146 N.Y.S. 870 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
This submission presents the question whether the plaintiff as subrogee of the State is entitled to assert the preference of the State in payment of a debt due the State from an insolvent, over other depositors and creditors who have not prior specific liens. The preference of the State was determined in Matter of Carnegie Trust Co. (206 N. Y. 390). The opinion in that case relieves me from discussion of that preference. I may note that this subject was examined also by many English judges in Giles v. Grover (1 Cl. & Fin. 72). The equitable doctrine of subrogation contemplates full substitution. Thus in Lidderdale v. Robinson (2 Brock. 159, 168; affd., 12 Wheat. 594) Marshall, Ch. J., at Circuit Court says that the claim of the surety is clothed in equity with the legal garb with which the original contract is invested (cited and approved in Pease v. Egan, 131 N. Y. 272), and in Hayes v. Ward (4 Johns. Ch. 123) Kent, C., says: “It is equally a settled principle in the English chancery, that a surety will be entitled to every remedy which the creditor has against the principal debtor, to enforce every security, and to stand in the place of the creditor, and have his securities transferred to him, and to avail himself of those securities against the debtor. This right of the surety stands
The contention of the learned counsel for the defendant is that the .State’s common-law right of preference is so inherent and exclusive in the State as a sovereignty that it can be a matter neither of assignment nor of subrogation. But this contention mistakes, what Blackstone calls the “incidental,” for the “ direct ” prerogative of the king, as is apparent in the illustration given in book 1, chapter 7 of the Commentaries (Cooley’s 4th ed., top *240), where it is said: “Prerogatives are either direct or incidental. The direct are such positive substantial parts of the royal character and authority as are rooted in and spring from the king’s political person, considered merely by itself, without reference to any other extrinsic circumstance; as, the right «of sending embassadors, of creating peers, and of making war or peace. But such prerogatives as are incidental bear always a relation to something else, distinct from the king’s person; and are indeed only exceptions, in favour of the crown, to those general rules that are established for the rest of the community; such as, that no costs shall be recovered against the king; that the king can never be a joint tenant; and that his debt shall be preferred before a debt to any of his subjects. These, and an infinite number of other instances, will better be understood, when we come regularly to consider the rules themselves, to which these incidental prerogatives are exceptions. And therefore we will at present only dwell upon the king’s substantive or direct prerogatives. ” (See, also, 3 Holds. Hist. Eng. Law, 350, 351.)
It is also contended that the plaintiff waived any right of preference by filing a claim as a general creditor and by acceptance of a dividend on said claim without complaint or protest.
The partial payment was made through a communication from the Special Deputy Superintendent of Banks, in which was inclosed a check representing a first dividend of 10 per cent, with the statement, “No receipt is necessary.” I fail to find any clear intention of waiver of the right of preference inferable from the plaintiff’s acceptance of the check “ without complaint or protest.” This was apparently a part payment from the fund, to which alone the plaintiff must look even with its right of preference. To accept a part payment of a claim out of a fund is, to my mind, not inconsistent with the subsequent assertion of a preference to payment out of that fund.
Nor do I perceive that from these two circumstances relied upon by the defendants a waiver of this right of preference followed as a legal result. It does not appear that the defendants were upon any reasonable belief misled by either of these circumstances to their detriment or disadvantage. As I have said, the preference was inherent in the debt itself, the very existence of the debt established its priority of payment out of the same fund. Therefore the plaintiff’s omission, at the time it filed its claim, to assert specifically the preference, or the plaintiff’s acceptance of the voluntary part payment without objection or protest, did not operate “as a trap to the
Since the writing of this opinion, my attention has been called to the decisions of this court in its First Department in the cases of U. S. F. & G. Co. v. Carnegie Trust Co., No. 2 (161 App. Div. 429), and U. S. F. & G. Co. v. Carnegie Trust Co., No. 1 (Id. 435). I now cite them in support of my conclusion upon the question of preference.
In fine, the acts of the plaintiff in filing its claim, in accepting the part payment and in asserting- its preference, were all consistent steps towards the collection of the debt out of this particular fund. There is, of course, no question hut that the plaintiff did specifically assert its preference in formal fashion on January 30, 1913.
I think that the plaintiff is not entitled to interest. (People v. American Loan & Trust Co., 172 N. Y. 371; People v. Merchants’ Trust Co., 116 App. Div. 41.)
There must be judgment for the plaintiff upon the submission in accord with this opinion.
Burr, Thomas, Stapleton and Putnam, JJ., concurred.
Judgment for plaintiff upon agreed statement of facts, with costs, in accord with opinion.