Brooks v. People's Bank

192 A.D. 541, 183 N.Y.S. 243, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7509

This text of 192 A.D. 541 (Brooks v. People's Bank) 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
Brooks v. People's Bank, 192 A.D. 541, 183 N.Y.S. 243, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7509 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

This is an action for money had and received. The plaintiffs were copartners, having their principal office at Atlanta, Ga., and doing business under the name of Doremus & Co. Their business was handling cotton contracts and cotton seed oil, as brokers on a commission basis on the floors of the New York Cotton and the New York Produce Exchange, where they were represented by the plaintiff Brooks, who resided here. The defendant is a Georgia banking corporation having its office at Mansfield, Ga. It is alleged in the complaint that there was deposited with the defendant, to the credit and for the use of the plaintiffs, between October 15 and November 8, 1915, the sum of $9,750, and that $4,200 thereof was paid to them between October 26 and November 15, 1915, leaving a balance of $5,550 due and owing, payment of which had been duly demanded and refused. The answer admitted that the defendant was such a banking corporation, and denied all other material allegations of the complaint, and for a separate defense it is alleged that if between the dates mentioned in the complaint there was in the possession or control of the defendant money to which the plaintiffs had title, or in which they had a beneficial interest, such money was in its possession without knowledge of plaintiffs’ title or beneficial interest and by virtue of contracts between the plaintiffs and third parties which were made and to be performed in Georgia, and were governed by its laws and were wagering contracts in contravention of the laws of Georgia known as sections 4117, 4257, 4258 and 4259 of the Code of Georgia, which statutes are set forth in the answer, and that the moneys were unknowingly in 'the possession of the defendant pursuant to wagering contracts between the plaintiffs and third parties to be performed in the State of Georgia, which [543]*543contracts contravened the public policy of Georgia and were in violation of its laws, and that the possession by the defendant of any such money was only that of a stakeholder, and that the alleged cause of action accrued without the jurisdiction of this State and within the State of Georgia, and that the defendant, at no time, was a resident of this State or had a place of business here.

The plaintiffs Stanford and Doremus were residents of Georgia, and Stanford was a member of the New Orleans Cotton Exchange. They had an office in Atlanta, Ga., which was in charge of Stanford for handling cotton contracts and dealing in cotton seed and cotton seed oil. When the office in Georgia received an order to buy it would wire the office in New York, of which Brooks was in charge, by plaintiffs’ own direct wire, to execute the order. The defendant was a small country bank and one Franklin was its president, and his nephew Hugh Franklin was its cashier and transacted most of its business. It was shown generally that some months before the transactions in question the plaintiffs had had dealings with the defendant consisting of two or three deposits to their credit, and it notified the Georgia office of the plaintiffs by telegraph or telephone of such deposits and paid the same by remitting to the plaintiffs Atlanta exchange therefor, or by sending the plaintiffs drafts. The plaintiff Stanford testified that early in October, 1915, said cashier called at plaintiffs’ Georgia office and the plaintiff Stanford informed him that he had become a member of the firm of Brooks & Doremus, for whom he had theretofore been working on a salary, and that he was anxious to secure business from good people and that it would be a benefit to the firm and to Stanford if the people in the vicinity of the defendant’s bank knew that the firm carried a balance with the defendant, and said that the plaintiffs would be glad to leave on deposit any margins deposited to their credit in the bank, and that when any of their customers closed out for profit any open account they might have with the plaintiffs he would wire the bank to pay without requiring the customers to wait for checks, and that the plaintiffs had sufficient capital to conduct their business and that it would not be necessary for them immediately to draw out such funds so deposited with the [544]*544defendant by customers, and he requested the cashier to speak a good word for the plaintiffs through his bank and to notify the plaintiffs when margins were deposited, and that shortly thereafter he wrote to the cashier to that effect. The letter was dated October 11, 1915, and in it he expressed himself as being sure that there would be a bull market in cotton and an opportunity for traders to make profits and stated that he wanted good people, not welchers.” Thereafter and on October 15, 1915, the plaintiffs received a telegram at Atlanta from the defendant’s cashier stating that the plaintiffs had four items of credit, consisting of two deposits made by H. M. Lloyd of the aggregate of $500, one by W. P. Hardman of $200, and one by J. W. Morgan of $300, and that the cashier would call at the plaintiffs’ Atlanta office the following Monday; and on the same day they received a telegram from the defendant that H. M. Lloyd had deposited $200 to their credit, and on the next day received a telegram from the cashier to buy 100 bales of January cotton for the account of J. M. Morgan, stating that the funds had been deposited. On the twenty-first day of October they received a telegram from defendant stating that H. M. Lloyd had deposited $500 to their credit and that W. P. "Hardman had deposited $300 to their credit; and the next day they received telegrams from defendant saying that R. L. Boyd, J. W. Henderson and W. P. Hardman had each deposited $300 to their credit and requesting them to buy 100 bales of January cotton for each. On October twenty-third they received a telegram from the defendant that D. L. Jones had deposited $300 and for them to buy 100 bales of cotton for March delivery; and on the twenty-sixth of October they received a telegram stating that the defendant had credited their account with $850 “ favor H. M. Lloyd.” On October twenty-seventh they received a telegram from defendant that H. M. Lloyd had deposited $900, D. L. Jones $100, W. P. Hardman $200, and R L. Boyd and J. W. Morgan each $100; and on October twenty-eighth they received telegrams from the defendant that D. L. Jones and J. W. Morgan had each deposited $100, and W. P. Hardman $200, and W. E. Lunsford $100, and H. M. Lloyd $800, and W. P. Hardman $200, and W. R Greer $300, and to buy 100 bales [545]*545of January cotton for the account of Greer. On the first of November they received a telegram in the name of the defendant signed by the initials of the cashier, stating that Jones, Greer, Boyd,. Morgan and Lunsford had each deposited $100 to the credit of the plaintiffs, and on the same day a telegram in the name of defendant stating that J. G. Morgan had deposited $300 and asking them to buy 100 bales of cotton for March delivery for his account. On November sixth they received a telegram from the defendant that Jones had deposited $100 to their credit, and on November eighth that W. C. Hitchcock had deposited $200 to their credit and J. W. Henderson $300, W. P. Hardman $300, H. M. Lloyd $500, and J. G. Morgan $200. Stanford testified with respect to the H. M. Lloyd account that it was opened October fifteenth by the cashier telephoning him at Atlanta to buy a cotton contract for the account of Lloyd who he said had deposited $300 to the credit of the plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
192 A.D. 541, 183 N.Y.S. 243, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-peoples-bank-nyappdiv-1920.