Carson v. Federal Reserve Bank

226 A.D. 225, 235 N.Y.S. 197, 1929 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8690
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 8, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 226 A.D. 225 (Carson v. Federal Reserve 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
Carson v. Federal Reserve Bank, 226 A.D. 225, 235 N.Y.S. 197, 1929 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8690 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Crouch, J.

The action is by trustees in bankruptcy to recover $10,363.93 paid by the bankrupt to defendant upon the ground that such payment constituted a voidable preference under the Bankruptcy Act. The defendant is the Federal Reserve Bank in the Second Federal Reserve District. Its main office is in New York city, and it has a branch at Buffalo. The bankrupt, Zartman & Co., was a partnership doing business as private bankers in Waterloo, Seneca county, N. Y.

[227]*227The facts out of which the controversy arises may be broadly stated as follows. On May 16 and 17, 1927, thirty-seven of defendant’s member banks sent to defendant one- hundred and fifty-seven checks drawn on the Zartman bank by various depositors therein to the order of various payees. Eighty-eight of those checks were produced on the trial. Forty of them were indorsed “ Pay to the order of Federal Reserve Bank of New York; ” forty of them were indorsed Pay to the order of any bank, banker or trust company; ” six were indorsed “ Pay to the order of any bank or banker; ” two were indorsed Pay to the order of any Federal Reserve Bank.” The evidence does not disclose the indorsement on the remaining "checks. When sending these checks to defendant, each of the thirty-seven member banks accompanied its shipment with a letter of remittance commonly referred to as a cash letter. These letters disclose a diversity in form and contents. Ten of them say in substance: “ We inclose for credit.” Seventeen of them say: “ for collection,” “ collection and credit,” collection and return ” “ collection and remittance.” The others may be said to be ambiguous, though most of them used the word “ collection ” in one form or another. The aggregate amount of the checks was $15,271.56.

On May 17 and 18, 1927, the defendant sent the 157 checks to the First National Bank of Waterloo, its correspondent in that village, with instructions to collect from the Zartman bank and remit. On May eighteenth and nineteenth the correspondent bank presented the checks to Zartman & Co. for payment. Thereupon Zartman & Co. drew two drafts on the American Exchange-Irving Trust Company of New York city, to the order of defendant, one for $8,699.25, covering the checks sent on May seventeenth, and the other for $6,572.27, covering the checks sent on May eighteenth. In due course the two drafts were presented for payment on May twentieth, through the New York Clearing House. Payment was refused by the drawee on the ground that the drafts were drawn against uncollected funds. The drafts were again presented for payment on May twenty-first and again payment was refused on the same ground. On the night of May twenty-second, which was Sunday, I. Ward Waters, manager of defendant’s check department, went to Waterloo, where he arrived on the morning of May twenty-third. About ten o’clock that morning Waters had a talk with Zartman, and requested either that the drafts be paid in cash or that the checks for which the drafts had been given should be returned. Zartman said in substance that he would take care of .the matter if he were given time. . Accordingly at two o’clock that afternoon Zartman again saw Waters, [228]*228and delivered to Waters $10,363.93 in cash, and 65 checks drawn on Zartman & Co. by the Metcalf Quality Cash Market, Inc., aggregating $4,907.63, which Zartman said he refused to pay. The total amount of the cash and the checks equaled the total of the 157 checks. Zartman & Co. did not open its doors for business on May twenty-fourth. On June twenty-seventh an involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against the firm and its individual partners, and on September thirteenth they were adjudged bankrupts. On October seventh plaintiffs were appointed trustees in bankruptcy.

On May 19 and 20, 1927, the several items contained in the thirty-seven cash letters consisting of the 157 checks from its member banks were credited on the defendant’s books to said member banks. Upon receipt of the notice by defendant that the two drafts had been dishonored, these items were charged back to those banks, and their accounts with defendant were debited with the respective amounts of such items. Except for two small items amounting to $14.97, such charging back or debiting was done on May twenty-first, twenty-second and twenty-third. On May 31, 1927, after defendant had received from Zartman the sum of $10,363.93 in cash, the defendant again credited said member banks with the respective amounts to which they were entitled by virtue of such payment. Thereafter, through withdrawals from those accounts by the several member banks, actual payment to them was made by the defendant.

The evidence further shows that the Federal Reserve Board, pursuant to powers conferred upon it by the Federal Reserve Act, had made and published certain rules and regulations referred to as regulation J, series of 1924, governing the matter of check clearing and collection between each Federal Reserve bank and its member and non-member clearing banks, which were in force and effect at the time of the transactions herein involved. Among other things, regulation J provided that a Federal Reserve bank would act only as agent of the bank from which it should receive checks; that for all checks received, the sending bank would be given immediate credit or deferred credit in accordance with a certain formulated time schedule; that the Federal Reserve banks were authorized in the collection of checks, either directly or through an agent, to accept either cash or bank drafts in payment of or in remittance for such checks without any liability for resulting loss; that they were authorized to charge back to the forwarding bank the amount of any check for which payment in actually and finally collected funds was not received; that the authority of the reserve banks to handle such checks was subject to the specified [229]*229conditions; that each member and non-member clearing bank sending checks for deposit or collection should, by such action, be deemed to have authorized the reserve bank to handle them according to such conditions; and finally, that the reserve banks themselves were authorized to promulgate rules and regulations which should be binding upon all member and non-member clearing banks sending checks to such reserve bank.

Under the authority of the last-mentioned provision the defendant had made certain rules and regulations, embraced in what is known •here as circular No. 728, and that circular had been sent to all of the thirty-seven member banks above mentioned. Among other provisions therein was one to the effect that credit for checks sent in would be given in the member banks’ deferred account immediately upon receipt; but that credit would be given in the members’ reserve account only “ when the appropriate time indicated on the current time schedule has elapsed.” But “ credit and availability are in all instances subject to our actual receipt of payment.” The sending bank was required to indorse all checks without restriction to the order of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York or to the order of any bank, banker or trust company. The time schedule accompanying the circular was based upon the average mailing time required for items to reach the paying bank, plus the time required for the paying bank to remit to the defendant. Certain paper is mentioned as entitled to immediate credit, other paper to credit one, two, three, four, five or eight days after receipt, according to the geographical location of the drawee bank.

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Bluebook (online)
226 A.D. 225, 235 N.Y.S. 197, 1929 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carson-v-federal-reserve-bank-nyappdiv-1929.