Corn Exchange Bank v. American Dock & Trust Co.

43 N.E. 915, 149 N.Y. 174, 3 E.H. Smith 174, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 695
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 14, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 43 N.E. 915 (Corn Exchange Bank v. American Dock & Trust 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
Corn Exchange Bank v. American Dock & Trust Co., 43 N.E. 915, 149 N.Y. 174, 3 E.H. Smith 174, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 695 (N.Y. 1896).

Opinion

Yann, J.

For the third time the defendant is before this

court to defend itself from liability on account of the misconduct of its former president, the late M. W. Stone. The actions were all based upon warehouse certificates issued by *178 Stone, as president, to Iris own order, for cotton purporting to have been deposited by him in the storehouses of the defendant.

The plaintiff in the first action sought to make the defendant liable upon a certificate alone, with proof of Stone’s authority to issue such certificates to third persons, but without any evidence of authority in him to issue certificates to himself, and the court held that he had no power to issue certificates in his own favor, even for cotton that he had actually deposited with the defendant. (Bank of New York v. This Defendant, 143 N. Y. 559.)

In the next action, the effort to recover from the defendant was based upon a certificate, supported by evidence, tending to show that the defendant’s directors, knowing, or being presumed to know, that Stone had occasionally issued certificates to himself, acquiesced in that assumption of authority, and the court held that acquiescence, under the circumstances then disclosed by the record, would permit the inference that Stone had implied authority to issue a certificate on his own account for cotton actually deposited by him. Upon this basis it was further held that in issuing the certificate then in question, although for cotton never deposited, Stone was acting within the scope of his apparent authority, so that his representations were binding upon the defendant, which thus became liable to a purchaser for value, even with notice that express authority to certify to himself had not been conferred. (Hanover National Bank v. This Defendant, 148 N. Y. 612.)

The facts of the case now before us are, to a great extent, identical with those in the case last cited, yet it lacks some elements there appearing, and has some features peculiar to itself. While the five certificates, issued by Stone in his own favor in 1881 and 1886, are common to both cases, it does not now appear that all of those certificates were written upon a printed blank by the defendant’s secretary, although the most of them were, nor were the stubs, or Stone’s personal receipts for the certificates, in evidence. The statements of the secretary in response to the inquiries of the assistant cashier of the Hano *179 ver National Bank were not proved upon the trial now under review, but no other important evidence was disclosed by the record in that case that does not substantially appear in the record now presented.

On the other hand, it appears that the plaintiff in this action liad made loans to Stone prior to the ninth of February, 1891, upon certificates issued by him as president, to himself as an individual, as many as fouy or five times. On that day the plaintiff lent him $5,000, taking as security two certificates issued by him in the name of the defendant, to his own order, for one hundred and ninety-four hales of cotton, dated respectively December 22d, 1890, and December 23d, 1891, each written by him on the blank commonly used, and in the usual form, except that the number was not printed in blue figures in the.corner, as it was upon the regular receipts, but was written in that place witli a jien. The proceeds of the loan were placed to his credit, as a depositor in the plaintiff’s bank. These certificates were fraudulently issued by him, as he had at the time no cotton on deposit with the defendant. As the plaintiff made many loans upon warehouse receipts as collateral, it had been its custom for years to cause the property named in the certificate to be examined immediately after the loan was made, and it had assigned to that duty a clerk named Mead, who generally, as well as in this instance, was furnished with, a slip containing the substance of the certificate for the purpose of making the examination. Mr. Mead went with the slip to the warehouses of the defendant and there saw Mr. Jewell, the man in charge, as he had on many occasions before when detailed to examine cotton. He testified, in substance, that Jewell informed him that Stone had the cotton mentioned in the slip then on storage with the defendant. He made no attempt to go into the room where the cotton was stored and actually see it, as his instructions required, but returned to the plaintiff and reported that “ the cotton was there and was now inspected.” Mr. Jewell, in his testimony, admitted that the interview took place, but denied telling Mead that Stone had the cotton on deposit.

*180 The question as to the implied authority of Stone to bind the defendant by issuing the certificates under consideration was not submitted to the jury, but the learned trial judge instructed them as follows, viz.: “ The plaintiff cannot recover upon these certificates, because the certificates were issued by Mr. Stone himself in his own name, and because there was no cotton there as represented in those certificates. But the plaintiff may recover in this action if you shall find, from the evidence in the case, that before it parted with the money that it had loaned to Mr. Stone, the defendant, or its agents, did something that caused it to part with that money. The plaintiff says that sometime after the 9th day of February it sent one of its clerks or employees to the warehouses, and he was there told by an employee of the defendant that Mr. Stone had 192 bales of cotton in that warehouse. That fact is denied by the defendant. Upon that fact depends the right of the plaintiff to recover in this action. I have told you that the plaintiff cannot recover upon the certificates alone. The plaintiff can only recover in this action if you shall find, from the evidence in the case, that Mr. Jewell told Mr. Mead that Mr. Stone had 192 bales of cotton there, and it recovers then because the defendant will be estopped from denying the truth of the statement. So you see that the point to which you should direct your minds in the first instance is, did Mr. Jewell téll Mr. Mead, that Mr. Stone had 192 bales of cotton there ? If he did, the plaintiff may recover. If he did not, the plaintiff cannot recover no matter how much it has lost. I have said nothing about the prior certificates because the view of the law I have taken makes it immaterial.” The trial court was apparently of the opinion that Stone had actual authority to issue certificates to himself for cotton that he ha$ in fact deposited. The deposit thus became in his mind the vital fact, and he charged, in substance, that if Jewell represented that the cotton was on hand the defendant was estopped from denying it, and was, therefore, liable the same as if the cotton had actually been deposited. This was an erroneous theory upon which to- *181 send tlie case to tlie jury, as the right to recover did not depend on the possession of the cotton by the defendant, but on the alleged contract between- Stone and the defendant, of which the certificates were the evidence. The action is for the conversion of cotton claimed to have once belonged to Stone, but he had sold no cotton to the plaintiff. He had simply sold it a certificate which, if valid, entitled the holder thereof to receive from the defendant the cotton described therein.

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

Related

Stanford Seed Co. v. Balfour, Guthrie & Co.
27 Misc. 2d 147 (New York Supreme Court, 1960)
Sparr v. People
219 P.2d 317 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1950)
Venuta v. New York, Westchester & Connecticut Traction Co.
84 N.Y.S. 544 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1903)
Venuta v. New York
87 A.D. 561 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1903)
Gale v. Chase Nat. Bank
104 F. 214 (Second Circuit, 1900)
Corn Exchange Bank v. American Dock & Trust Co.
57 N.E. 477 (New York Court of Appeals, 1900)
Corn Exchange Bank v. American Dock & Trust Co.
14 A.D. 453 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1897)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 N.E. 915, 149 N.Y. 174, 3 E.H. Smith 174, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corn-exchange-bank-v-american-dock-trust-co-ny-1896.