Albers v. Suisse

188 Misc. 229, 67 N.Y.S.2d 239, 1946 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3218
CourtCity of New York Municipal Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 188 Misc. 229 (Albers v. Suisse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of New York Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albers v. Suisse, 188 Misc. 229, 67 N.Y.S.2d 239, 1946 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3218 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1946).

Opinion

Coleman, J.

Plaintiff sues the defendant bank for its failure to return to him certain bonds which he had entrusted to it for safekeeping. The defendant denying liability, relies upón a letter signed by the plaintiff directing it to transfer the bonds to the account of a third party. The plaintiff seeks to avoid the effect of this letter by asserting that it was signed by him in circumstances which made it a nullity; that the defendant knew those circumstances, acted in disregard of them, and thereby acted in disregard of its obligations to him.

[231]*231Plaintiff was a Viennese merchant. In 1937 he deposited with the defendant bank in Switzerland for safekeeping five $1,000 Yugoslavian Government bonds. In March, 1938, the German Government occupied Austria and incorporated it within the German Reich. In September of that year the plaintiff, because of his religion, was removed to a concentration camp where he remained until April, 1939. In this period, and from time to time he signed papers and documents as they were submitted to him by his captors; he had no choice, of course. He signed the letter in question without knowing its contents and without being permitted to read it, although there were times when depending upon the whim of the functionary of the moment he was allowed to look over papers that he was signing. He did not sign the letter" as a condition of release from the concentration camp. The letter is dated September, 1938, and January 6, 1939; it was received by the defendant January 14, 1939. It was typed upon stationery of plaintiff’s business, but plaintiff had nothing to do with its preparation; he had long been removed from Ms place of business and all Ms effects had been confiscated. The letter directed the defendant to transfer $10,000 Yugoslav bonds [sic] from his account to the account of Oesterreichische Credit Anstalt, a banMng institution in Vienna. The letter was received by the defendant in Zurich not from the plaintiff but from the Viennese bank. That bank, in enclosing the plaintiff’s letter, asked the defendant to transfer the bonds in accordance with the letter and to sell them for its account. The defendant followed these instructions.

In June, 1938, a distant relation of plaintiff, wrote to a resident of Zurich, one Fleischman, describing the situation of the plaintiff. He stated in his letter that plaintiff was “ in protective custody ’ ’; that he would be released only if he were to relinquish Ms property in favor of the State and that he had already done so. He went on to say that the bonds deposited with the defendant constituted plaintiff’s entire property and he requested that the defendant be asked to deliver the bonds only to the plaintiff in Zurich; that if the plaintiff’s firm were to ask for the bonds the request should be denied as the firm was no longer Ms. A copy of this letter was sent to the defendant wMch, through an employee, Kollreuther, on June 18th, acknowledged its receipt and stated “ in accordance with the request I had an instruction entered for the said deposit in accordance with which the deposit is to remain blocked and in case of any possible dispositions an inquiry must first be sub-, mitted to me. Should such a case occur I shall be very willing! [232]*232to get in touch with you again ’ ’. An appropriate notation was in fact made upon the bank’s records.

When the plaintiff’s letter instructing the defendant to transfer the bonds to the Viennese bank was received with the latter’s request, the defendant, by the same employee, did get in touch with Fleischman, but the result of his so doing is obscure. Kollreuther testified that although he communicated with Fleischman, “ I did not have to receive any instructions from the Fleischman firm and I have also not received any instructions as it had no power of attorney ”. Apparently nothing transpired, and the defendant without more, and without further inquiry, made the transfer. It then wrote the plaintiff that pursuant to his instructions it was transferring the bonds to the account of the Viennese bank; it called plaintiff’s attention to- the fact that there were only five bonds in his account, not ten. This letter was not received by the plaintiff until long-after this transaction; indeed, as will be explained later, it could not be received by him. After plaintiff was released from the concentration camp he made his way to London, arriving there late in 1939; he then wrote the defendant for the bonds. The bank replied, in November, 1939, that the bonds had been sold pursuant to his instructions and it sent him a copy of the letter it had written ” him the previous January.

The test of the plaintiff’s right to recover and of the defendant’s liability is whether the defendant acted prudently and in good faith with relation to the securities entrusted to it for safekeeping. For there is no doubt that when the defendant received the bonds for safekeeping and for compensation it became a bailee and its liability is to be determined by reference to the manner in. which it discharged the obligations which it assumed as bailee. (Ouderkirk v. Central National Bank, 119 N. Y. 263, 270; Pattison v. Syracuse National Bank, 80 N. Y. 82; Manhattan Bank of Memphis v. Walker, 130 U. S. 267; National Bank v. Graham, 100 U. S. 699.) The plaintiff takes the position, as I have said, that as a matter of fact the bank acted in total disregard of the instructions it had .received in June, 1938, to ignore any letter of his purporting to transfer the bonds, and in disregard of its obligations to him; that it assumed an attitude of complacency in the face of specific information which it had concerning the plaintiff’s circumstances and of general information which it shared with banking institutions in Europe for a number of years preceding the outbreak of war. As the trier of the facts called upon to determine the facts and to exercise judgment upon them, I agree [233]*233with the plaintiff’s position and I find in his favor. I append an exposition of my views as the trier of the facts.

The plaintiff’s letter authorizing the transfer was, of course, void considering the circumstances in which it was signed. But if that were all before the defendant it could act upon the letter with impunity; it would be putting too strict an obligation upon it, too onerous a burden, to ask it to go behind every letter of authorization that it received. But if it knew the circumstances in which the letter was written it could not rely upon it without being remiss in the duty it owed the plaintiff; and it did know those circumstances. It knew the general state of affairs in Germany and in the adjacent countries that had been forcibly seized by the German Government. It knew of the destruction of life, of the torture and the confiscation of property visited upon numberless people for no reason other than their religion. It knew that the plaintiff was one of those persons. The letter which it had received in June of 1938 through an intermediary of the plaintiff informed it precisely of the plaintiff’s status. It had no communication from the plaintiff, or from anyone acting in his behalf, from June, 1938, until it received the letter of January, 1939. If the plaintiff had died in the intervening period, of course, defendant could not rely on the letter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 Misc. 229, 67 N.Y.S.2d 239, 1946 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albers-v-suisse-nynyccityct-1946.