Bank of New York v. Vanderhorst

32 N.Y. 553
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 32 N.Y. 553 (Bank of New York v. Vanderhorst) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of New York v. Vanderhorst, 32 N.Y. 553 (N.Y. 1865).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The plaintiff in this action claims to recover against the defendant as maker of a promissory note, dated November 24th, 1859, for $4,400.80, payable, six months after date, to the order of Kolff & Persuhn. No question was made upon the pleadings. The action was tried before Samuel E. Lyon, Esq., referee, who, in his report, finds the following facts amongst others:

That the firm of Kolff & Persuhn was a limited partnership, doing business in the city of New York, Kolff & Persuhn being the general partners, and one Ernest Fiedler being the "special partner. That at the time the note bears date, the defendant lent to the firm the note in suit, and, at the same time, received from Kolff his promissory note of the same date for the same amount, and payable to the order of Jacob W. Vanderhorst, six months after date. It was agreed that neither party should negotiate or pass the notes away, or make any use of them whatever. The purpose of the exchange of the notes being to enable Kolff to induce the special partner, Fiedler, to think that a share of a vessel called the “Holland,” and owned by the firm, had been sold to Vanderhorst. Fredrick W. Stange was the duly constituted agent of the firm, under a power of attorney in writing, and, as such, under the authority of Kolff, Persuhn being absent *554 in the West Indies, appliéd to the plaintiffs for the discount of the note of the firm for $5,000, payable to the order of George W. Duer, the cashier of the plaintiffs, at sixty-five days after date, maiming June 2d, 1860, with certain collateral notes (of which the note in suit was one) as security. The loan was made accordingly, and the . principal note, together with the collaterals, passed to the plaintiff. The defendant was not known to the plaintiff. Ho inquiry was made in regard to his credit or standing, and no representations given as to the character of the collateral notes left as the security. On the 17th of April, 1860, Kolff left the office of the firm and did not return. He was afterward discovered dead, in a pond of water upon Staten Island, on the 27th of April, 1860, and was buried on Sunday, the 29th of April. The firm had a balance to their credit in the plaintiff’s bank of $1,294.05, on the 18th of April, which Stange drew out, under his power of attorney, by 13 different checks for various sums, at dates extending from the 19th to the 28th of April, both inclusive. And a. deposit in the meantime having been made to the credit of the firm, left a balance due them of $55.98/ The firm were insolvent at the time of Kolff’s disappearance, although the fact was •not known until some time in Hay following. His disappearance was known to Hr. Duer, the plaintiff’s cashier, but at what precise time does not appear. The firm had also, under discount with the plaintiff, another note for $4,000, secured in part by two collaterals, viz., the note of .0. & E. Poillon for $593.54, and another note for $596.94, maiming 'in Hay, 1860. The note of Poillon was withdrawn from the bank by Stange in April, i860, and by him given to Persuhn after his return in Hay. The collaterals, except the note in suit, were collected by the bank. The firm made an assignment for the benefit of their creditors, and crediting the amount collected by the bank, and a dividend made by the assignee, there was left a balance due upon the note at the time of the report, of $1,322.39. The referee found, as a conclusion of law, that the plaintiff was a Iona, fide holder of the note for value, and although made without *555 consideration, the plaintiff was entitled to recover the balance found due. He also found the defendant was entitled to a pro rata share of the balance remaining to the credit of the firm, and also of the Poillon note withdrawn from the bank. And he also found that he was not entitled to be credited with the amounts of the several checks drawn upon the fund in the bank by Stange, after Kolff’s disappearance. Judgment was entered upon the report which was afterward affirmed at the General Term of the Superior Court of the city of Hew York, and thereupon the defendant appealed to this court.

The duty and obligation of the bank to retain the money on deposit to the credit of the firm at the time of Kolff’s disappearance, and to retain it in satisfaction and part pay7 ment of the note, may be disposed of in a few words. The firm, was dissolved, and, for all the purposes of future business and new enterprises, ceased to exist by the death of Kolff. The time of his death is not found by the report, nor, indeed, could be, from the evidence. He disappeared on the 17th, and was not discovered until the 27th of April. At this latter date all the moneys had been drawn from the bank, except the sum of seventy-five dollars, drawn on the 28th of the same month. For the purposes of settlement and liquidation,the copartnership still existed. The surviving partner, Persuhn, could draw out the moneys on deposit and apply them to the uses of the firm. As a general rule, a power of attorney is revoked by death. And the reason assigned is, that, as the power of one man to act for another depends upon-the will and license of that other, the power ceases when the will or the permission is withdrawn. It may, at any time, be revoked by the principal, and is revoked by his death. Besides, there is a manifest absurdity in doing an act in the name of a person no longer in being. This firm, I have said, did not cease absolutely, nor did the right to draw out the money on deposit cease, by the death of Kolff. It survived to the survivor, Persuhn, as did the power to Stange exist in a qualified form; and he might, under it, draw out the money on deposit for the uses of the firm. The note in suit was not *556 due at the time, and the only ground upon which the bank could have refused to part with the money was the want of power by Stange to draw the checks. Persuhn, the survivor, taking no exception, none, I think, can be taken by others, more especially as the bank seems to have paid over the money in good faith, and without notice of the death of Kolff and the consequent dissolution of the firm.

It remains to consider whether the circumstances under which the bank became the holder of the note are such as deprive it of the power to enforce its payment by the maker. Is it a holder in good faith and for value ? ' It was not made for the purpose of being discounted or used in any way by Kolff and Persuhn, the payees. On the contrary, they agreed not to do- anything of the kind. They received it for the purpose of being exhibited to Ernest Fiedler as evidence of the sale of an interest in the vessel, and for no other use. It was, however, payable to their order, and under the law-merchant was negotiable, by indorsement, in the market, being an instrument perfect and complete in itself. An indorsee of a negotiable promissory note, who receives it in the usual course of business, without notice that it was made for a special purpose and applied to uses different from those for which it was intended by the original parties, and who is without knowledge or notice of the equities between the parties, is regarded as a holder in good faith. In the present instance, the bank had no notice of the purpose for which the note was made, or of the agreement between Kolff and the defendant in regard thereto.

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.Y. 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-new-york-v-vanderhorst-ny-1865.