52 N.Y.S. 867 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
It seems to us quite clear that the original motion should have been granted. We agree that it is desirable that the determination of all questions in cases like the present should be postponed until the final accounting. The receiver should, in the first instance, be required to give an adequate bond, and the court should not be troubled by a host of intermediate applications challenging his acts. Hence it would doubtless have been proper for the court at Special Term, when first applied to, to have merely vacated the order of May 29, 1894, on the ground that it was granted ex parte, or possibly to have allowed it to stand as against those only who had received notice of the application therefor. The court, however, acted upon the theory that the appellants’ rights were doubtful, and that they might not have been prejudiced, as matter of fact, by the omission to give them notice of the application for leave to pay the money to the death claimants. To ascertain the facts upon this head, and to enable the court to adjudicate advisedly upon the question whether
Upon the merits, we quite agree with the learned referee that the fund belonged to the persistent members, and not to the death claimants. We think this is settled by the Matter of Equitable Reserve Fund Life Association (131 N. Y. 372), The People v. Life Union (83 Hun, 598; affd. in 145 N. Y. 606) and Farmers' L. & T. Co. v. Aberle (19 App. Div. 79). We need add nothing to the detailed reasons given by the referee.
The court below, however, denied the motion upon the ground that, whatever the original rights of the respective claimants, the receiver could not be compelled to restore this money for the reason that he had paid it out under an order of the court. This general rule, however, does not apply here. It was said in People ex rel. Atty.-Gen. v. Security Life Ins. & A. Co. (79 N. Y. 267, 271) that a receiver “is not to advocate the cause of one claimant as against another — between them he is indifferent, owing a like duty to all — and for that very reason should as far as possible see to it that each has an equal opportunity to enforce his claim.” The receiver here violated the duty thus enjoined. Instead of remaining neutral, he espoused the cause of the death claimants against the persistent members, petitioned the court for leave to pay the former, and sedulously avoided giving the latter notice, of his application or an opportunity to be heard thereon. An order thus obtained and acted upon cannot be a protection to him. This case differs essentially from Willis v. Sharp (124 N. Y. 406) and other cases where the receiver has been held to be protected. (See People ex rel. Morris v. Randall, 73 N. Y. 416; Swart v. Central Trust Co., 27 N. Y. St. Repr. 113.) In these cases the receiver did not take the initiative, but merely obeyed an order duly procured by another ; and in the Morris case it was especially observed that the payer “ had nothing to do with its procurement, and was in no way responsible for the manner in which it was procured.”
The absolute rule contended for by the respondent if applied in a case like the present would remit the appellants solely to recourse
As to the relief sought against Boss, it is enough to say that no such relief was asked upon the original motion of August, 1894. As already intimated, we think that this original motion was the one finally brought on in April, 1897, and that on the latter date the court simply disposed of the original motion, with the additional
The motion for resettlement should have been granted. The papers omitted ■—the affidavit of Boss and the notice of motion of April, 1897 —were used upon the motion, and should have been recited in the order, as provided by rule 41. Whether or not the appellants were able to successfully claim additional relief by reason of them, is immaterial. They had the right to have them included for what they were worth.
The order of June 1, 1897, should as to these appellants be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and as to these appellants the motion of August 23, 1894, granted, with ten dollars costs. The order of June 21, 1897, as to these appellants should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and as to these appellants the motion granted, with ten dollars costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Bums by, Ingraham and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Order of June 1, 1897, as to these appellants reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements; motion of August 23, 1894, as to these appellants granted, with ten dollars costs ; order of June 21, 1897, as to these appellants reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted as to these appellants, with ten dollars costs.