29 N.Y.S. 77 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
Although the trial of this action was- commenced before a jury, and the jury found on the several questions submitted to them, and their further services in the case were waived by consent of both parties to the action, and further findings of fact were made by the court, it must be assumed there was not a mistrial. A somewhat similar course was adopted in Carr v. Carr, 52 N. Y. 252, and in the course of the opinion delivered in that case, which was decided by the court after the findings made by the jury, it was said: “It was, in substance, then, a trial by the' court without a jury, and a decision upon the whole evidence, with the aid of the finding of the jury upon two questions of fact.” Opinion of Allen, J. (page 255).
2. It is insisted in behalf of the plaintiff that it paid full value for the check in question, and became a bona fide holder for value. In considering this question it is appropriate to recall some of the leading features of the evidence bearing upon the question of the ownership by the bank of the first and second checks. From the evidence it appears that in the fall of 1886 F. E. Ross and Gregg had become instrumental in the organization, and actors in bringing into existence, a gas-machine company. A patent had been issued for a gas machine which was owned by one Hanford, and ■ one-half interest therein was purchased by Ross for some $4,000, and that patent was put into the company, which was capitalized at $25,000, and the stock was issued to Ro'ss and Hanford, each taking one-half in the concern, which commenced business, and began to borrow money of the plaintiff. This company apparently continued until early in July, 1888, when it was embarrassed, and its stock became of little or no value. The gas machine did not prove of much value. Frederick E. Ross was president, and Clinton Ross, a brother, was treasurer, and Gregg acted as secretary, • and they were directors. In June, 1887, Fred Ross, Gregg, Clinton Ross, and others initiated and organized a company known as the Binghamton Hydraulic Power Company. One Van Deusen had obtained a patent for a water motor. It was first proposed to organize the company with a capital of $15,000. Subsequently Fred Ross and Gregg concluded to capitalize it at $25,000. Steps were taken to organize the hydraulic company, and the stock thereof was to’ be divided to them—Ross, $6,000; Gregg, $6,000; Clinton Ross, $6,000; and Van Deusen, for his patent, $5,000; and Scott was to
“Binghamton, May 31st, ’S9.
“Received of Frank B. Tracy his check dated June 1st; amt., one thousand dollars ($1,000). This sum to be applied on the fifty shares of stock owned by F. E. Ross. He to give an option on his fifty shares for ten days from June 1st, and, in case Mr. Tracy does not purchase the balance of ihe fiity shares, to return the check, or its equivalent. Also his check for four thorn and ■dollars ($4,000), dated June 15th, for which I agree to deliver on June 15th ninety-six shares of Binghamton Hydraulic Power Company’s stock. In case said Tracy does not come into the company, said check, or its equivalent, to be returned, and the ninety-six shares returned to me.
“[Signed] D. W. Gregg.”
Gregg and Frank then agreed to go to Washington, and have an interview with the senior Tracy, and they were to meet in Brooklyn on the morning of June 1st; and before they parted Frank testifies that he said to Gregg, “Under no condition must those checks be used until you hear from me.” On the following day Gregg sent the certificates for 96 shares of' stock, by a messenger, to Frank Tracy. On the morning of May 31st, Gregg saw Frank Boss at the Merchants’ National Bank, and he had the two checks with him at the time he went to the bank, and he handed both checks, one for $1,000, first to Cashier Boss, and “told him that was his check for his option on the fifty shares,” and thereafter handed him the check for $4,000, and “fold him it was for 96 shares of my stock, and that I was depositing it to the credit of the Binghamton Hydraulic Power Company.” Gregg testifies that he told Boss that he was selling it to the Tracys at par, and he adds in his testimony:
“I think I told him the agreement. I cannot recollect the full conversation. I remember telling him that Frank was going to investigate the company, and see his father, and that I was going to Washington with him, to see his father in regard to raising the balance of the money; and I thought he would go that very evening, and perhaps I should go with him; and that is about all I can remember. I think I said that Mr. Tracy was going to Washington that night, to see his father in regard to raising the money to come into the company; but nothing was said in regard to investigating it, that I remember,—not at that time.”
Gregg presented to Cashier Boss the paper which he had heretofore received from him, giving him an option, and took a receipt for the $1,000 on the back of it, which option bore date May 22, 1889.
We are of the opinion that the evidence, although conflicting, warranted a finding that the scheme which was on foot to obtain from the Tracys money for the stock at par was fraudulent, and was known to be so by Gregg and by Boss; and that when Gregg-received the check of $4,000 it was with an understanding that it was not to be used until after a conference was had with the senior Tracy, and a determination made to purchase greater interest in the hydraulic company; and that the check of $4,000 was diverted from its proper use by Gregg when he delivered it to the cashier, and that it was a breach of the agreement made with Frank Tracy, as shown by the quotation made. Gregg, testifies that he communicated the agreement to Cashier Boss at the
3. It is contended in behalf of the appellant that, although Fred Boss was guilty of a conspiracy with Gregg, the bank is not affected by his knowledge and acts and co-operation in carrying out the-fraudulent scheme. The evidence discloses that he was, and had been for some time, acting as the cashier of the plaintiff, having-supervision of its affairs, and that he had charge of the discount and collections in behalf of the plaintiff; and it also discloses that when he received the check of $4,000 he was acting in such capacity
This case differs from Mayor, etc., of New York v. Tenth Nat. Bank, 111 N. Y. 457, 18 N. E. 618, referred to by the appellant. In that case the directors, who were conspirators, did not represent the bank in the transactions; and in the opinion, at page 457, 111 N. Y., and page 618, 18 N. E., it is said:
“The sole agent and representative of the bank was Bliss, its president; and he was entirely innocent of any wrong. The knowledge these conspirators had while engaged in their fraud for their own benefit could not, therefore, be attributed to the bank; and to this effect are all the decisions.”
