OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Regions Bank d/b/a Regions Funding (“Regions”) brought suit against defendants Wieder & Mastroianni, P.C. (“W & M”) and Peter Mastroianni for conversion, breach of fiduciary duty and other claims. W & M in turn brought a Third-Party Complaint against The Provident Bank, Inc. d/b/a Provident Consumer Financial Services, Inc. (“Provident”), Morning Star Mortgage Bankers, Inc. (“Morning Star”), and Angela Daidone (“Daidone”). In an earlier Opinion and Order, this Court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to plaintiffs claims and dismissed the action.
See Regions Bank v. Wieder & Mastroianni, P.C.,
BACKGROUND
The facts of this case are set out at length in our two previous opinions, familiarity with which is presumed.
See id.; Regions Bank v. Wieder & Mastroianni, P.C.,
Morning Star was in the business of originating residential mortgage loans.
Regions Bank I,
Regions is a warehouse lender. Id. On April 4, 2000, Regions and Morning Star entered into a Warehouse Security Agreement and warehouse line of credit, pursuant to which Regions would fund mortgage loans originated by Morning Star. Id. According to the agreement, Regions would transfer the money for the loans into the escrow account of Morning Star’s settlement agent, W & M. Id. The funds transferred into W & M’s account by Regions were to be used to fund previously specified underlying loans. Id.
This dispute arises out of a series of fraudulent banking transactions initiated by Morning Star. Between April 10 and 12, 2000, Regions transferred a total of $798,720 into W & M’s escrow account, allegedly for the purpose of funding three separate mortgage loans. Id. Between *413 April 10 and 12, 2001, Daidone, Morning Star’s president and chief executive officer, contacted W & M and told the firm that there had been a mistake with each of those three loans. Id. at 438. Daidone falsely told W & M that Provident was the warehouse lender for the three loans, and instructed W & M to return the money by transferring it to a certain Provident account, which W & M did. Id. In fact, and allegedly unbeknownst to W & M, the Provident account that Morning Star instructed W & M to transfer the funds to was Morning Star’s private account, not a Provident warehouse account. Id. Shortly after W & M transferred the funds to Morning Star’s account, Regions informed W & M that Regions was the source of the funds. Id. W & M then asked Provident to wire the funds back to the escrow account, but Provident refused to do so. Id.
DISCUSSION
I. Regions Bank II
Regions Bank, II
involved claims by plaintiff against defendants for conversion and breach of fiduciary duty. In our previous Opinion, we observed that W
&
M’s mortgage-banking clients, such as Morning Star, would regularly have funds wire-transferred into W & M’s escrow account, and that there would often be multiple transfers per day into the account on behalf of Morning Star and other clients.
Regions Bank II,
As the Eleventh Circuit ruled in Regions Bank,345 F.3d at 1277 , there is no conversion unless the depositary knew or should have known that the deposited funds were being taken or withheld from their owner. Here W & M had no reason to know that the funds had come from Regions. When Morning Star instructed it to transfer them to its account at Provident, it was duty bound to comply. It did not knowingly convert funds belonging to Regions.
Id.
at 269
(citing Regions Bank v. Provident Bank, Inc.,
II. Analysis
“ ‘Conversion is any unauthorized exercise of dominion or control over property by one who is not the owner of the property which interferes with and is in defiance of a superior possessory right of another in the property.’ ”
Schwartz v. Capital Liquidators, Inc.,
When a defendant’s possession of the property was initially lawful, there is no conversion unless the defendant refuses the owner’s demand to return the property or wrongfully transfers or disposes of it before a demand is made.
See MacDonnell v. Buffalo Loan, Trust & Safe Deposit Co.,
The rule that one who comes lawfully into possession of property cannot be charged with conversion thereof until after a demand and refusal ... has no application in a case where the lawful custodian of property commits an overt and positive act of conversion by an unlawful sale or disposition of the same.
Id.; see also Nat’l Steamship Co. v. Sheahan,
In the present case, W & M came into possession of the funds lawfully and transferred them to Provident before plaintiff demanded their return. The Court is not aware of any precedent directly on point. 2 However, a review of New York case law reveals certain principles that are instructive: although the general rule is that wrongfulness is not an element of conversion, a defendant who came into possession lawfully will be liable for transferring the property only if the transfer was in some way wrongful. 3 Therefore, the issue before the Court is whether a reasonable fact finder could conclude that W & M’s transferring the funds to Provident was wrongful. 4
*415
Black’s Law Dictionary defines “wrongful” as “Characterized by unfairness or injustice” or “Contrary to law; unlawful.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1644 (8th ed.2004). In the conversion context, courts have found transfers to be wrongful where the transferor knew the transfer would violate the superior property rights of another, yet disposed of the property anyway, usually for personal gain.
