Chesterman v. . Eyland

81 N.Y. 398, 8 Abb. N. Cas. 92, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 254
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 81 N.Y. 398 (Chesterman v. . Eyland) 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
Chesterman v. . Eyland, 81 N.Y. 398, 8 Abb. N. Cas. 92, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 254 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Finch, J.

In this action, which was brought for the partition of real estate,- a sale was had pursuant to the judgment rendered, and the share of the proceeds belonging to Mary C. Timpson and others, amounting in the aggregate to $13,475.23, was brought into court by reason of their infancy and paid over to George W. Lane, as chamberlain of the city of Hew' York, in trust for the infants. Ho order of the court directing its investment appears to have been made in the action. The money was paid to the chamberlain, on December 15, 1873, and was immediately deposited by him to the credit of his account in the Fulton Bank. It apparently remained there on deposit for a few days when it was invested in a manner *401 evidently common in the chamberlain’s office, but which is criticised by the parties interested in the fund. The chamberlain held a mortgage, made by one Edward Jones, in 1867, which covered certain vacant lots in the city of New York, and having been originally given for $15,000, had been reduced to $10,000, and a portion of the lots released. On the 19th of March, 1874, the chamberlain was ordered to pay over certain moneys, in the suit of Robins v. Robins, to the persons entitled, and desiring to keep this Jones mortgage, and certain others in which those moneys had been invested, he used the moneys deposited in this case to make the payments required, crediting the suit now before us with an equivalent interest in the Jones mortgage, and practically transferring to himself, in trust,'for the infants in this case, an interest in such mortgage, to the amount of $4,101.25. The balance of the fund was thereupon deposited in the trust company where it remained until the following May, when it was invested in a similar manner, and by the same process, in certain other mortgages held by the chamberlain. At the time of this investment in the Jones mortgage, taxes upon the mortgaged property to the amount of something over $700 were in arrears, but the fact was unknown to the chamberlain, and when afterward discovered the amount necessary to pay them was called for and they were paid in full. There is no reason to doubt the sufficiency of the Jones mortgage as a security for the sum unpaid upon it at the time of this transaction. The interest was promptly paid, the obligor in the bond was responsible, and in February, 1875, this mortgage, with others, was delivered over by Mr. Lane, at the close of his term of office, to J. Nelson Tappan, the present city chamberlain. While it remained in his hands, a severe depreciation in the values of real estate ensued, and in 1876 an assessment of more than $8,000 was imposed upon the property, with the usual ruinous effect to the parties interested. The mortgagor abandoned the payment of interest and the present chamberlain, acting on his own impression of duty, foreclosed the mortgage, bid the property in for $8,000, and now holds it at the risk and for *402 the benefit of those whose funds went into the investment. The taxes remain unpaid, and the result is, substantially, a total loss of a fund which the courts took from the infants for the purpose of its safety and preservation. Mary C. Timpson, becoming of age, called for her money, and being unable to obtain it, moved at Special Term for an order requiring the late and the present chamberlain, to pay it over to her. That motion was denied, the denial affirmed at the General Term, and an appeal taken to this court.

The right to compel Lane or Tappau to pay this money is founded upon allegations that their treatment of the fund committed to their care was unauthorized by law and in violation of their duty. To establish this it is strenuously argued that in the absence of an explicit order of the court to invest the fund in bond and mortgage they had no right to do so, and should have deposited the money in the authorized trust companies. In cases of partition it is provided (3 R. S. [6th ed.] 504, §§ 18, 82, 84), that where any of the known parties are infants the court may, in its discretion, direct the share of such infant to be paid over to the general guardian, or to be invested in permanent securities at interest, in the name and for the benefit of such infant; that when the security is directed to be taken otherwise than in the name of a known owner it shall be taken in the name of the clerk and his successors in office; and that the investments when made shall be in the public stocks of the State or the United States, or in bond and mortgage upon unincumbered ieal estate of at least double the amount of the loan in valuer Such investment being once made, the security is not to be discharged, transferred or impaired, without the order of the cotirt entered in its minutes.

These provisions evidently contemplate a case where the court, by an order in the action, directs an investment. They perhaps assume that such direction will be given, but do not purport to furnish a rule to control the action of the officer in the absence of a special direction by the court. This difficulty was met and remedied by rule 180 of the Court of Chancery, that where no direction for the investment of funds paid into *403 court is contained in the decree, and the money is not applied, for within six months thereafter, it shall he the duty of the register, assistant register or clerk with whom the same is deposited, and without any special order for that purpose, to cause it to be invested in public stocks or other permanent securities, and a similar duty was imposed as to accumulations of income. Thus both cases were provided for. Where special direction in the suit itself was given, that order furnished the guide. Where such direction was omitted, the chancery rule required the officer to invest according to its terms. That rule has survived the changes of recent legislation, and is still operative. When the Court of Chancery was abolished, and its jurisdiction and duties imposed upon the Supreme Court the Judiciary Act of 1847, which directed the change (Laws of 1847, chap. 280, § 71), and vested the securities brought into the Court of Chancery in the clerk of the Court of Appeals, was careful to preserve the rules of the older tribunal respecting the deposit and investment of such funds, subject only to the rules and regulations that might thereafter be prescribed by the Supreme Court. The act of 1848 (chap. 277) worked no other change than to substitute the county treasurers, and in the city of Hew York, the chamberlain, in the place of the clerk of the Court of Appeals as custodians of this class of trust funds. It is claimed, however, that the rules of the Supreme Court have abrogated rule 180, and prescribed for the county treasurers a different duty. (Rule 83 of 1849, rule 79 of 1852, rule 81 of 1858, rule 82 of 1871, rule 82 of 1874.) Through all the changes of the rule referred to it steadily did but one thing. It prescribed the place of deposit of moneys that were to be deposited, and did no more than that. It did not forbid investments in stocks, and bonds and mortgages, either directly or by implication. Its entire operation is plainly limited to uninvested funds, while they remain uninvested. We conclude, therefore, that rule 180 is yet in force, and furnishes the standard by which to test the action of the chamberlain, modified only by the rule of the Supreme Court as to the place of deposit. The chamberlain deposited the moneys resulting from the sale in this action in *404

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.Y. 398, 8 Abb. N. Cas. 92, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesterman-v-eyland-ny-1880.