172 N.Y. 371 | NY | 1902
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *375 By the charter of the American Loan and Trust Company it was provided that "in case of the dissolution of the said Company by the legislature, the Supreme Court or otherwise, the debts due from the Company as trustee, guardian, receiver or depositary of money in court or of savings banks' funds shall have a preference." (L. 1872, ch. 686; L. 1874, ch. 260, § 3.) Said company carried on business pursuant to its charter until the 18th of February, 1891, when the appellant savings banks demanded payment of their deposits which was refused, and thereupon it at once closed its doors and the superintendent of banks took possession. On the 7th of March following J. Edward Simmons was appointed temporary receiver, and on May 1st, 1891, the corporation was dissolved and he was appointed permanent *376 receiver. The savings banks and some others presented claims to the receiver as preferred creditors which were allowed by him as such, with interest at the contractual rate to the date of suspension. Subsequently by four successive dividends, declared pursuant to orders of the Supreme Court, he paid the principal of said claims, including interest at the rate provided for by the contract of deposit to the date of suspension, and the second and third payments were receipted for as dividends "on the principal of the claim." While said orders were made without notice to the preferred creditors, they knew of the making and entry of the same when they accepted and retained the money without complaint or question. The receipts for the fourth and last dividend stated that it completed "the payment of the principal of the claim."
On the final accounting taken before a referee the appellant savings banks and Thomas P. Wickes, as receiver of Coffin Stanton, who were preferred creditors, claimed that they were entitled to interest at six per cent upon the amount of their respective claims from the date when the insolvent corporation suspended business, and this claim was allowed by the referee, but disallowed by order of the Special Term, which denied all interest upon the preferred claims either at the legal or the contractual rate. The order was affirmed, in this respect, by the Appellate Division, one of the justices dissenting upon the ground that interest should be allowed at the rate provided by the contract. The claim of the preferred creditors, if sustained, would not only exhaust the funds in the hands of the receiver and leave nothing for the unpreferred creditors, but would give them more interest than they had contracted for, or could have received if the company had not failed.
Subsequently leave was given to the Onondaga County Savings Bank, the Monroe County Savings Bank, the Union Dime Savings Institution and the Farmers and Mechanics' Savings Bank to appeal to this court and the following questions were certified for decision: "Are the appellant Savings *377 Banks, or any of them, entitled to receive before payment of any dividends of the unpreferred creditors, any interest upon their deposits, demands or claims against the American Loan and Trust Company? If so, which of the said appellants are so entitled, for what time or times, at what rate or rates per cent per annum, and upon what basis of computation respectively?"
Leave was also given to Thomas P. Wickes, as receiver of Coffin Stanton, to appeal to the Court of Appeals, and the following questions were certified for decision upon his appeal: "Is the appellant, Thomas P. Wickes, as receiver of Coffin Stanton, entitled to receive before payment of any dividend of the unpreferred creditors any interest upon his claim against the American Loan and Trust Company? If so, for what time or times, at what rate or rates per cent per annum, and upon what basis of computation?"
As questions relating to interest are liable to arise so frequently in the settlement of the affairs of insolvent corporations, we adopt the broad, simple and just rule laid down in substance by the Appellate Division, that while interest is allowed as against the corporation itself, or its stockholders, if the assets are sufficient for the purpose, as between preferred and unpreferred creditors no interest is allowed after the law takes charge through the appointment of a receiver.
A corporation is created by the edict of the legislature and dies at its command. Knowledge is imputed to all who deal with it that when it suspends business the law takes charge of its affairs, liquidates its debts, converts its assets and distributes the proceeds among its creditors. Those who contract with it do so "with knowledge of the statutory conditions, and these must be deemed to have permeated the agreement and constituted elements of the obligation." (People v. Globe Mut.Life Ins. Co.,
The claims of creditors are presentable when the receiver is appointed, and that date fixes their status and amount, regardless of when they are in fact presented. As we said in a recent case, "it is the day on which the court practically takes possession of the assets of the company for the purpose of distribution among its creditors, and consequently (that) is the day on which the rights of creditors should be ascertained and the value of their claims determined." (People v. CommercialAlliance Life Ins. Co.,
As the statute does not say that preferred claims shall be paid with interest to the date of payment, the courts should not, because the claims of substantially all the creditors, both preferred and unpreferred, were alike in origin, for they were created by the deposit of money, and preferences in derogation of the common law should not be extended by construction beyond the express command of the statute. If the fund in the hands of the court could have been distributed on the same day that the receiver was appointed, no claim of interest could have arisen, for there would have been no delay and no suspension of legal remedies. The delay in distribution, however, was the act of the law itself, and was essential for various purposes and among others to enable the creditors to prove their claims. "As a general rule, after property of an insolvent passes into the hands of a receiver or of an assignee in insolvency, interest is not allowed on the claims against the funds." (Thomas v.Western Car Co.,
As the decree of dissolution relates back to the day when the court took possesssion of the assets, the delay is not the act or omission of the corporation, which is civiliter mortuus, but is owing to the law and hence should operate neither to benefit nor prejudice any creditor. Distribution should be made as of the date when the delay began, for it was not only caused by the law but was necessary for the protection of all *380 classes of creditors. As between the creditors themselves, therefore, interest ceases to accrue upon their respective claims, whether preferred or unpreferred, from the day when the corporation let go and the court took hold. This rule is so simple and easy of application that it will not only tend to prevent litigation, but will stimulate all creditors to frown upon delay and to promptly call the receiver to account. It will not induce preferred creditors to rest easy in reliance upon the expectation that they will make money through the misfortune of the corporation and, during the entire period of administration, receive interest at a greater rate than they had contracted for.
This rule is consistent with the provisions governing preferences as they appear not only in the special charter of the American Loan Trust Company, already cited, but also in the General Banking Law (L. 1892, ch. 689, § 130). The preference provided by the one is "the debts due," and by the other, "the sums of money deposited," and as both depend on the fact of dissolution or insolvency, both may properly be held to refer to the date when the event took place which brought the preference into action. On that date distribution should have been made, but as both the court and the creditors required time, it should be made as of that date and upon the claims as they then stood.
No authority has been cited which should prevent us from laying down this useful and convenient rule. Questions relating to the allowance of interest upon preferred claims have usually been regarded as of such slight importance as to receive scant attention in the reported cases, and to rest upon the mere announcement of the result. When a question slips through the courts without discussion or anything to indicate deliberate judgment, the decision is not of great value as an authority, at least until it has stood the test of citation without criticism. This was the method of decision so far as the question of interest was concerned in Upton v. New York Erie Bank (13 Hun, 269, 273) and Matter of Patterson (18 Hun, 221, 224). While we decided the latter case upon the *381
opinion of the General Term (
The respondent Euphemia A. Hawes, as executrix, complains that injustice was done her by the decision of the Appellate Division in not only denying her a preference, but also in excluding her even as an unpreferred creditor. So far as we can now see, the latter ground of complaint seems well founded, but as the person making it did not appeal to this court, and no question affecting her rights has been certified to us, we are unable to relieve her, and she must await the issue of another remedy.
The orders appealed from should be affirmed, with costs to the receiver, payable out of the fund, and to the other respondents, Mrs. Hawes as executrix excepted, payable by the appellants. The direct questions certified should be answered in the negative, and the contingent questions should not be answered at all.
PARKER, Ch. J., O'BRIEN, BARTLETT, HAIGHT, CULLEN and WERNER, JJ., concur.
Ordered accordingly.