest, and insisting that it could only be drawn on the warrant of himself and the mayor; and where that might be necessary, as it was as to the disposition of county moneys, that the warrant should also be signed by the clerk of the board of supervisors. And by a letter which the comptroller wrote to the bank on the 16th of December, 1871, the bank was forbidden to pay the interest accruing on the deposits otherwise than upon the authority of warrants signed in that manner; and it was requested, as the interest accrued at the end of each month, that it should be credited to the accounts of the city and county, and that information should be given to the comptroller of the amount of such credits. The chamberlain dissented from this denial of his authority to receive the accruing interest from the bank. But there was no disagreement as to the liability of the bank to pay, or the amount of the interest, but it related wholly to the authority by which it was to be drawn from the bank; and in consequence of this disagreement the bank omitted to pay out the interest, or to add it as a credit to the deposits, the chamberlain claiming that the interest should be proportionately applied to the city and the county money, and the bank was not disposed to attempt that apportionment, orto give the requested credits. Beyond this, further substantial evidence was given tending to support the averments that the defendant had agreed to pay this rate of interest upon the deposits of the city and county money; for, after the letter of the comptroller to the bank of the 16th of December, 1871, the president of the bank is stated to have waited personally upon him as to the subject-matter of that communication. And it is to be inferred from that circumstance, as well as other correspondence, that the president of the bank had an interview
Evidence was given by Mr. Palmer, the president of the bank, concerning these transactions, but it did not definitely result in anything which was said to relieve the bank from the obligations imposed upon it by the agreement to pay interest. As to that obligation, if it was created at all, it was not by this witness, but probably by the cashier of the bank; and that it was in fact created was proved with a very satisfactory degree of clearness by the circumstances and correspondence already referred to; and the right to recover the accrued interest became vested in the city itself so far as it should be derived from the deposits of moneys belonging to the county. The act of 1866 did not direct the chamberlain to reserve, either for the city or the county, interest upon the deposits which he should make. Neither did it forbid such a reservation of interest, or the making of contracts with the banks by which they should become obligated to pay interest. But the omission of the act to direct interest to be reserved did not deprive the chamberlain of the authority, when that could be done, to stipulate for the reservation and payment of interest upon the balances remaining on deposit of the public moneys. Certainly before the passage of this act such an agreement could legally be made, for it was incidental to the deposit of the moneys and the enjoyment of the benefit of such deposits by the banks selected to’receive them. And the act of 1866 in no respect attempted to abridge or divest the chamberlain of this authority. It did provide that the banks in which the deposits should be made should proportionately pay the rent of the office of the chamberlain, and the salaries to be fixed by him of his clerks and a deputy chamberlain. But no negative language was employed forbidding the chamberlain to reserve still more beneficial: terms for the city for the use of its moneys remaining on deposit; and, as long as the act neither in language nor theory prohibited him from secur
There w;as nothing illegal, or against the policy of the law, in the reservation of interest upon these deposits, and the bank has derived the benefit expected to be secured from the deposits under the agreement which was entered into. And, after deriving this benefit in this manner, the law will not permit it to resist this demand for interest by taking the ground that the chamberlain was not authorized to make the agreement which was entered into for its payment. Woodruff v. Railway Co., 93 N. Y. 609, 619; Whitney Arms Co. v. Barlow, 63 N. Y. 62; Raft Co. v. Roach, 97 N. Y. 378; Mayor, etc., v. Sonneborn, 113 N. Y. 423, 21 N. E. Rep. 121.
The stipulation used upon the trial contained other correspondence passing between the chamberlain and the comptroller, and between the former and the mayor, which was not competent evidence upon the trial of this action. Neither was it pertinent to prove what had taken place with the other depository banks concerning the payment aiid collection of interest on the daily balances. But the admission of this evidence does not require the reversal of the judgment, for the liability of the defendant for the payment of the interest was so clearly made out as to leave it in no sense dependent upon any of the evidence which should have been omitted upon the trial. This evidence was embodied in the stipulation with the other which was pertinent and relevant to the controversy; and it was stipulated that the plaintiff gave prima facie evidence of the facts mentioned in the stipulation. But as to the parts of the stipulation which were not pertinent to the issues in this action, as well as to other portions which were, it is stated that the evidence was objected to under the foregoing stipulation as res inter alios acta, and exception taken. But it does not appear that either of these objections were brought to the attention of the court upon the trial, or that in the course of the trial any exception was made to the admissibility of so much of the stipulation as has in this manner been referred to. Both the objections and the exceptions have probably been inserted in the case under another stipulation dated on the 1st of June, 1887; for by that it appears that the matters contained in the stipulation of facts dated on the same day were, “upon the express understanding and agreement that, in case the defendant shall appeal or make any motion herein, then any case, minutes, or record of the trial, which may be used on such appeal or motion, shall state that plaintiffs offered evidence of the facts covered by said stipulation, and that defendant duly objected thereto, and duly excepted to the overruling of defendant’s objection, and such
An act to regulate the deposit by the chamberlain of New York city and county money.