186 A.D. 613 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1919
This action is brought by the plaintiff, an Arizona corporation, to recover of the defendants, who were formerly directors of the company,- moneys misappropriated by one Harry 'J. Clarke, the treasurer of 'said plaintiff corporation, at a time when said defendant directors were serving as such. Service
The defendants, including the appellants herein, were elected directors of the plaintiff corporation on or about July 8, 1912, and qualified as such on July 9, 1912. Said defendants were duly re-elected and qualified as directors of said plaintiff on or about March 30, 1914. The defendants served as such directors and assumed to discharge their duties as-such from on or about July 9, 1912, until they were ousted from office by the election and qualification of successors in January, 1916. From July 8, 1912, until January, 1916, the said Howard Paschal was the president of the plaintiff, and each of the appellants, Paschal, Earle and Curtis, was a director. The said Harry J. Clarke was secretary and treasurer, but was not a director of the corporation. The evidence discloses that during their service as such directors, and commencing
As to th; fifteen canceled checks which were produced upon the trial, the officers of the banks upon which they were drawn testified that the checks produced were never paid by them, but that their books showed like amounts on corresponding dates of withdrawals from the funds of the plaintiff company in their nstitutions.
As to the remaining twelve items of peculation the treasurer, ' Clarke, pursued a different course. The canceled checks which were produced were shown to have been paid by the National . State Bank of Newark, N. J., but after they were paid they had been altered by erasing the name of the payee, in the place of which had been typewritten the name of a fictitious payee and the same camouflage as to indorsement by the payee and the various banks was placed upon the back of each of said checks.
Clarke’s dishonesty commenced on February 21, 1913, when he withdrew from the Chatham and Phenix National Bank of plaintiff’s funds there on deposit the sum of $2,760.15, and to cover which he prepared a check to Kittredge & Hobbs, Inc., a concededly fictitious payee, and placed the same with plaintiff’s returned vouchers to satisfy the scrutiny of plaintiff’s accountants when later they might examine into the transaction. Thereafter, on various dates down to June 21, 1913, and in various amounts, and adopting the same means of concealing his dishonesty, Clarke withdrew other amounts of plaintiff’s moneys from the Chatham and Phenix National Bank. In all, said peculations, during the four months from February 21, 1913, to June 21, 1913, aggregated in amount $8,979.08, and involved eight distinct withdrawals, and were covered by eight bogus checks to fictitious payees and which
This system seems to have entirely escaped detection by the board of directors, and this action is brought by the corporation to recover from the directors, and a verdict and judgment have been entered therein in favor of the plaintiff based upon the negligence and want of care of said directors making it possible for the dishonest treasurer to carry on his thefts.
The law is well settled that while a bank may primarily pay and charge to its depositor only such sums as are duly authorized by the latter, and while a forged check is not authority for such payment, still if the depositor is guilty of .negligence which contributed to such payments and the bank itself has been free from negligence, the bank may be relieved from liability to repay the amounts thus paid out on forged paper. (Morgan v. United States Mortgage & Trust Co., 208 N. Y. 218.)
It is claimed by the plaintiff that the defendants, as such directors, including the three appellants, were so careless and negligent in the manner in which they discharged their duties as directors of the plaintiff corporation during the time of Clarke’s misappropriations, that he was able to carry on the same, and that the exercise of that degree of diligence which an individual would exercise toward his own affairs would have discovered the treasurer’s dishonesty and prevented the loss. •
The plaintiff was,, organized under the laws of the State of Arizona, and carried on,mining operations at two different points, one at mines known as the Kelly Group, at Kelly, N. M„ and the other at mines known as the Nitt Group, at Kelly, N. M., a distance of three-quarters of a mile from the Kelly Group. The company also owned two other mining projects, one in Montana and the other in Arizona, but neither of said last-mentioned mines was developed nor productive. For a number of years the Kelly and Nitt Groups had been in operation with varied success. That the mines were running at a loss began to be apparent in the latter part of the year 1912, and operations were finally discontinued in both the Kelly and Nitt Groups in May or June, ,1913.
The moneys of the company were, in 1913, until November eighth, deposited with the Chatham and Phenix National Bank of New York city, and thereafter the plaintiff’s principal depositary was the National State Bank of Newark, N. J., before mentioned. The plaintiff company employed as a general manager at its base of operations one Robert W. Bull, who had authority to O. K. vouchers and make expenditures at the mines. For this purpose a bank account was
While, as before suggested, defendants may be excused from discovering the dishonesty of plaintiff’s treasurer while
These defalcations from which the plaintiff has suffered occurred through the dishonesty of an agent appointed by the defendant directors. The law is well settled that when such defalcations could have been detected and prevented by the exercise of ordinary care and vigilance on the part of the directors they are personally liable for loss sustained by reason of their negligence. (Brinckerhoff v. Bostwick, 88 N. Y. 52; Higgins v. Tefft, 4 App. Div. 62.)
The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellants to abide the event, unless plaintiff stipulates to reduce the recovery to an amount represented by the defalcations of its treasurer on and after November 11, 1913, including interest; in which event the judgment as so modified and the order appealed from are affirmed, with costs to the respondent.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Page and Shearn, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order- reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellants to abide event, unless plaintiff stipulates to reduce recovery as indicated in opinion; in which event the judgment as so modified and the order appealed from are affirmed, with costs to respondent. Order to be settled on notice.