Corn Exchange Bank v. American Dock & Trust Co.

57 N.E. 477, 163 N.Y. 332, 1900 N.Y. LEXIS 1069
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 57 N.E. 477 (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., 57 N.E. 477, 163 N.Y. 332, 1900 N.Y. LEXIS 1069 (N.Y. 1900).

Opinion

Haight, J.

This action was brought to recover the value of a quantity of cotton represented by warehouse receipts issued by the defendant to one Stone and by him transferred *335 to the plaintiff as collateral security for a loan of five thousand dollars. The defense interposed was, in substance, to the effect that the warehouse receipts in question were issued by Stone, as president of the defendant, to himself, and that he did not have in storage with the defendant the cotton called for by the receipts, and that they were consequently false and fictitious. Upon the maturity of the note given to the plaintiff by Stone for the loan of the five thousand dollars the money was not paid, and thereupon the plaintiff demanded of the defendant the cotton called for by the certificates. The defendant refused to deliver for the reason that Stone did not have authority to issue certificates to himself and that he did not have in storage the cotton called for. The question as to whether the defendant is liable under these certificates has already been considered in this court on a former trial in this case (149 N. Y. 174), and also in the cases of Bank of New York v. American Dock & Trust Company (143 N. Y. 559) and Hanover Nat. Bank v. American Dock & Trust Company (148 N. Y. 612). In those eases it has been, in substance, held that the certificates issued by Stone, as president, to himself, on their face gave a purchaser such notice as should put a prudent person upon inquiry in regard to Stone’s authority to issue the certificates, and in order to sustain a recovery the plaintiff must show that implied authority had been conferred upon Stone to issue certificates to himself, and if he was thus authorized and he issued certificates on his personal account for cotton not on deposit, the defendant would be liable to respond to a tona fide holder thereof for value. While Stone had been given general authority to issue warehouse receipts to persons placing merchandise in storage, he had not, by the by-laws, been authorized to issue receipts to himself. It, therefore, became necessary for the plaintiff to establish on the trial that the officers of the defendant knew that Stone had issued certificates to himself, or that he had engaged in so doing for such a length of time that they ought to have known of it, and that they had acquiesced in such acts for such a time as would estop *336 them from denying to purchasers for value that his power to so certify did not in fact exist. The trial was chiefly directed to this issue which has been determined by a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and affirmed by the Appellate Division.

It is now contended, on behalf of the appellant, that the defendant is not liable for the reason that the plaintiff did not part with the money loaned upon these certificates as collateral, relying upon the representations made by Stone at the time of making the loan, but that instead the plaintiff parted with the money upon the representation of its own servant and agent.

It appears that for a number of years the plaintiff’s officers in making loans upon warehouse certificates were accustomed to inspect the goods in the warehouse before paying over the money. This duty devolved upon one Mead, an employee of the bank. Mead was furnished with a description of the cotton called for in the certificates, and he went down to Staten Island, where the warehouses were located, for the purpose of making an inspection of the cotton. On arriving at the warehouse he met a Mr. Jewel, the defendant’s superintendent in charge, and showed him the memorandum of the cotton that he wished to inspect; Jewel replied to him saying, “ well, that cotton is here all right in store, but I cannot show it to you now, because it has an inspection number.” Thereupon Mead returned to the bank and reported that the cotton was in storage, and the money was subsequently paid over by the bank upon checks drawn by Stone. It is not claimed that Stone ever had any authority to issue fraudulent or false certificates to himself. The contention of the plaintiff is that he had implied authority to issue certificates to himself representing goods that he had in storage, and with this authority he was able to deceive the public with his false certificates while acting within the apparent scope of his authority as agent of the company. For this reason the company became bound to protect innocent owners and holders for value. It, therefore, became important for the plaintiff to establish, not only Stone’s authority for issuing certificates *337 to himself, but also that the bank parted with the money in good faith, relying upon the representations made to its officers. We should, therefore, have no doubts about the correctness of the appellant’s claim were it not for the fact that the plaintiffs agent was deceived or misled by the action and declaration of the defendant’s superintendent at the time that the plaintiff’s agent called to inspect the cotton. He was then informed that the cotton was there in storage all right, but that it could not then be shown to him. The plaintiff’s agent acted upon these representations and made his report to the bank. It is said that he was not refused admission to the warehouse ; that he ought to have gone in and looked for the cotton ; that had he done so he would have found that it was not in storage. Possibly this discovery would have been made had he persisted and entered the warehouse, but after he had been either deceived or misled by the defendant’s superintendent with reference to the cotton being on storage, we think that the defendant cannot now avail itself of the claim that the plaintiff did not rely upon the representations of the agents of the defendant in parting with its money.

¡Numerous exceptions taken upon the admission and rejection of the evidence have been argued both orally and upon the briefs of counsel, but we cannot, within the reasonable limits of an opinion, discuss them all. We have, however, carefully considered them together with the exceptions taken to the charge of the court and have reached the conclusion that the rulings should be sustained. There is one which we think should be specially considered, and that we regard as the most serious. The plaintiff claimed that it might lay before the jury, for the purpose of showing implied authority in Stone to sign these certificates, whatever facts its officers prosecuting an investigation would naturally have discovered. For this purpose one Halls, who was the cashier of the Hanover ¡National Bank, and as such had made loans to Stone upon warehouse certificates, was called as a witness. As to one of the transactions, he testified to a conversation as having taken place, either at the bank or at the defendant’s office, 43 *338 with a Mr. Hascy, the secretary of the defendant, in which he stated to him that Stone was the sole officer who signed these certificates at this time, and I then said: Did not other officers used to sign ? ’ and my recollection is that Mr. Hascy answered me to the effect that there was a time when other officers had signed, hut that the other two officers, Mr. Bostwick at that time, I think, and Mr. Pouch, had too much other business to attend to and the entire authority had been placed in Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 N.E. 477, 163 N.Y. 332, 1900 N.Y. LEXIS 1069, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corn-exchange-bank-v-american-dock-trust-co-ny-1900.