85 N.Y. 580 | NY | 1881
This is a suit in equity, to obtain relief, in the nature of the application by the defendant, the Albany City Bank, of certain securities held by it, in which the defendant McLean has an interest, ex officio, to the payment of a judgment owned by that bank against the plaintiff, recovered on a negotiable promissory note made by him. In June, 1871, the plaintiff made a deposit with the Farmers and Mechanics' Bank of Rochester of $3,000, and took from the bank a certificate thereof, payable to his order on the return of it, with six per cent interest. While this certificate was outstanding *584 in his ownership, never having been returned to the bank that issued it, nor any demand having been made for payment of or upon it, he made his promissory note to the order of the same bank, payable at two months from date, for $1,500. That bank then had a long standing arrangement with the Albany City Bank, by which the latter discounted for the former such commercial paper as is that note made by the plaintiff, on the same being transferred by the Rochester bank, it becoming liable as indorser thereon, and it having also lodged with the Albany bank certain securities, as a general collateral security for the ultimate payment of the paper thus transferred. In accordance with this arrangement, the Rochester bank indorsed over to the Albany bank the note of the plaintiff, before the same was mature, for a valuable consideration, in the usual course of business, and in good faith by the parties to the transaction, and in the ignorance of the Albany bank of the deposit made by the plaintiff with the Rochester bank. At the time of the transfer of that note, the Rochester bank was solvent, and was carrying on its usual business as a moneyed corporation. When the note made by the plaintiff fell due and payable, it was duly protested for non-payment and the Rochester bank was duly charged as indorser. The Albany bank still held some of the collateral securities above mentioned. The note not having been paid, the Albany bank brought action upon it and recovered judgment thereon against the plaintiff for the amount thereof, which has not been paid. He made no defense in that action. After the transfer of the note, and before that action was brought, the Rochester bank was adjudicated a bankrupt, and the defendant McLean was made assignee of its assets. The plaintiff apprised the Albany City Bank, before it brought action against him, of the fact that he was a depositor with the Rochester bank, and a holder of that certificate, and asked of the Albany bank that it avail itself of those collateral securities, for his benefit, to the amount of that note That bank disregarded the notice and request, and surrendered those securities to McLean as such assignee, taking from him a guarantee of the collection of the *585 note. Thereupon the plaintiff brought this suit. Two questions arise in the case: First. Whether the plaintiff ever had an equitable right to the relief which he demands; and Second, whether, if he ever had, he should not have set it up as a defense in the action brought against him on the note, and whether the judgment in that action is not a bar to this suit. If either of these questions is solved against him, judgment must go against him in this suit.
This is an interesting case. The elaborate and well-framed opinion given at Special Term, when the case was there on demurrer, and the sincere and earnest argument for the plaintiff at our bar, have led us to give it a lengthy and attentive consideration. But we have found it hard to perceive in it the principle on which the plaintiff rests his case. For him to have judgment he must establish this proposition: That the legal rights first acquired by the Albany City Bank have been so affected by subsequent equities, growing out of changed relations of the plaintiff and the Farmers and Mechanics' Bank of Rochester, as that the three parties have been put in these attitudes to each other, viz.; the City Bank, the creditor, the bank at Rochester the principal debtor, the plaintiff the surety, and the creditor-bank the holder as collateral to the debt of securities lodged with it by the principal debtor, to which it can and ought to first resort for payment to the exoneration of the surety. We are troubled to find in the facts any thing that places the parties in those attitudes. Doubtless, the first impression on hearing the facts of the case is, that there is a natural equity that the note of the plaintiff should be applied to the certificate of the Rochester bank, and the difference thus found be the only indebtedness remaining. "But equity goes upon fixed principles; and it does not allow a set-off or a stoppage, unless there is a recognized rule of law, or a recognized equitable reason that requires it. It does not interfere to declare either a set-off or a stoppage, unless there is one debt contracted on the faith of another; or an agreement between the parties that one should be discounted from the other; or there is a rule of law on which to base its action; or some intervening *586 equity that renders the interposition of the court necessary for the protection of the demand." There is nothing in this case that shows that one debt was contracted on the faith of the other; or that there was an agreement between the parties that one should be discounted from the other; nor is any rule of law shown to us, on which to base the action desired; and if that action is taken, it will be because of some intervening equity that renders the interposition of equity power necessary and proper.
We say that there is no rule of law on which to base the action desired. The seminal principle needed to be fixed as a rule of law is that the plaintiff has a right of set-off to the note. Clearly, he never had that right at law under our former statute of set-off. (2 R.S. 354, § 18; Patterson v. Patterson,
Suppose that, on the day next after the Rochester bank had transferred to the Albany bank the note made by the plaintiff, the certificate of deposit had been presented to the former bank by the plaintiff or by an assignee from him, could that bank have claimed to have set off against it that note, and held itself liable on the certificate for the balance only? Clearly not; for it had parted with all its property in the note and another had become the owner thereof. It had no right then, the enforcement of which it could seek against the plaintiff. He was not bound to pay his note before it was payable by its terms. Besides, that bank had transferred to another all right in the note, and could have none again in it, in ordinary course, until the plaintiff had failed to pay and it had become charged as indorser, and had taken up the note and again become the owner of it. For the same reason, was there any time, from that transfer by it of the note until the present, that that bank could have made that claim with show of right? It appears to us that there was not. How, then, could the plaintiff on his part set up a claim at law to set off any portion of the certificate against the note? We know of no rule of law that would allow him him to do so.
