Court Opinion

ID: 3630448
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 00:10:10.579514+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:45:01.215847
License: Public Domain

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The defendant Hubbell, as one defense to the claim of the plaintiff, insists that Wilkinson  Co., upon the receipt, by them, of the various checks and drafts or other pieces of paper payable on demand, and upon the crediting of the amounts thereof to the plaintiff upon their books, without waiting for the payment of the same, became the owners thereof, and that these facts amounted to a transfer of the title to the paper, or its proceeds, to Wilkinson  Co. In that, we think, he is mistaken. The indorsement upon each piece of paper was for collection simply, and by virtue of that indorsement no title passed to the firm, but, on the contrary, it became simply the agent of the plaintiff to present the paper, demand payment thereof and remit to it. Under such circumstances the title to the paper remained in the party sending it. (Montgomery Co. Bk. v. Albany CityBk., 7 N.Y. 459; Dickerson v. Wason, 47 id. 439; White v.Nat. Bk., 102 U.S. 658.)
The letter accompanying the inclosures of paper amounted simply to a direction to credit after the collection was made; and up to the time that the funds were actually received by the firm, it certainly would make no alteration in the law relative to indorsement for collection only.
Nor does the finding of the learned justice at Special Term as to the custom pursued between the parties alter the law in regard to the title to the paper before the funds arising from the payment thereof were actually received by the firm. The *Page 394 
finding shows that the credit was a provisional one only. It was a mere matter of bookkeeping. It would seem to have been more in the form of a memorandum of the different pieces of paper received; because if any were not paid, such as went to protest were at once charged back upon the books of the firm against the plaintiff, and returned to it with the expenses of protest charged to it. The firm never became absolutely responsible to the plaintiff for the amount of these collections until the collections were actually made and the proceeds received by them.
The property in these different pieces of paper, therefore, never vested in the firm, and the firm never purchased them or advanced any money upon them. Hence the firm never owned them. (Scott v. Ocean Bk., 23 N.Y. 289; Dickerson v. Wason,supra.)
These pieces of paper were undoubtedly subject to the direction of the plaintiff at any time prior to their payment, and it would have been the duty of the firm to have obeyed such direction. The plaintiff could have withdrawn the paper or made such other disposition of it as seemed to it proper. It might have been liable to pay the firm for the services performed by them, but that had no effect or bearing upon the title to the paper.
The cases relied on by the counsel for the defendant for the purpose of showing title in the firm were decided upon an essentially different state of facts. In Clark v. Merchants'Bank (2 N.Y. 380) the indorsement was in blank, which the court said, prima facie, imported a transfer of the title to the note, and that it was not sent for collection merely. Upon looking at the other facts in the case the court held there was nothing to show that the paper was sent for collection only, but, on the contrary, it appeared plainly that it was intended to pass the title. GARDNER, J., in that case, said: "The whole fund was, by the course of dealing, and, in this instance, by the directions of the plaintiff, treated as cash. It was passed to their credit according to their instructions, and the draft in question was for account." Again, he said: "The *Page 395 
whole arrangement was one of mutual convenience, and to hold that such drafts were transmitted for collection merely, with no right to a credit, or to draw against them until they were actually paid, is to lose sight of the situation of these brokers, their business and their necessities."
In Metropolitan National Bank v. Loyd (90 N.Y. 530) the bank received the check from the depositor as a deposit of money and entered the amount as cash to the credit of the depositor in his bank pass-book, which was returned to him. It was held that the title to the check passed to the bank. It was not received merely for collection. The court, per DANFORTH, J., said: "It is not disputed that Murray (the depositor) held the check as owner. It was his property to do with as he pleased. He had held other checks. Some of these he placed in the Troy bank for collection. Others he deposited and took credit therefor as cash upon his pass-book. As to the first, he could give and revoke his own directions as often as he chose, but as to the others, when they were by his direction credited to him, the title passed to the bank and they were not again subject to his control." There again the credit was of so much cash. It was nothing less than the purchase of the check. The indorsement was in blank and the bank took it as owner.
