Cahan v. Empire Trust Co.

9 F.2d 713, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2368
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 4, 1926
Docket105
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 9 F.2d 713 (Cahan v. Empire Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cahan v. Empire Trust Co., 9 F.2d 713, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2368 (2d Cir. 1926).

Opinion

HOUGH, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above).

We have not summarized all' the "evidence given, but have stated the only facts we deem material; they are also clearly proven.

This material evidence proves that defendant received without comment or question, collected, and credited to Cahan, Jr., and permitted him to use, the proceeds of 21, checks on their face showing that the depositor as a fiduciary — i. e.,- an attorney in fact-had drawn his principal’s money for the purpose of transferring it to his own credit and for his own use in defendant’s bank.

This evidence must of course be measured -by and with the pleadings. The complaint alleges that what Cahan, Jr., did was a “conversion” — i. e., a wrongful misappropriation —of his principal’s money, and further that what defendant did aided the attorney’s fraud and amounted to participation' therein. The asserted legal analogy is that both the actual doer of wrong and his accessory therein are both liable, and it is not necessary that both should profit by the wrong. Longfellow v. Lewis, 2 Hask. 256, Fed. Cas. No. 8,487.

Admittedly defendant knew nothing of what its depositor, Cahan, Jr., was doing, except as information was given by the checks he offered for deposit; wherefore the record presents this bald legal question: Is an agent’s bank of deposit put on notice by, and *715 does it take at its peril, if it receives without investigation, a check drawn by the agent on his principal’s funds to his own order and tendered for the credit of his private account ?

This question has been thoroughly apprehended by counsel, yet in treating it we cannot but think that they have juggled somewhat with the word “authority,” as modified by the adjectives “actual” and “apparent.” Definition is always dangerous, for by derivation it pretends to speak the last word, to he final, which is usually impossible. For the purposes of this ease, however, “actual” authority may safely be taken to mean what sundry Civil Codes (notably that of California) say it means, viz. the power which “a principal intentionally confers upon the agent, or intentionally or by want of ordinary care allows the agent to believe himself to possess.”

As thus described, Cahan, Jr., could never have believed that he had “actual” authority to use his father’s money for his own purposes, while his apparent authority is not expanded by any evidence before us. He was apparently, no more than he was actually, one who by written power was authorized to deal with the deposits in the drawee hanks for his principal’s uses and purposes. But he had both actual and apparent authority to draw the 21 checks, and the misappropriation of which he was undoubtedly guilty lay, not in the drawing of the checks, but in what he did with them.

In considering the mass of case law discussed, we shall, so far as possible, avoid decisions dealing with defalcations by executors and trustees who had “title” to the funds they misapplied; we shall regard primarily eases arising out of acts by agents like Cahan, Jr., or officers of corporations, both of whom act by procuration and have no title to the funds with which they deal. We do not assert that the legal principles involved in these two classes of wrongdoing are basically different; we hut seek to avoid unnecessary prolixity.

We likewise lay aside the class of cases of whieh Ward v. City Trust Co., 192 N. Y. 61, 84 N. E. 585, is an example, wherein a'defendant received from an agent a cheek of or belonging to his principal in payment of the agent’s indebtedness to the defendant. Again we do not deny that the principles involved in such eases are in some ways analogous to the case in hand, hut the facts at bar do not render such decisions especially apt, and the field of citation must be kept as small as possible.

Remembering, now, that the trial court directed a verdict, our question may be thus restated: Did the act of defendant, in collecting for the personal account of its depositor cheeks drawn by that depositor as agent of another against his principal’s funds, constitute as matter of lav.) an assistance to the depositor in an unlawful appropriation of that principal’s funds? The holding below substantially asserts that the evidence was such that the law could only be satisfied by a direction, and that the misappropriation was complete when the money was collected and deposited to Cahan, Jr.’s, credit.

Technical or formal criticism can he made of these holdings. It may he urged that, since admittedly there was nothing per se wrong in drawing checks to Cahan, Jr.’s, order, it is illogical to find a tort in carrying out the order contained in the lawfully drawn check; and it is also a rather attractive criticism to say that, if an agent has his principal’s money either in his pocket or in Ms own bank account, and applies it in cash or by his own cheek to his principal’s business, there is no wrong, and therefore no actionable tort; for there is no such thing as a contingent wrong. The formal answer may be that injuria is complete when the agent puts his principal’s money where his principal did not intend it to be, or wish his agent to put it, hut damnum did not arise until actual wrongful expenditure.

Forms and formality are important. The difficulties of modern courts are largely due to modern ignorance of form; hut form cannot he made as important as substantive law, and the underlying question here is whether there is or is not the judge-made business safeguard against dishonesty asserted by this court in Havana, etc., v. Central, etc., 204 F. 546, 548, 123 C. C. A. 72, 74 (L. R. A. 1915B, 715), to be substantially as follows: If an agent’s bank receives for deposit to the personal credit of the agent cheeks drawn by the agent to his own order on the principal’s funds, that hank is by the checks themselves charged with notice that the agent is wrongfully applying the principal’s money to Ms own use, and if said bank fails to make inquiry it is liable to the principal for an on-suing fraudulent appropriation to his own use by the agent.

We took this rule in substance from Havana, etc., v. Knickerbocker, 135 App. Div. 313, 119 N. Y. S. 1035, and approved it, although the judgment of the Appellate Division had already been reversed in 198 N. Y. 422, 92 N. E. 12, L. R. A. 1915B, 720. Since *716 we perceive no legal difference between the position of the fiscal officer qf a corporation •who draws against corporate funds checks to his own order, and puts them to the credit of his private account, and that of Cahan, Jr., in this ease, we shall assume that the Havana litigation in the state court was exactly like the present cause, and the Havana Case in this court was in legal substance an action by Cahan, Sr.', against his own (the drawee) banks.

When, in 1909, the Appellate Division decided the Havana. Case, the dissenters, per Scott, J., said that the judgment seemed to them “to extend the responsibility of pelsons dealing with trustees, not only beyond anything that has yet been judicially decided, but also . beyond practicable limits.” Whether there was such complete paucity of decision will be considered later.

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9 F.2d 713, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cahan-v-empire-trust-co-ca2-1926.