Commercial Bank of Rochester v. MacDougall & Southwick Co.

8 A.D. 1, 40 N.Y.S. 189, 74 N.Y. St. Rep. 751

This text of 8 A.D. 1 (Commercial Bank of Rochester v. MacDougall & Southwick 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
Commercial Bank of Rochester v. MacDougall & Southwick Co., 8 A.D. 1, 40 N.Y.S. 189, 74 N.Y. St. Rep. 751 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Green, J.:

Toklas, Singerman & Co., prior to July 15,1891, was a firm doing business in the city of Seattle, Washington. On that day they sold and transferred all their firm property to the defendant, and, as part consideration, the defendant assumed and agreed to pay all the debts and liabilities of the firm, due or to become due. Holland & Co. were creditors of that firm for goods sold and delivered, and received the firm’s promissory note payable to the order of Holland -&■ Co., who, prior to said assignment or transfer, indorsed and deliv[3]*3ered the same to the plaintiff hank for value. At the time of the transfer of the firm property to defendant this note was not due, hut would mature in about eight days. Defendant knew nothing of the giving of this note and was in no way a party to it; but it will be assumed, for the sake of argument, that this is one of those cases coming within the principle of Lawrence v. Fox (20 R. T. 268) and subsequent decisions, and that the plaintiff bank could maintain an action upon the defendant’s agreement to pay the debts of its assignor or vendor.

On- the day prior to the making of defendant’s agreement, Toldas, Singerman & Co., in pursuance of a prior agreement with Holland & Co. to that effect, forwarded by mail another promissory note in renewal of the original one, payable at three months. A day or two subsequent to the execution of defendant’s contract, Holland & Co. took this note to plaintiff hank and transferred it to the bank as collateral for money which the bank advanced upon the faith of it, and as collateral security for a past due indebtedness.

This was a wrongful diversion of the note, but the bank claims that, although the note was for the same amount exactly ($1,970.30), it had no knowledge of the fact that it was given as a renewal note until after it had received it, but supposed and believed that it arose out of a new, independent and distinct transaction.

Defendant was not cognizant of the existence of this note until it became due. Plaintiff claims that it had no knowledge of the fact that the defendant had assumed to pay the debts of the firm of Toldas, Singerman & Co. until after the second note became due, and consequently it parted with nothing on the faith of that agreement. The bank called upon the defendant to pay the second note and we must assume that it founded its demand on the agreement made by defendant with Toldas, Singeiman & Co., otherwise it would bo a most extraordinary circumstance that it should demand payment of a party who was an entire stranger to it. The defendant paid to plaintiff the amount so demanded; the bank concedes that it had no right whatever to make that demand, and that defendant Avas under no obligation at all to answer it — that the money was voluntarily paid.

It is argued that the renewal or second note, although mailed to Holland & Co. before the making of the defendant’s agreement, had [4]*4no legal inception until it was indorsed to the bank subsequent to such agreement; and that, therefore, it was not an existing debt or liability against the firm of Toldas, Singerman & Co. which the defendant could be held bound to pay. Conceding this for argument’s sake, and what does it lead to ? With what purpose did the bank demand and receive the payment ? Did the bank appropriate or apply this money to the purpose for which it was paid ? In so far as the defendant is concerned, these two notes represented but one indebtedness of $1,970.30, which defendant assumed and was bound to pay; but the plaintiff, by retaining the money paid, insists that the defendant must pay double that sum. Not so, says plaintiff’s counsel; we make no such claim; our position is that defendant is legally liable to us only in the sum of $1,970.30, due upon that first note, which it refuses to pay and discharge. But you have that amount of money in your hands belonging to defendant, which you are bound either to return, or to apply to the purpose for which it was paid, to wit, in discharge of defendant’s liability for the indebtedness of said firm. Ton received that money for the same purpose for which it was paid, and if you refuse to so apply it in discharge of defendant’s indebtedness to you, the law will direct its application.

Upon no other ground, than that the second note was an obligation of the firm, for the payment of which defendant was liable, could the plaintiff call upon it for payment; but it is now admitted that defendant was under no legal obligation to pay it, and that the plaintiff had no legal right to demand it, and yet plaintiff did demand and receive the money, and now refuses either to apply it upon the legal claim, or to return it.

If, at the time of receiving the money, the plaintiff had knowledge of the fact that defendant was not legally liable to pay this note, then it practiced a fraud upon the latter; if it did not have such knowledge, then it received it under a mistake of fact, and in either view it has no legal or equitable right to retain this money, unless it consents to apply it to the indebtedness for which defendant is liable. Having retained the money, the law makes the. proper application. It appears here that the defendant paid the note under a mistake of fact, believing that it represented an indebtedness of the firm and without knowledge of the prior note. If it had possessed knowledge of the true facts of the whole transaction, would [5]*5it have paid both notes ? Surely not, and yet that is what plaintiff is here demanding that it should do. Thus, it appears, that according to plaintiff’s admissions and the conceded facts of the case, it is justly indebted to the defendant in the amount of the note upon which recovery is sought. True, this indebtedness is not pleaded as a counterclaim, or by the way of set-off; but it is not necessary in the view of the court that the money constituted a payment, and that is alleged in the answer. How, suppose that defendant had, prior to the institution of this action, brought an action against plaintiff for money had and received, what would have been the answer to that suit in bar of a recovery ? Why, the answer would be not that the money was voluntarily paid upon the note, to which the plaintiff was not a party, and which he was under no obligation to pay, but that the payment was made in discharge of a certain indebtedness of a third party, which the plaintiff had assumed and agreed to pay, and that the defendant held the legal title to the claim, either as indorsee or assignee. That would be the objection which the defendant here would encounter.

If the defendant in that -action should omit to set up such defense, it is clear that the money, having been paid under a mistake of fact, could be recovered. (Kingston Bank v. Eltinge, 40 N. Y. 391; S. C., 66 id. 625 ; Union Nat. Bank v. Sixth Nat. Bank, 43 id. 452.)

It is contended, with all seriousness, that so far as the equities of the case are concerned, they are with the plaintiff, for it acted innocently, and in good faith advanced money on both of the notes, and is not responsible for the fact that the defendant paid the note, for the payment of which it is not liable; that the trouble was all caused by Holland & Co.; that Toldas, Singerman & Co. carelessly put it into the power of Holland & Co. to divert the second note, and defendant voluntarily paid it, as to each of which transactions plaintiff was not negligent, nor did it lose its original right to recover upon defendant’s promise to pay the note in suit.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fairbanks v. . Sargent
9 N.E. 870 (New York Court of Appeals, 1887)
The Kingston Bank v. . Eltinge
40 N.Y. 391 (New York Court of Appeals, 1869)
Huff v. Wagner
63 Barb. 215 (New York Supreme Court, 1872)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 A.D. 1, 40 N.Y.S. 189, 74 N.Y. St. Rep. 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-bank-of-rochester-v-macdougall-southwick-co-nyappdiv-1896.