In Briggs v. The Central National Bank of New York (89 N.Y. 182) the defendant made the First National Bank of Newark its collecting agent. The bank upon which the check was drawn, upon its receipt, charged the check to the drawer and credited the defendant with the amount in its account. By the transaction the check was paid to the Newark bank, and it was only necessary for it to remit its collections once a week to the bank in New York under its agreement. The next day, however, it suspended payment, and in an action by the person who gave the check to the defendant for collection it was held that the defendant was liable for the payment thereof, although it had not received the amount from its own agent in Newark. The case is not in the least similar to the one at bar. *Page 396 
In People v. City Bank of Rochester (93 N.Y. 582) that bank and the Utica City National Bank each acted as agent for and kept a running account with the other, the balance being struck once a week and the bank found indebted remitting the balance due. The crediting of the paper was entirely different, and there was a mutual account current between the banks. All that case holds, however, is that when the moneys were paid the relation between the banks was simply that of debtor and creditor.
We cannot see, therefore, that, as to the paper not actually collected and the cash received by Wilkinson  Co. before their failure, it ever became the property of that firm, or that the title to the proceeds thereof ever vested in that firm or its assignee.
As to the moneys received by the firm in payment of checks and drafts sent to it for collection by the plaintiff and by the firm, paid out before the assignment and in the usual course of business in payment of the debts of the firm, and, of course, never received by the assignee, we do not see that the plaintiff occupies any different position in that regard towards the firm than any other creditor. As the firm was to remit but once a week, of course it was not expected that the identical moneys received by it, in payment of paper sent to it for collection, were to be sent to the plaintiff. The firm, by the arrangement, had the right to retain the moneys and to remit weekly, and, of course, from one week to another it had the right to use the money, and the plaintiff relied upon the credit of the firm for such time as it had the right to retain the money.
But it is claimed, on the part of the defendant, assignee, that, assuming that no title to the checks passed to Wilkinson 
Co., the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, so far as regards the proceeds of the paper that were received by the assignee, and expended by him in good faith and without notice by him of any claim on the part of the plaintiff prior to the making of the demand or the service of the notice by the plaintiff upon him. We think this claim cannot be maintained.
In the first place the money received by the assignee, as *Page 397 
proceeds of the paper sent by the plaintiff to the firm for collection, and not collected by the firm before the assignment, never became the property of that firm, and, therefore, the legal title never passed to the assignee of the firm. It was not transferred by the firm to the assignee because, at the time when the assignment was made, the money had not been collected and had not come into the hands of the assignors. It never came into the hands of the assignee by virtue of the assignment in any legal sense of the term. The moneys came to him from the various collecting agents to whom the drafts and checks had been sent by the firm. The assignee could get no better title to the moneys than his assignor, and neither had any right to apply such moneys collected, after the failure, to the payment of firm debts. If it be said that he received and applied them in good faith, it may be answered that good faith did not change the title of the plaintiff to the proceeds of its property.
There are cases in which an assignee or trustee is protected for acts done in good faith under an instrument creating the trust, and before such instrument has been declared invalid. Where an assignee under an assignment for the benefit of creditors, fraudulent upon its face, pays money to bona fide
creditors of the assignor in accordance with the directions of the assignment, he will be protected, provided he does it in good faith and before any other creditor has obtained a lien upon the money. This is because the assignment, as between the parties to it, is valid and the assignee in making such payment is doing no more than the assignor might at that time lawfully have done if no assignment had been made. In such case all that can be said is, if the assignment be declared void, that the assignor paid certain of his creditors indirectly and through the agency of the assignee at a time when he had the right to do it directly but for the assignment. Such was the case of Ames v. Blunt (5 Paige, 13), where the chancellor said that the liability of the assignee depended upon the question whether the rights of the plaintiff had been affected by the distribution of the proceeds of the assigned property to bona *Page 398 fide creditors of the assignor. And it was held that the plaintiff was not thereby injured because the assignee had done no more than the assignor might have done at any time before the plaintiff obtained a lien upon the money paid by the assignee. To the same effect are the cases of Collumb v. Read (24 N.Y. 505) ; Averill v. Loucks (6 Barb. 470, 477); Iddings v.Bruen (4 Sandf. Ch. 417).
The case of Sullivan v. Miller (106 N.Y. 635) is also an instance of the same general principle. In that case the property belonged to the assignor and was assigned to the assignee subject to a mortgage. The action of the assignee (or his successor, the receiver) was upheld by the court. The title to the property was in the assignor. It was not property of a third person which he disposed of.
