Court Opinion

ID: 6220237
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-10 18:56:30.663362+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:57:17.542204
License: Public Domain

Pratt, J.:
The opinion at Special Term sufficiently discusses the law and facts.
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.
*186Barnard, P. J., and Dykman, J., concurred.
Judgment in each of these appeals affirmed, with costs.
The opinion delivered at Special Term was as follows:
Cullen, J.:
Even though the plaintiff were a party to the wrong, if the defendant’s intestate was guilty of a spoliation of the trust estate, the plaintiff in his representative character can maintain this action. But I do not think that the loan Mr. Post assumed to make was per sa a misuse of trust funds, for which he would be responsible. The word “ trustee ” in the check gave notice to the banker that the funds were not or might not be the property of the plaintiff individually. (Jaudon v. Nat. City Bank, 8 Blatchf. 430; Shaw v. Spencer, 100 Mass. 382; Baker v. Bliss, 39 N. Y. 70.)
Therefore, if the transaction was prima facie a waste or spoliation of the trust estate, or if the trustee apparently was using the trust funds for his personal benefit, the banker participating in the matter and receiving the funds would be liable. But I think that this transaction was not of that character. I find as a fact that Post had no knowledge or notice that that money belonged to the particular trust estate of which it now seems to be the property. The transaction was not dishonest or hazardous. The plaintiff himself had no thought that he was wrongdoing. Loans on collateral to brokers are made by banks, bankers and trust companies. To declare the defendant liable on the theory that the loan as it was intended to be made was illegal and a waste of trust funds, it is necessary to hold that the word “ trustee ” put the receiver of the check on notice not only that the plaintiff did not hold the moneys in his own right, but that the trust was of such a character that the trustee was limited solely to what are called “ legal investments.” I think that would be carrying the doctrine of implied notice too far. In this very case the trustee could, with the assent of the beneficiaries, invest in any class of securities. It is a matter of common knowledge that many of the bank accounts in the name of a person simply as trustee require no such strictness in investments. I am not disposed, therefore, to hold the defendant liable on this ground.
The question then arises as to the responsibility for receiving the forged or altered certificates of stock. I have searched in vain for *187precedent in this respect. Two cases arising from stock transactions are to be found in the reports which approach the case in hand, but still are to be distinguished from it. In Lambert v. Heath (15 M. & W. 484), the stock broker was held not liable for the invalidity of certain Kentish Coast railroad scrip purchased by him for his principal, on the ground that he bought the thing he was ordered to buy, that is, the scrip that was selling in the market. In Peckham v. Ketchum (5 Bosw. 506), the stock delivered by the broker to his principal was a genuine certificate, but was alleged to be invalid because of an over issue of stock by the officers of the New York and New Haven Railroad Company. Here, also, the broker was held not liable.
But here the loan was concededly to have been made on the faith of the collaterals and the securities on which it was made; spurious securities were not the securities contemplated by the parties, nor did the banker take any precautions to verify the genuineness of the securities and guard against forgery. There were accessible to the banker both the office and the company issuing the stock, and the office of the trust company which registered the certificates. An inquiry at either office would have disclosed the forgery and prevented the loss. It is true that the banker did not take this precaution in the case of his own loan. But this does not determine the question of care. He undoubtedly relied on the standing of the firm to whom he made the loan. But this confidence was his own; the plaintiff did not know the parties. This is a hard case for either party on whom ultimately the liability is adjudged to rest. But where so simple a precaution as that already stated would have exposed the fraud, I think that the liability should rest on the party who neglected to avail himself of it. There will, therefore, be judgment for plaintiff, with costs.
This decision disposes of the cross suit of Post v. Isham, in which the complaint will be dismissed, without costs.