Black River Insurance v. New York State Loan & Trust Co.

73 N.Y. 282, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 612
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 16, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 73 N.Y. 282 (Black River Insurance v. New York State Loan & Trust Co.) 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
Black River Insurance v. New York State Loan & Trust Co., 73 N.Y. 282, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 612 (N.Y. 1878).

Opinion

Earl, J.

This is an action of replevin to recover the pds-' session of twenty-two promissory notes, the par value of which is $20,000.

The material facts of the case, which were undisputed at the trial, are as follows: In January, 1874, the capital stock of the plaintiff, a fire insurance company, located at Watertown in this State, had become impaired by losses which it had sustained, to the extent of twenty-five per cent of its capital. This impairment came to the knowledge of the superintendent of the insurance department through an examination instituted by him under section 24 of chapter 466 of the Laws of 1855 ; and on the 28th day of January, 1874, under the same section, he made an order directing the officers of the company to require the stockholders to pay in the amount of such deficiency. In pursuance of such order, notices were published in two newspapers designated, requiring the stockholders to pay twenty-five per cent on their stock in cash, to make good the deficiency; and a similar notice was mailed to stockholders.

At that time George F. Paddock was president of the insurance company, and he and one Andrews were private bankers at Watertown, doing business under the firm name *287 of 11 George F. Paddock & Co.; ” and Andrews was also one of the directors of the insurance company.

There was some difficulty in procuring the stockholders to make cash payments, and it was therefore arranged between certain persons wiio were officers of the insurance company and Paddock & Co. that if stockholders would give their notes, Paddock & Co. would take them, and give the company a cash credit for them ; but the company was not to draw upon this credit faster than the notes were paid, and the makers were not to be called upon for payment, unless the exigencies of the company absolutely required payment so that it could draw. The understanding was that 'the notes, except as voluntarily paid, would be paid out of the dividends to be made by the company to its stockholders.

Under this arrangement and understanding, most of the stockholders wore procured to give their notes instead of paying cash. The notes were all dated January twenty-ninth, payable in six months after date, with interest, at Paddock & Co.’s bank; and most of them were delivered to some of the officers at the office of the company. They were then taken by such officers and delivered to Paddock & Co. under the previous arrangement and understanding. The notes were not indorsed by the insurance company; but each note was payable to the order of and indorsed by the maker. At the bank they were all credited to the insurance company and charged to discounted bills. They were entered upon the discount book and upon the tickler, and were filed and numbered and put away with the other discounted paper of the bank. On the books of the insurance company they were charged to Paddock & Co. as cash. After all this was done, Paddock and one Lord, who was vice-president of the insurance company, made an affidavit, in which they stated that the amount of $46,000, which included the amount credited at the bank on account of the notes of the stockholders given as above stated, had been realized in cash by the company, and was then absolutely held by it in its corporate name, and that it was subject to *288 no hen or claim thereon of any kind or nature by any person; and they forwarded this affidavit to the superintendent of the insurance department. Thereafter, in March, 1874, Paddock, as president, and one Moulton, as secretary of the company, made, under oath, a report to the said superintendent, for the purpose of showing a compliance with his order of January twenty-eighth, in which they stated that each one of the stockholders, who had given his note as above stated, had paid the amount in cash to the company, and that the sums thus paid had been deposited by the company in the bank without any conditions or reserve whatever. Annexed to this report was the certificate of Paddock & Co., certifying that the company had deposited in their bank the sum of $60,600.25, which amount had been collected under the requisition of the insurance department of January twenty-eighth. On the seventh of March, the deputy superintendent of the insurance department went to Watertown to verify the report which had thus been made, and was there informed by the officers of the company and also of the bank that the insurance company had the cash credit in the bank. After this examination, the superintendent of the insurance department made a certificate, to the effect that his order of January twenty-eighth had been complied with, and that the insurance company possessed the entire amount of its capital. In the annual report made by the company, for the year 1874, to the insurance department, the money credited to the company by Paddock & Co., as above stated, was reported as cash deposited in bank.

In June, 1874, Paddock & Co. pledged the twenty-two notes now in question to the defendant as collateral security, and for their recovery this action was commenced in January, 1875 , after Paddock & Co. had failed, owing the plaintiff a large sum of money, including a portion of the credit given to it on account of the notes as above stated. The plaintiff claims that it took title to the notes directly from the stockholders, and that it never parted with such title to Paddock & Co.

*289 I am of opinion that, upon the undisputed faots of the case, the complaint should have been dismissed at the trial.

First. The insurance company never had title to these notes. It had no right to take them. It could only take cash from the stockholders. It never authorized any one to take these notes for it. Its corporate action required that cash should be paid by the stockholders, and all its corporate acts show that cash was paid to it. In making the arrangement with Paddock & Co. for the discount, and in procuring the notes and delivering them to Paddock & Co. its officers were not acting, and were not authorized to act, for it; they were acting for the stockholders. They had no general or implied power to do* an unlawful act. The board of directors of the insurance company never took any action in reference to these notes ; never authorized them to be taken or to be transferred, and never, in any way, ratified the acts of its officers in taking them, and never recognized them as the property of the company until it authorized this suit to be commenced for their recovery in January, 1875, long after they hed been transferred to the defendant. To have taken these notes and held the title to them in any way would have served no useful purpose, but would have defeated any compliance with the law and the requisition of the insurance department; and all the corporate action of the company shows that it did not take or hold them. There was no agreement between it and the stockholders that it would take these notes. By its notice it required cash to be paid, and this the stockholders must have understood. They gave these notes that they might be discounted by Paddock & Co. under the arrangement which had been, made for their benefit with that firm, and that the cash might thus be produced and paid to the company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 N.Y. 282, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/black-river-insurance-v-new-york-state-loan-trust-co-ny-1878.