It is argued, also, that as this property came honestly into the possession of the assignee, the plaintiff would have to prove a demand upon, and a refusal by him to give it up, before an action could be maintained; and it is then claimed that where such an assignee, before notice has been given to him, or any demand made upon him for a surrender of the property, has disposed of the same in good faith, he is relieved from liability. The cases cited by counsel are those where property has come into the hands of the assignor tortiously, and, under such circumstances, that, as between him and the original owner, the latter could insist upon his title. In such case, where possession of the property is given to the assignee under the assignment, it is held that as he innocently came into the possession of the same, before an action can be maintained against him, demand must be made for the surrender of the property. Such is the case of property obtained by the assignor by fraudulent representations, where the vendor has the right to rescind the contract and take back the property. (Barnard v.Campbell, 58 N.Y. 73; Goodwin v. Wertheimer, 99 id. 149.) But in such case the legal title is in the assignor at the time he makes the assignment, and that title passing to the assignee, who is innocent of the fraud, a demand by the vendor must be made before an action for its recovery can be maintained. *Page 399 
The case of Haggerty v. Palmer (6 Johns. Ch. 437) is of a similar nature. The legal title to the property was in the assignor, and the assignee took it. If disposed of by him to abona fide purchaser for value, without notice, the vendee might be protected, and the assignee also if he sold before he himself had any notice. Here the property was never the property of the assignor. It never came to the assignee by virtue of the assignment in any legal acceptation of that term. Indeed, he must have known that the property did not belong to the assignors. At least an inspection of their books would have shown, as it seems to us, enough to put him upon inquiry as to where the title to these moneys vested. It did not vest with the assignors, and they could transfer none to their assignee.
Again, we do not think that the order of the County Court or the county judge for the payment of the dividend was the least protection to the assignee. That order did not assume to say what moneys should be used in the payment of the dividend. It did not assume to decide whether these moneys were the moneys of the assignor. That question was not before the court. It simply gave directions to the assignee to pay a certain dividend upon papers which, it is to be presumed, showed to the court or judge that the assignee claimed to have moneys enough of the assignor in his hands at the time to pay it with.
But even if it had assumed to direct that these particular moneys should be paid, we see no protection thereby given to the assignee. The plaintiffs could not be concluded upon a question as to the title to their property by any ex parte decision of the county judge. The case of Herring v. New York, Lake Erie Western Railroad Company (105 N.Y. 375) has nothing to do with the point. The plaintiff here was no lienor of property in the possession of the assignee. It was, as we have seen, the absolute owner of it, and it could not be divested of its title without some notice.
Lastly, the claim is made that the plaintiff has been guilty of laches in asserting its rights, and that, therefore, the payment *Page 400 
made by the assignee in ignorance of the existence of its claim is to be protected.
If laches were a defense we see no facts upon which their existence can be founded. The plaintiff heard of the assignment of Wilkinson  Co. at the earliest, not before December 10, 1884, and on the twenty-sixth the demand on its behalf for these moneys was made of the assignee. It seems that, under an ex parte
order of the County Court or judge made on the 23d of December, he had already paid out a large part of this money. It would be a pretty stern application of the doctrine of laches to hold that a plaintiff should be deprived of all title to its property by reason of not making a demand for it of an assignee of a third person for the benefit of creditors within less than sixteen days after it heard of the assignment, and where it had no reason to suppose that the assignee would take its property to pay the debts of the assignors. The defense of laches is not made out.
Whether the funds (if there are any) in the hands of the assignee, collected by him since the service of the notice and the demand, should be impressed with a trust to reimburse the plaintiff the amount of its property used to pay the debts of the assignors, we do not now decide. We should want more facts before us. We should, among other things, want to know whether any liens had been acquired by any other creditor upon such moneys, and under what circumstances, so as to be able to decide understandingly as between different claimants to such funds. Perhaps other parties would have to be brought in.
Upon the whole, we think the assignee is liable to account to the plaintiff for the moneys received by him subsequent to the 9th day of December 1884, being the proceeds of the checks or drafts above referred to.
It results from these views that the judgment of the General and Special Terms should be reversed, as to the assignee, and a new trial granted against him, with costs to abide the event.
All concur, except RUGER, Ch. J., and ANDREWS, J., not voting.
Judgment accordingly. *Page 401