Coates v. Donnell

16 Jones & S. 46
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedDecember 12, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Jones & S. 46 (Coates v. Donnell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coates v. Donnell, 16 Jones & S. 46 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1881).

Opinion

Henry E. Howland

Referee.—The fact that Mas tin, the cashier, made the agreement testified to by the defendant is not disputed. This was, in effect, that it they would accept the drafts the bank would keep a balance with them large enough to protect them, on which they should have a lien, and in case the bank got into trouble they should be notified and be at liberty to charge up the acceptances against the balance in their hands.

The plaintiff’s counsel have argued with great earnestness that in making such an agreement the cashier exceeded his powers, and that such an agreement is in violation of the provisions of the Revised [52]*52Statutes, prohibiting any transfer by any incorporated company in contemplation of insolvency (1 R. S. 608, § 4).

At the time this agreement was made, the bank was not supposed to be insolvent—the claims upon it had all been paid as they were presented, and its officers were making efforts to keep its credit unimpaired, and to meet all future calls upon it. The property pledged by the cashier consisted in part of the very funds realized from the defendants’ acceptances under the agreement. The agreement was not a transfer in contemplation of insolvencj?-, but was rather an agreement to raise money to prevent insolvency.

If the cashier had power to borrow the money,' I am at a loss to see how the bank or its representatives can object to his making a valid agreement to repay it or to secure its repayment. The assignee stands in no better position than the bank in that respect (Griffin v. Marquant, 17 N. Y. 28; Schieffelin v. Hawkins, 14 Abb. Pr. 116 ; Green v. Warwick, 64 N. Y. 220 ; Crane v. Turner, 67 Id. 437; Cutts v. Guild, 57 Id. 232.

If the cashier came clothed with authority to raise money, and the bank accepted the money, they cannot have the benefit of it and repudiate the other part of the contract, as to the mode of its payment, if the contract is not forbidden by law (31 N. Y. 611; 32 Id. 105 ; 19 Id. 156).

A cashier must act within his authority, but when his bank receives and uses money borrowed by him in pursuance of an agreement, they- imply that he had authority to make the agreement, and must abide by it, unless its provisions are repugnant to law.

There is no doubt that an officer of a moneyed corporation cannot transfer property of the corporation in contemplation of insolvency; but this is not that case. A part of the funds of the bank were raised by virtue of the very agreement which plaintiff’s counsel [53]*53claim was a fraudulent transfer. Shall the plaintiff s assignee have the benefit of funds so .raised, and repudiate the rest of the transaction % The law cannot surely sanction such a proceeding. The bank and its assignee are estopped from setting up such a defense.

The fact that the lien was upon a shifting balance does not render it invalid.

By agreement, a lien may be given on any property not in existence or owned by a person at the time of the agreement, but to take effect when the property is obtained or came into existence (Hale v. Omaha Nat’l Bank, 49 N. Y. 626; McCafferty v. Woodin, 65 Id. 459, reversing S. C., 62 Barb. 316, cited by plaintiff’s counsel; Wisner v. Ocumpaugh, 71 N. Y. 113).

The defendants did not, by entering into this agreement, become parties to a fraudulent transaction. They held out no representations to the holder of drafts drawn against any funds in their hands. They owed them no duty until they accepted drafts. The holders of the drafts purchased solely on the credit of the Mastín Bank, not on any representations of the defendants that the bank had funds in their hands. They had signed the acceptances only on condition that the bank would give them just that security, and it would have been fraud on the part of the bank if it had not done so.

It is urged, on the part of the plaintiffs, with much earnestness, that the defendants cannot invoke the principle of equitable set-off in this case, because, as it is asserted, their obligation or debt had not matured at the time of the assignment to the plaintiff, whereas the debt was due from the defendant to plaintiff’s assignor.

The cases have made this distinction, that where there are cross-demands between a solvent and an insolvent person, the party who is solvent can, in equity, set off his debts agaiiast the others, if his cross [54]*54demand against the insolvent is due, notwithstanding the claim against the insolvent debtor is not due, for the reason that he has a right to waive a credit which is solely for the benefit of the other party ; but if the cross-demand against the insolvent is not dne, no set-off will be ordered in equity, because the insolvent is entitled to the full period of credit, and until he is bound to pay the debt a debt due him cannot be set off against it. Whatever may be the effect of his insolvency, the court cannot change the contract of the parties.

And the cases cited where this doctrine is laid down are mainly cases where the principle has been invoked before both debts became due, in order to prevent the insolvent from parting with the evidence of debt of the solvent debtor.

It will be seen in all those cases that it is not because the court has not the right of equitable power to do it, but because the peculiar facts of each case show that it would be contrary to equity to do so. In a case where the debt from the solvent party is due, and the debt from the insolvent party is not due, something more than the mere insolvency of the one party is required. In the language of Judge Hogeboom, (36 Barb. 230), " There must, in such a case, be some special circumstances—an agreement between the parties, expressed or implied, or a course of dealing between the parties—leading clearly to the inference that such was their intention or expectation, or some other controlling equities, to justify such a course.”

Latterly, the courts do not require so much. Within the spirit and the letter of the later decisions in the court of appeals, no distinction is made between the cases where the debt from the insolvent is not due, and the cases where the debt from the solvent party is not due. It is sufficient that justice and equity require the set-off. • In the language of Judge Allen, in Smith v. [55]*55Felton (43 N. Y. 423): “ It is enough, that justice and equity demand that the debts should be set off against each other, rather than that the defendants should be made to pay the note and left to rely upon the estate of an insolvent debtor for the payment of the debt due them” (see also 74 N. Y. 473, 474 ; 59 Id. 537, 538).

In all of the cases presenting this question, where the set-off has been denied, the court in each case has simply passed upon the case before it, as presented by the facts and pleadings in that case, and so left it.

In Seaman v. Van Rensselaer (10 Barb. 83) Judge Hand says: “ In a case of natural equity the court will allow an equitable set-off when justice cannot otherwise be obtained,” citing many authorities ; and then adds : The case of Bradley v. Angel (3 N. Y. 475) is not opposed to this rule, but rests upon a special contract.”

'The case of Myers v. Davis (22 N. 7.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Jones & S. 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coates-v-donnell-nysuperctnyc-1881.