MacDonnell
is one example. In
MacDonnell,
the Medina Gas Light Company allowed its secretary, Stranahan, to pledge bonds issued by Medina as security for a personal loan made by the defendant to Stranahan, despite the fact that the bonds were authorized for corporate purposes only.
See
The Appellate Division, Third Department, affirmed a judgment of conversion in
Key Bank of New York v. Grossi,
On the other hand, courts have declined to impose liability where the defendant came into possession lawfully and then disposed of the property in a manner that was not wrongful. In
Gonzalez,
the plaintiff was arrested by officers of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Police Department.
Gonzalez,
Under the circumstances of this case, an action sounding in replevin and conversion cannot lie against the [defendant]. Where a defendant lawfully obtains possession of property and has not wrongfully disposed of it, the action is not maintainable unless the defendant had *416 possession of the property at the commencement of the action.
Id.; see also Wembach Corp. v. Emigrant Indus. Sav. Bank,
Sheahan
involved a principal-agent-sub-agent system for the distribution of steamboat tickets.
See Sheahan,
The cases cited above are factually different from each other and from the case at bar. But taken together, they stand for the principle that one who comes into possession of property lawfully and then disposes of it will not be liable for conversion unless that disposal was in some way wrongful.
See, e.g., MacDonnell,
Here, there is no question that the money at issue came into W & M’s possession lawfully. Plaintiff transferred the funds to W & M at the direction of Morning Star, who had caused them to be deposited in W & M’s escrow account. (Holland Aff. ¶¶ 3-5.) W & M did not learn that plaintiff was the source of the funds until after W & M had transferred them to Provident on Morning Star’s instructions. (Mastroianni Aff. ¶¶ 11-18.) And although plaintiff argues that it was careless of W & M not to verify the source of the funds before wiring them to Provident
(see
PL Mem. Opp. Summ. J. at 10-11), there is no reason to believe that defendants wrongfully intended to deprive plaintiff of its right to the funds. They did not seek to confer an improper benefit on themselves or anyone else, nor to improperly deprive another person of what was rightfully his.
See Key Bank of N.Y.,
Simply put, plaintiff made a bad loan. It advanced money to finance residential mortgage loans, expecting to be repaid when the mortgages were sold, but the crooked borrowers misapplied the funds to pay off some of their other debt. Because *417 the borrowers are apparently judgment proof, plaintiff seeks indemnification from defendants, in whose escrow account the funds were briefly lodged. But there is no basis in law or in equity for shifting plaintiffs loss to defendants, who did not know the source of the funds and merely transferred them in accordance with the instructions of their apparent owner, with no reason to suspect the propriety of those instructions.
CONCLUSION
For all of the foregoing reasons, the motion of defendants Wieder & Mastroian-ni, P.C. and Peter Mastroianni for summary judgment is granted, the motion of plaintiff Regions Bank d/b/a Regions Funding for partial summary judgment as to the conversion claim is denied, and the motion of The Provident Bank, Inc. d/b/a Provident Consumer Financial Services, Inc. to dismiss, without prejudice, the Third-Party Complaint is granted. The claims against third-party defendants Morning Star Mortgage Bankers, Inc. and Angela Daidone are dismissed as moot. SO ORDERED.
Notes
. W & M was not a party in the 11th Circuit action, apparently because the firm was not subject to personal jurisdiction in Georgia, where that lawsuit was brought.
. Plaintiff discusses
Newbro
at length. (See PI. Mem. Opp. Summ. J. at 15-16.) There is some superficial similarity between that case and this one, in that
Newbro
involved a conversion claim based on a transfer of funds as well as fraudulent conduct by a third party.
See Newbro,
. In another exception to the general rule, courts have also used the concept of "wrongfulness” to maintain the distinction between the tort of conversion and a claim for breach of contract.
See, e.g., Global View Ltd. Venture Capital v. Great Cent. Basin Exploration, L.L.C.,
.There are cases in which some courts, including the Second Circuit,. have implied in dicta that a person could be liable for conversion based on any transfer, not just a wrongful one.
See, e.g., Schwartz,
