Asylum of St. Vincent de Paul v. McGuire

118 Misc. 706
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1922
StatusPublished

This text of 118 Misc. 706 (Asylum of St. Vincent de Paul v. McGuire) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Asylum of St. Vincent de Paul v. McGuire, 118 Misc. 706 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Cohalan, J.

Amy & Co. were a partnership engaged in the business of stockbrokers in the city of New York. On March 5, 1919, the members of the firm executed a general assignment to the defendant Edward J. McGuire. In January, 1915, Amy & Co. had obtained from the defendant Chase National Bank a loan of $250,000, and had pledged as collateral therefor, securities, consisting of stocks and bonds of various corporations. The bonds were payable to holder or bearer in the usual form of corporate bonds, and the stocks were represented by the usual certificates, with assignments in blank executed by the party named as owner. Some of the securities thus pledged were those of margin creditors; some were the property of parties who had authorized their pledging; some were the property of parties who had left them with Amy & Co. for safekeeping or for sale. This latter class we might call larceny creditors,” as the firm had no ownership of any kind in these securities.

The plaintiff occupies rather a unique position in this matter. Its securities were left not with Amy & Co., but with a member of that firm who was at the time the plaintiff’s treasurer. These securities, in the form of bearer bonds, were delivered by the treasurer to Amy & Co.; were handed over by them as part of the collateral security for the loan; were sold by the bank and the proceeds applied upon payment of the note. On these facts the plaintiff claims a right superior to the other larceny creditors.”

[708]*708It appears that after the making of the loan by the Chase National Bank, and from time to time, new collateral was substituted in place of some of the original, which was withdrawn.

On March 5, 1919, the date of the assignment, the Chase National Bank demanded payment of the loan, and the same not being paid, it sold some of the securities on March thirteenth, realizing in round figures the sum of $255,000. After this sale, but within a day or so, the bank received from the attorneys for defendant Cramer a letter advising it that certain securities held as collateral to the loan were the property of Cramer and not of Amy & Co. The securities mentioned in this letter were 100 shares of Western Union, 133 shares of Pittsburgh Coal preferred and 62 shares of Pacific Coast preferred. The Western Union shares had been sold, but on receipt of the letter the defendant bank retained in its possession and still has a cashier’s check for the proceeds of the sale in the sum of $8,833.50. On March nineteenth the bank, to secure the balance due, sold six bonds of the Hocking Valley and 28 shares of the New York Dock Company preferred, realizing on such sales $5,852.64, and thus clearing Amy & Co. of all indebtedness to it under the loan. There then remained in its hands some of the securities pledged as collateral, and the cashier’s check representing the sale of the Western Union stock. Of these certificates some were handed over to the trustee in bankruptcy, and others at this time are held by the bank, which, however, claims no right or title to them and offers to hand them over in accordance with the terms of the judgment herein.

On March nineteenth of the same year a petition in involuntary bankruptcy was filed against Amy & Co. in the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York. An adjudication was entered thereon on June ninth, and defendant McGuire was appointed trustee in bankruptcy.

The plaintiff contends that the securities unsold on the loan should be sold, and out of the proceeds it should receive the value of its securities hypothecated by Amy & Co. I cannot agree with •this contention. That its property was stolen from it by its treasurer and turned over by him to the firm of which he was a member is further evidence of the frailty of human nature, but the fact gives the plaintiff no legal claim against those defendants whose property, also stolen, was jeopardized but not finally lost.

At the time of the assignment Amy & Co. held certain securities of Monneron & Guye, and prior to the assignment they had pledged all of these except a $1,000 bond of the Southern Railway Development and General Mortgage 4s with the Chase National Bank as part of the- collateral to the loan. These securities had [709]*709been deposited with Amy & Co. for safekeeping only. Of the other securities deposited on the loan Monneron & Guye contend that the $500 Norfolk and Western bond and the ten shares of Norfolk and Western preferred, not sold by the bank, should be returned to them, with all accrued interest and dividends, and further, that they are entitled to the sum of $3,611.65, with interest, representing the proceeds of their securities that were sold by the bank.

The defendant Cramer contends that the 100 shares of Western Union, 62 of Pacific Coast Company and 133 of Pittsburgh Coal preferred were the property of Cramer’s predecessor in title; were left in the hands of Amy & Co. for safekeeping; were delivered by that company to the bank as part of the collateral security to the loan, and were pledged subsequent to the date of the original loan. The Pacific Coast and Pittsburgh Coal shares were not sold by the bank; the Western Union were, and the result of this sale is the cashier’s check for $8,833.50. It was the attorneys for this defendant who wrote the letter to the bank which caused it to hold the check for the proceeds. An action in replevin was commenced by Cramer, but was stayed by an order entered in this action. This defendant contends that he is entitled to the immediate possession of the Pacific Coast and Pittsburgh Coal shares and to the check representing the proceeds of the sale of the Western Union shares.

The defendants Cramer, Monneron & Guye, Popp, La Fort, Frank, Salyer, Walsh, Connolly, Charles C. Miller, Clare J. Miller, all left their securities with Amy & Co. for safekeeping or for sale. They were not margin creditors. They were not indebted to Amy & Co., and their securities were part of the collateral to the loan. The International Catholic Truth Society was in this same class. Some question arose at the trial as to whether or not by reason of its default herein proof should be taken and rights adjudicated on its behalf in this action. The remaining defendants were either margin creditors or what may be called family creditors.”

Amy & Co. under the law had the right to pledge the securities of the margin creditors, and the testimony shows that the family creditors ” all consented that their securities might be pledged.

Two questions press for solution in the present action: First, whether or not the plaintiff has a right superior to that of the other larceny creditors,” and may call for the sale of the securities unsold by the bank, and may be reimbursed in full from the proceeds of such a sale before any of such proceeds be distributed to the other “ larceny creditors.” Second, whether or not the [710]*710unsold securities pledged to the bank on the loan should be sold and the proceeds, together with the $8,833.50 cashier’s check, distributed pro rata among the “ larceny creditors ” as is urged on the theory of cosuretyship. Some of the defendant larceny creditors ” believe this should be done. Cramer and Monneron & Guye claim they are entitled to their specific securities and the $8,833.50 cashier’s check, and that there should not be a sale and distribution.

Prior to Matter of Wilson & Co.,

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118 Misc. 706, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/asylum-of-st-vincent-de-paul-v-mcguire-nysupct-1922.