116 N.E. 787 | NY | 1917
In April, 1910, the Ninteenth Ward Bank, the plaintiff's assignor, paid to the defendant, the Carnegie Trust Company, $140,000. The payment was made by checks drawn by the bank to the defendant's order. In return the bank received a written agreement which, after the correction of some admitted errors, reads as follows:
"NEW YORK, April 23rd, 1910. "Mr. BRADLEY MARTIN, JR., President, "Nineteenth Ward Bank, "3d Ave. 57th St., "New York, N.Y.:
"DEAR SIR. — We acknowledge receipt hereof from the Ninteenth Ward Bank of $140,000, the proceeds of the following notes:
Demand note of Charles A. Moore, Jr. .... $70,000 00 " " " Merchants Manufacturers' Securities Company ..... 70,000 00
"The above amount to be used by us toward the payment of the Carnegie Trust Company stock at $1.75; Twelfth Ward Bank stock at $1.00.
"We agree to hold in trust for you, or any trustees named by you, the above collaterals as paid for by us at prices mentioned above. Whatever part of the above amount is not employed in the purchase of the above stocks, shall be subject to your order at any time.
*94"Yours very truly, R.L. SMITH, "Vice-President."
Before the delivery of this agreement the bank had undertaken to loan $70,000 to Charles A. Moore, Jr., and a like sum to the Merchants and Manufacturers' Securities Company, upon their promissory notes. The loan was made on the condition that the proceeds be paid to a trustee and invested in stock, which was to be held as collateral security. In fulfillment of that condition the payment to the trust company was made. The trust company never bought the shares mentioned in its agreement. It closed its doors on January 7, 1911, and is now insolvent and in liquidation. The sum of $16,000 has been paid to the bank by the makers of the notes. Not a dollar has been paid by the trust company. This action has been brought to determine the indebtedness on which the plaintiff's dividend must be computed in the distribution of the defendant's assets. The courts below have held that the trust company must be credited with $16,000 paid by the makers of the notes, and that the dividend is, therefore, to be computed on $124,000, and no more. The plaintiff says that this restriction is erroneous, and that the dividend is to be computed on $140,000, the amount of the trust deposit. We are to choose between these conflicting claims.
Our judgment is that the plaintiff's claim must be upheld. The defendant made a contract which cannot be misread. The contract was that the money paid to it by the bank should be subject to the bank's order. That contract it has not kept. It has no concern with payments made by strangers. They were not made in its behalf (Atlantic Dock Co. v. Mayor, etc. of N.Y.,
Any other conclusion would be fruitful of unjust results. To split the right of action between the bank and the bank's customers would be to destroy a part of the security. A debt fixed at $124,000 must yield a dividend of something less, for the debtor, the trust company, is insolvent. The judgment under review leaves the deficiency unsecured. By applying the $16,000 in reduction of the defendant's debt, the creditor has been made to lose a part of his collateral. The outcome demonstrates the error. A creditor may not be required to surrender any part of his collateral till payment has been made in full (People v.Remington Sons,
The judgment of the Appellate Division, so far as appealed from, should be reversed, with costs in the Appellate Division and in this court, and the judgment of the Special Term should be modified by adding to the plaintiff's claim the sum of $16,000, with interest from April 23, 1910, to January 7, 1911.
CHASE, COLLIN, HOGAN and POUND, JJ., concur; CUDDEBACK, J., dissents; HISCOCK, Ch. J., not voting.
Judgment accordingly. *96