Cohen v. Manufacturers Safe Deposit Co.

78 N.E.2d 604, 297 N.Y. 266
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 19, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 78 N.E.2d 604 (Cohen v. Manufacturers Safe Deposit Co.) 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
Cohen v. Manufacturers Safe Deposit Co., 78 N.E.2d 604, 297 N.Y. 266 (N.Y. 1948).

Opinions

Loughran, Ch. J.

In this controversy, which was submitted to the Appellate Division upon an agreed statement of facts, pursuant to sections 546-548 of the Civil Practice Act, the court directed judgment for the defendant and gave the plaintiff leave to bring the case here.

The agreed facts are stated in the following terms: The defendant maintained and operated in the city of New York a safe deposit vault equipped with metal boxes and with small booths; each booth was furnished with a desk or counter and a chair; access to the vault was controlled and limited to employees of the defendant and to lessees of the safe deposit boxes; upon the floor near the desk in one of the booths the intestate of the plaintiff — a lessee of one of the boxes — came upon a package containing United States currency; neither party has any proof as to how that package found its way to the floor of the booth.

The question in difference is stated by the parties in these words: “Plaintiff claims and demands that upon the foregoing facts judgment should be rendered decreeing that plaintiff is entitled to possession of the package containing the currency as against defendant on the ground that plaintiff [through his intestate] is the finder of the lost property which defendant denies, contending that said package was not lost and that it was always in the custody of defendant as agent of the true owner thereof.’*

*269 The first thing to be noticed is the scope of the present proceeding. Such a submission of controversy calls upon the courts merely to define -the effect of the agreed facts as matter of law and excludes power to find any additional fact — even if the submitted facts logically and reasonably admit of further important inferences which a trier of the fact might very well draw. (See Feist v. Fifth Avenue Bank, 280 N. Y. 189; Manhattan Storage & Warehouse Co. v. Movers Assn., 289 N. Y. 82, 86.)

The statement of agreed facts is silent in respect of the functions of the defendant as a safe deposit company. Even so, we feel safe enough in declaring the company to be in some degree a bailee of property deposited in its rented boxes. (See Banking Law, § 317, subds. 1, 2, and § 331, subd. 4; Roberts v. Stuyvesant Safe Deposit Co., 123 N. Y. 57; Carples v. Cumberland Coal & Iron Co., 240 N. Y. 187.) The company, in consequence, would possibly have the sounder claim upon custody of the currency in question, if a customer had dropped it upon the floor of the booth,— at least if the customer had first removed the currency from his safe deposit box. But that hypothesis has no warrant in the submission. Indeed, the statement of agreed facts proclaims a complete lack of proof as to where the currency came from and it may conceivably have been the property of a stranger who entered the vault under court order (see Tax Law, § 228; Mental Hygiene Law, § 51-a).

Again the defendant company would even more surely be in the better position if in fact the currency had not been lost ”, but had merely been mislaid ”, e.g., if the owner had not involuntarily let the package slip to the floor of the booth, but had purposely placed it upon the nearby table and had then forgotten it. (See Foulke v. N. Y. Consolidated R. R. Co., 228 N. Y. 269; Loucks v. Gallogly, 1 Misc. 22.) But that hypothesis, too, has no warrant in the submission.

In granting judgment for the defendant, the Appellate Division said: “ Cases relating to the loss of property in a public place such as a street or roadway or the floor of premises open generally to the public are not here controlling. This package of currency was not found in a public place but in a booth or com *270 partment located within a safe deposit vault, access to which was denied to the public generally and limited to customers of the safe deposit company and its employees. The package remained in the custody of the deposit company as representative or agent of the owner, and such company owed a duty to the true owner and is the lawful custodian of the package for his benefit. ” (271 App. Div. 428, 430.) These words, as we read them, imply acceptance of a positive rule of law to this effect: custody of a lost chattel belongs to the finder when the finding occurs in a place open to the public, whereas if the finding occur in a private place, the owner of that place and not the finder is entitled to such custody.

To what extent and on what legal theory such a distinction may be supportable is a question that has provoked a large variety of opinion and the pertinent case law appears to be equally incbnclusive (cf. Bridges v. Hawkesworth, 21 L. J. [Q. B.] 75 [1851]; South Staffordshire Water Co. v. Sharman, [1896] 2 Q. B. 44, 47; Hannah v. Peel, [1945] 1 K. B. 509; Holmes, The Common Law, p. 222; Pollock and Wright, Possession in the Common Law, pp. 39-41; Salmond on Jurisprudence [9th ed.], pp. 382-384; Gfoodhart, Three Cases on Possession, 3 Cambridge L. J. 195; Riesman, Possession and the Law of Finders, 52 Harv. L. Rev. 1105; 1 Halsbury’s Laws of England [2d ed.], pp. 731-733). But we do not reach that dispute in this proceeding. Although access to the safe deposit vault of the defendant company was limited to its customers and employees, yet that agreed fact does not without, more conclusively establish the character of the vault as being a private rather than a public or quasi-public place. On the contrary, admission to many places of public or quasi-public resort or accommodation is similarly restricted, as everybody knows. (Cf. Aaron v. Ward, 203 N. Y. 351, 356-357.) Moreover, any difference between the premises of the average shopkeeper (cf. Bridges v. Hawkesworth, supra), and other commercial establishments, based on whether service is held out to a larger or smaller group of customers, would seem to be one of degree only, which would ordinarily give rise to a question of fact, and nothing in the statement of agreed facts tells us how many people the defendant company had for its patrons. The extent of actual control *271 exercised over particular commercial premises by the occupier may possibly be a sounder test of his right to custody of a chattel found therein by an invitee (see Pollock and Wright, op. cit. supra, at pp. 39-41). But that test likewise cannot here be applied. Indeed, nowhere in the statement of agreed facts is it said that the defendant company ever supervised the presence of any persons within its safe deposit vault or made any record of their entrances and their exits. (Cf. Silcott v. Louisville Trust Co., 205 Ky. 234, 235-236.) Accordingly we can here neither affirm nor deny as matter of law the validity of the principle enunciated by the Appellate Division.

Nor has any.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.E.2d 604, 297 N.Y. 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohen-v-manufacturers-safe-deposit-co-ny-1948.