Central Trust & Savings Co. v. Waterbury Co.

203 A.D. 602, 197 N.Y.S. 586, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7256
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 203 A.D. 602 (Central Trust & Savings Co. v. Waterbury Co.) 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
Central Trust & Savings Co. v. Waterbury Co., 203 A.D. 602, 197 N.Y.S. 586, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7256 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinions

Smith, J.:

The plaintiff loaned to the defendant certain moneys, part of which only have been repaid. This loan was made through one Dockendorff without personal negotiation with the defendant, and Dockendorff was paid the full amount of the loan. The sole question here for determination is whether Dockendorff was the agent of the plaintiff to receive those moneys. If so, the plaintiff has been paid in full and the judgment is right.

This determination rests upon many facts somewhat complicated. The defendant was a mercantile corporation. In its business it needed to borrow large amounts of money. One Dockendorff undertook to borrow this money on its behalf through a system which he had inaugurated and under which he was working with various other mercantile corporations desiring to borrow money for the purposes of their transactions. In 1914 Dockendorff went into bankruptcy. This system of Dockendorff’s was an elaborate system by which contracts were made between the mercantile company and Dockendorff, under which Dockendorff did procure credit or loans from various financial institutions under agreement made between him and those institutions, so that under the contract in the case at bar it is contended by the plaintiff that Dockendorff was merely a loan broker, and that the defendant was at all times liable to the plaintiff for the repayment of moneys loaned to the defendant, and that the payment of those moneys by the defendant to Dockendorff, where consented to by the plaintiff, did not constitute Dockendorff the agent of the plaintiff to receive such payment as its agent.

On December 9, 1907, the agreement between the defendant and Dockendorff was signed. In this instrument the defendant is referred to as the party of the first part, and Dockendorff the party of the second part. It provides that the defendant shall assign and deliver to Dockendorff all accounts receivable for sales of merchandise with certain exceptions, and further provides that Dockendorff shall use his best efforts to procure loans [604]*604for the defendant on the security of the said accounts. Dockendorff undertook to use his best efforts to procure loans and advances for the defendant on its accounts receivable from" financial institutions or persons to whom he should reassign said accounts receivable. It was therein provided that the proceeds of the loans procured- by Dockendorff shall, while in his possession, be held by him in trust, first to be applied to the payment of interest on such loans, and second, to the payment of any accounts receivable rejected by the lender, after having been assigned to such lender as collateral security, and third, to the payment of any money which may become due any lender under the terms of this agreement. The defendant was to execute a promissory note which was to contain such conditions and agreements as the lender might require, and the lender might require further papers. Dockendorff was to be paid a commission on his account. Thereafter Dockendorff entered into a contract with the plaintiff and delivered to the plaintiff the $50,000 note of the defendant. The note contained a direct promise to pay to the plaintiff and recited: “ This note is given in pursuance of a certain agreement made between Waterbury Company and John E. Dockendorff, dated December 9, 1907, certified copy of which is furnished Central Trust & Savings Company, and with an agreement between the said John E. Dockendorff and Central Trust & Savings Company dated April —, 1908, and is to be interpreted in harmony with said agreements.”

The agreement between Dockendorff and the plaintiff was made on the 20th day of April, 1908. That agreement in part recited: Central Trust & Savings Company agrees to make loans and advances to said Waterbury Company from time to time until further notice, taking as security therefor the promissory note of said company payable on demand, to be secured by approved accounts receivable of said company assigned to it by said John E. Dockendorff as contemplated in the agreement above recited.”

By paragraph 4 it is recited that Dockendorff will give to the Central Trust and Savings Company any information or knowledge which he may receive affecting the solvency or the credit of said Waterbury Company, or relating to the financial status of, or to any suit or proceeding against, any of the debtors under the accounts receivable assigned to said company. The note of April 16, 1908, for $50,000 was on April 2, 1909, returned to Dockendorff by the bank after the receipt of another note for $75,000 executed by the defendant. This second note was executed to Dockendorff himself and was by him assigned to the plaintiff. The referee has found that the defendant had no notice of the assignment to the plaintiff. This seems to me immaterial, because the note was [605]*605clearly executed to be assigned to some person who should advance money, and any party which advanced moneys and received the note was entitled to all the benefits therefrom. Moreover, from the transactions thereafter had between the plaintiff, Dockendorff and the defendant, it appears to me demonstrable that the defendant had full knowledge that the plaintiff held this note. By the contract between the defendant and Dockendorff, which is referred to and made a part of the contract between Dockendorff and the plaintiff, it was provided that any moneys, notes or other securities which should be received by the defendant from its customers should be transferred to Dockendorff. On September 1, 1911, defendant and Dockendorff entered into a new agreement. This new agreement was in most respects similar to the prior agreement and did not change the actual methods of doing business. It may be presumed from its reading that the phraseology of the agreement of 1907 was changed for the purpose of giving Dockendorff a standing as a creditor in case of the possible bankruptcy of the borrower. The form of the new agreement was substantially identical with that of the agreement in the case of Presser v. Central Trust & Savings Co. (189 App. Div. 721; affd., 232 N. Y. 573). There is no evidence and no finding that the plaintiff had notice of the cancellation of the agreement of 1907 and the éxecution of the agreement of 1911.

The transactions under the Dockendorff arrangement between the plaintiff and the defendant through Dockendorff began after April 16, 1908. The method of procedure was substantially as follows: The Waterbury Company would send to Dockendorff so-called certificates of indebtedness, which were in fact assignments of invoices, and upon the reverse side of the certificates were certain representations, and among them, that the moneys received upon the said invoices by the defendant should be immediately transferred to Dockendorff. These invoices were according to the agreement transferred by Dockendorff to the plaintiff. The certificates contained this provision: “ The undersigned, knowing that this account is to be reassigned by John E. Dockendorff to a financial institution or person and is to be given to said financial institution or person as collateral security for a loan to be made to the undersigned, for the express purpose of inducing said institution or person to which it may be assigned by John E. Dockendorff to part with its money and to make the said loan to the undersigned, does hereby make the following representations to both John E. Dockendorff and the said financial institution or person.”

In the agreement between Dockendorff and the plaintiff, Dockendorff agrees that he will make payments from the account in the [606]

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Related

Ruffer v. Waterbury Co.
203 A.D. 611 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
203 A.D. 602, 197 N.Y.S. 586, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-trust-savings-co-v-waterbury-co-nyappdiv-1922.