Then we turn from law to equity. The plaintiff never had a right of set-off in equity. Equity sometimes allows a set-off when law will not, because of the insolvency of one debtor, and the willingness of the other to anticipate the time for the payment of the debt owing by him, if the whole or a part of that owing to him may be applied as a set-off. But in this case, these facts did not exist until after the debt against the plaintiff had passed into the ownership of another party, which had acquired all legal and equitable rights in it. Moreover, even had the Rochester bank then been insolvent, and then been the owner of the note, the deposit of the plaintiff was not due and payable, the certificate was outstanding and negotiable, and equity would not have compelled an application of the amount of the note upon the deposit, until some act of the plaintiff making the certificate due and payable in his hands. (Lindsay v.Jackson, 2 Paige, 581; Bradley v. Angel, *589
We have then a case, in which with no right of set-off then existing, either at law or in equity, the contract of a party has been transferred in exact conformity with its terms, and has become a lawful demand in the hands of the transferee. (3 N.Y.,supra; 5 Paige, supra.)
Let us now consider the effect of the provisions of the Federal Bankrupt Act. (Laws of U.S. 1867, chap. 176, §§ 19, 20.) It was thereby provided, that in all cases of mutual debts, or mutual credits, the account should be stated, one debt set off against the other, and only the balance be allowed or paid. The Federal Judiciary has held that by these provisions it was not intended to enlarge the doctrine of set-off beyond what the principles of legal or equitable set-off before that warranted; that the debts must be mutual, must be in the same right. (Sawyer v. Hoag, 17 Wall. 610.) And it is further held, in adjudication upon the same act, that mutual debts must be debts between the same parties. (Gray v. Rollo, 18 id. 629.) It is clear then that the debts in this case are not mutual debts within the purview of the Bankrupt Act. The note made by the plaintiff, payable to the order of the bank at Rochester, has been by that bank before maturity ordered to be paid by the plaintiff to the Albany bank, and by the terms of his contract the plaintiff had become the debtor of the latter. Thereby the debt from the plaintiff is to the latter bank, while the debt to him is from the former bank. They are not debts between the same parties, they are not mutual. The same authority (18 Wall., supra) holds that there is not a mutual credit where there is not a connection between the claims. It is clear then that there were not when the Rochester bank became insolvent, *590 and was put into bankruptcy, mutual credits existing between it and the plaintiff. There was no connection between the credit for the deposit, and the credit for the sum loaned on the discount of the note. It appears from the evidence that the note was a renewal of a note existing before that, and that there were numbers of such renewals, the first note having been for the larger sum of $2,000; $500 were paid in reduction of that. That sum does not appear to have been taken from the money of the plaintiff on deposit. There is no finding, no proof, there can be no inference, that the discount of the first note for the plaintiff, and the renewals of it by the Rochester bank, were made in dependence upon, or in view of, the deposit by him with the bank; or that he made the deposit in expectation of a discount, or for the purpose of getting it, or as a means or security for the payment of it. There was no connection between the two acts, and no mutual credit, for neither was entered into in consequence or in reliance upon the other, and no agreement was made that one should stand against the other. (Id.) Apart from the Bankrupt Act, and the interpretation of it by the Federal Judiciary, it seems, that a mutual credit is a knowledge on both sides of an existing debt due to one party, and a credit by the other party founded on and trusting to that debt, as a means of discharging it (Ex parte Prescot, 1 Atk. 231; Rose v. Hart, 8 Taunt. 499; Key v. Flint, id. 23); though it is to be confessed that the decisions are not harmonious. (Hankey v. Smith, 3 T.R. 507; French v. Fenn, 3 Doug. 257.) We doubt, then, whether the case can be brought within the provisions of the Federal Bankrupt Act, as one showing a mutual debt or a mutual credit. Besides that, when the bank at Rochester was adjudicated a bankrupt, it had no debt against the plaintiff, and in that sense he had no credit with it; so that there was not in fact a mutual debt or a mutual credit to be mutually applied. The credit, so to speak, of the plaintiff with that bank had been sold to the Albany City Bank, and had become a legal demand owned by it.
It remains to be seen whether there is an intervening equity *591
that rightfully demands the exercise of equitable power for the protection of the plaintiff. The reasoning by which that end is sought is this: The Rochester bank assumed the payment of the note by indorsing it, and by the previous pledge of securities as collateral for the payment of all such indebtedness; it thereby became the debtor of the Albany City Bank and continued the creditor of the plaintiff. When the note matured, the Albany bank had a choice of remedies, to sue the plaintiff or make the money from the collaterals; and if it had made use of the latter, the Rochester bank or the assignee in bankruptcy of it would have had a right to take up the note by payment, and would then again become the creditor of the plaintiff, when a right of set-off in him would at once spring up and he could apply enough of the deposit to pay the note. We will not deny that the Albany bank might have so acted, and that such might have been the result. But is that the question involved here? Is not the question this, had the plaintiff the equitable right to compel the Albany bank so to act? It was the legal owner of his obligation, which had passed to it in exact accordance with the terms in which he had expressed his contract. By that contract he was the principal debtor, and the liability of the Rochester bank was collateral or contingent only. Our difficulty is, to see how the plaintiff could change this legal relation of the three parties to that strictly legal contract so as to make the Rochester bank the principal debtor, and himself the surety only. If this can be once established, it is easy to apply the doctrine of the marshaling of securities, or the election of different funds, to the relief and benefit of the plaintiff. We are aware that the relation of a creditor to different debtors may be changed from those legal to those equitable without his assent. Colgrove v.Tallman (
We are led to the conclusion that the judgment should be reversed.
All concur, except RAPALLO, J., absent at argument, and DANFORTH, J., taking no part.
Judgment reversed.