August v. O'Brien

50 A.D. 626, 63 N.Y.S. 989

This text of 50 A.D. 626 (August v. O'Brien) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
August v. O'Brien, 50 A.D. 626, 63 N.Y.S. 989 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

McLaughlin, J.:

This action was brought to recover the value of certain bonds alleged to have been wrongfully withheld by the Madison Square Bank, of which the defendants, at the time of the commencement of the action, were receivers. The complaint alleged, in substance, that on the 19th of July, 1892, one Elias August delivered to the bank four bonds of the par value of $1,000 each, as collateral security for the payment of a note for $2,000 made by him, and that day discounted by the bank; that sometime thereafter, and prior to the time the note became due, August assigned to the plaintiff all his right, title and interest in the bonds, of which fact the bank had due notice; that when the note fell due the same was paid by the plaintiff, and a demand was then made by her for the return of the bonds, which was refused, notwithstanding the bank had previously agreed that if she would make such payment it would make such return to her. The answer, in substance, admitted the making of the note and the delivery of the bonds to it as collateral security for the payment of the same, but denied that the note was paid by the plaintiff under an agreement that upon such payment it would deliver the bonds referred to to her, and alleged that when the note was paid the bank held another claim against Elias August, amounting to the sum of $3,650, and that by the terms and conditions of the note under which the bonds were held it had a right to retain and hold them as Security for the payment of such claim. Upon the issue thus formed the parties went to trial, and substantially the following facts were made to appear by the testimony offered on the part of the plaintiff: That before the note became due Elias August assigned to the plaintiff all his right, title and interest in and to the bonds, of which fact tho bank was notified; that a few days before the note fell due, and after notice of the assignment of the bonds had been given, one Jacob S. August, acting for and representing the plaintiff, had a conversation by telephone with Mr. Blaut, the president of the bank — in which August stated that the plaintiff, for the purpose of obtaining the bonds held by the bank as collateral security for the payment of the note, would pay the note when it became due and asked if a certified check would be accepted, to which Mr. Blaut replied: “ Yes. Send a certified

check and we will have the papers all ready for you.” In pursuance of this conversation» the plaintiff, on the day the note fell due, sent to the Park National Bank lor certification a check drawn on that bank, with instructions that, after the same had been certified, it should be delivered to the Madison Square Bank in payment of the note and for the bonds above stated; and while her representative was at the Park Bank, he was notified that the president of the Madison Square Bank would not accept a certified check in payment of the note, but would insist upon having “the cash,” and thereupon the plaintiff's representative procured upon her check $2.000 in cash, which he took and delivered to the Madison Square Bank. As to what took place when the cash was paid to the bank, Mr. Jacob S. August, the person who made the payment, testified, and he was corroborated in some respects by at least one other witness: “I called there some time before noon and was ushered into the office of Mr. Blaut. I handed him $2,000 with the remark that this was for the purpose of getting a certain note and collaterals attached to that note, pursuant to a conversation we had had over the telephone several days previously. Mr. Blaut took the $2,000 * * * and called Mr. Thompson, the cashier. * * * Then Mr. Blaut said to Mr. Thompson: ‘ There is $2,000. You can now give to Mr. August the paper which we have ready for him.’ ” This witness further' testified that, after he had made the payment, Mr. Blaut and the cashier left the room in which they were at the time sitting, and a few minutes later Mr. Thompson returned with a paper which, upon examination, he found was not the note and jollaterals, but was simply a receipt for the money paid, and that he immediately demanded an explanation. That he said to Blaut “that he knew what papers I had called for; ” and in reply Blaut said “ this was the paper that I was to get and there was nothing further for me.” He stated that he thereupon left the bank, but returned later in the day, and a further conversation was had with Blaut, in which he said: “I then made another demand for the return of the note and collaterals, and, in case of his refusal to do this, that he should return to me the $2,000 cash which I had handed to him in the morning. He refused to do either of these -things, and said that he had given me all that he was going to give me, and that if it did not suit me, I could try and see what I could do about the matter.” On the day following,-the plaintiff called in person and demanded from the bank the note and bonds, or the return of the $2,000 paid the day before. The bank again refused to deliver to her the bonds or to return the money paid. On the part of the defendants, the president of the bank was sworn as a witness, and while he denied that there was an express agreement on the part of the bank to return to the plaintiff the bonds in question, he, however, did not deny that he had stated, in the conversation with Jacob S. August over the telephone, that he would accept a certified check, and when the same was received he would “have the papers ready.” He ádmitted that Jacob S. August came to the bank and said he wanted to pay the note; that he then said: “Have you got the cash? Yes. They gave me the cash and I sent out for the receipt, and the receipt came in and I handed them the receipt. They looked at it and said, ‘I want the note and the collaterals * * I gave Jacob August the receipt at that time and he was dissatisfied and wanted. [627]*627the money back. I said no, you have paid that note and I cannot give it back to you. I said, you see your lawyer about this, l can’t give you anything else.” He further stated that on tne following day, when the plaintiff and Jacob S. August called, Jacob used vile epithets in addressing him, called him a thief and a robber, and tiiat he put him out of the bank. The trial court found that the bank agreed to deliver the bonds to the plaintiff on her paying the note, and that she, relying upon such promise, made the payment, and it directed judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the value of the bonds. After a careful consideration of the record we are entirely satisfied that the conclusion reached by the trial court is correct. The $2,OJO was paid by the plaintiff, if not under an express agreement with the president of the bank, certainly under an implied one, that upon her making such payment the bonds would be delivered to her. The president) of the bank knew that the equity in the bonds had been assigned to her, and he also knew that when the payment was made she expected the bonds would be delivered to her. Neither the plaintiff nor Jacob S. August was under any obligation to pay the note, and when the president of the bank accepted the money he knew that it was paid for the sole and only purpose of obtaining possession of the bonds. This he did not deny, and if he did, his own acts were sufficient in and of themselves to establish the contrary. The fact that he refused to accept a certified check shows that he knew that the plaintiff, in making the payment, expected to have the bonds returned to her, and that if they were not returned payment on the check could be stopped; but with the cash he could do just what he did do, retain the money and refuse to deliver the bonds. There is no other explanation for his refusing to accept a cenified check.

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Bluebook (online)
50 A.D. 626, 63 N.Y.S. 989, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/august-v-obrien-nyappdiv-1900.