Bank v. Savery, 82 N. Y. 307, is also distinguishable from the case before us. Hor do the cases of Bank v. Clark, 139 N. Y. 307, 34 N. E. 908, and Bank v. Clark, 139 N. Y. 314, 34 N. E. 910; support the contention of the appellant. We think this case is nearer like Holden v. Bank, 72 N. Y. 286, where it was held:
“Where an agency is continuous, and made up of a long series of transactions of the same general character, knowledge acquired by the agent in one or more of the transactions is notice to the agent and the principal, which will affect the latter in any other transaction in which the agent, as such, is engaged, and in which the knowledge is material.”
In Cragie v. Hadley, 99 N. Y. 134,1 N. E. 537, it is said:
“But the general rule is well established that notice to an agent of a bank or other corporation intrusted with the management of its business, or of a particular branch of its business, is notice to the corporation in transactions conducted by such agent, acting for the corporation, within the scope of his authority, whether the knowledge of such agent was acquired in the course of the particular dealing or on some prior occasion.”
In the course of the opinion delivered by Mason, J., in Davis v. Bemis, reported in 40 N. Y. 454, he said:
“For it is a general principle of law that the principal is held liable to the public or third persons in a civil action for the frauds, deceits, concealments, misrepresentations, torts, negligence, and other malfeasances in the course of his employment, although the principal did not authorize or justify or participate in it, or, indeed, know of such conduct.”
In Garner v. Mangara, 93 H. Y. 642, it appeared that defendants, by means of false representations, induced plaintiff to purchase 120 shares of stock which were utterly worthless. Each of the defendants contributed 40 shares, and all were parties to the fraud. In the course of the opinion it was said that one of the defendants “could not receive the fruits of the bargain without being responsible for the fraud through it was effected.”
It seems to follow from what has already been said that when the check which was delivered to the plaintiff, dated the 15th of June, matured, the plaintiff had not acquired an ownership thereof in good faith; and it appears by the evidence that its cashier cooperated with Gregg in a scheme to procure an extension of time or the renewal check which is made the basis of this action. There is testimony to the effect that Gregg prepared a letter to be addressed to the cashier, with a view of securing an extension of time for the payment of the first check. Inasmuch as the plaintiff did not
.“If, in the principal obligation, there is essential vice which may annul it, as if it has been contracted by force, if it is contrary to- law or to good manners, if it be founded only on a fraud, or on some error which may suffice-to annul it,—in all these cases the obligation of the surety is likewise annulled.”
It does not seem too much to say that, if the bank held a fraudulent piece of paper, with notice of the fraud, indorsed by one of the parties perpetrating the fraud and by another party having knowledge of the fraud, and, after such knowledge, having received moneys wrongfully thereon, the holding of such paper by the plaintiff would not give it any additional right of recovery against the indorsers of the paper. Besides, it seems anomalous to require of a party to a piece of fraudulent paper to return it to a person not entitled to enforce it, because it is tainted with fraud as a condition precedent to the right to defeat a recovery upon another piece of paper given in substitution therefor in continuation of the fraud, and as a part of the scheme fraudulent in itself, which defeats the right of recovery against the makers of it. Such a piece of paper would seem to be of no more value to the plaintiff than one where the name of the drawer of a check was stricken therefrom, leaving only the indorsements thereon. The defendants are in a position of asserting that the contract for the purchase of the stock was fraudulent and void, and of repudiating that contract; and whatever the defendants received under that contract they offered to return at the trial, to wit, the surrender of the shares of stock which were delivered to the defendants on the 1st of June. Surely the defendants have acquired nothing more of value to them; and, if the observations already made are correct, they have received nothing under the contract—which they repudiate—of any value to the plaintiff. In this case the defendants are seeking to withhold their moneys from the payment of a check that is tainted with fraud. They allege and furnish evidence indicative that the first check was obtained and diverted by fraudulent representations, and that in continuance of the fraud and scheme in which the conspirators were engaged; that the second check was obtained from them in furtherance and contin
“If the plaintiff suffers, it is due to his own fraudulent and dishonest act, and courts will not go to the romantic extent of striving to protect a fraudulent purchaser of property from the consequences of his own dishonest act.”
In Masson v. Bovet, 1 Denio, 74, in the course of the opinion delivered by Beardsley, J., he said, in speaking of a party who had perpetrated a fraud, that:
“If, therefore, he has so entangled himself in the meshes of his own knavish plot that the party defrauded cannot unloose him, the fault is his own; and the law only requires the injured party to restore what he has received, and, so far as he can, undo what had been done in the execution of the contract. This is all that the party defrauded can do, and all that honesty and fair dealing require of him. If these fail to extricate the wrongdoer from the position he has assumed in the execution of the contract, it is in no sense the fault of his intended victim; and, upon the principles of eternal justice, whatever consequences may follow, they should rest on the head of the offender alone.”
Assuming, as I think we should, upon the whole evidence, that the second check was obtained by means of fraudulent representations, and in furtherance of the s.ckeme to defraud the defendants, probably the plaintiff is entitled to recover damages by reason of the fraud which induced it to part with its moneys to the hydraulic company against Gregg and the hydraulic company, irrespective of that indorsement upon the check, which was fraudulent in its inception, and to which, as before seenj the plaintiff did not acquire title in good faith.
The foregoing views lead to the conclusion that the decision made-at the circuit, and the judgment entered thereon, should remain-judgment affirmed, with costs. All concur.