Dayton v. H. B. Claflin Co.

19 A.D. 120, 45 N.Y.S. 1005
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 19 A.D. 120 (Dayton v. H. B. Claflin 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
Dayton v. H. B. Claflin Co., 19 A.D. 120, 45 N.Y.S. 1005 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Williams, J. :

The action was originally brought against the Mutual Life Insurance Company to recover the sum of $10,000 upon two - policies of insurance issued upon -the life of Henry W. Dayton, the husband of plaintiff. One policy for $5,000 was issued November 24, 1890, •payable directly to the plaintiff; the other policy for - $5,000 was issued- September 10, 1891, payable to the husband himself, and was assigned to the plaintiff December. 4, 1891. After the commencement of the action an order was entered directing the $10,000 to be deposited- in court, awaiting the determination of the claims thereto; and the defendant, H. B. Claflin Company, was substituted for the insurance company in the action. The defendant claimed that it was entitled t-o the whole insurance fund, and its claim was based substantially upon the allegation that the. assured had, for many years before his death, been one of the employees of the firm of II. ¡B, [121]*121Claflin & Co., and of the defendant company; and that from time to time since early in 1890, the defendant had stolen and embezzled from the firm and the defendant company large sums of money, and that all the premiums upon the two policies of insurance had been paid from the moneys so stolen and embezzled. The referee decided that the whole fund, ten thousand dollars, belonged to the defendant, subject to a lien thereon in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of seventy-six dollars, with interest from November 21, 1891, and that the plaintiff had no other claim to any part of the fund. And the referee in his opinion stated the ground thereof to be that the fund was the product of the defendant’s moneys, so used as to impress the fund with a trust, in favor of the defendant, and the same was both in law and equity the property of the defendant; and that the seventy-six dollars declared to be a lien on the fund in favor of the plaintiff was for such sum loaned by plaintiff to the assured, and by him used for the payment of one of the premiums going to produce the fund. It seems, therefore, that the referee found that all the premiums on both the policies were paid from the moneys stolen and embezzled by the assured from the firm and the defendant company, except the one premium of seventy-six dollars, which • was paid with moneys furnished by the plaintiff, and which the ■referee found were loaned by plaintiff to the assured for the purpose of making such payment, and were in no way the moneys of the firm or the defendant company. The decision of the referee was apparently intended to be based upon the principles of law laid down by the Court of Appeals in Holmes v. Gilman( 138 N. Y. 369). That action was brought by a partner of the assured against the wife and children of the latter, to reach insurance moneys collected upon policies issued upon, the life of the assured, and to have a trust impressed thereon in favor of the partnership, on the ground that, the premiums on the policies had all been paid from partnership funds wrongfully abstracted by the assured The policies were all payable directly to the wife, but none of the premiums had been paid by the wife, or from her funds. All of them had been paid by the assured from ■ the moneys wrongfully abstracted from the partnership. Upon these facts the whole fund was awarded to the plaintiff.

A few quotations from the opinion of Peckham, J., will show [122]*122just what"was held in that case: “ The claim of the plaintiff to recover the moneys arising from the payments' of these policies, is, based upon the principle which allows a cestui que trust to follow trust funds and to appropriate to himself, the property into which such funds have been- changed, together, with the increased value . such' property, provided the trust fund can be clearly ascertained, traced .and identified, and provided -the' rights of Iona fide purchasers for value without notice do not intervene. The right has its- basis in the right of property, and the court proceeds on the principle that the title has not been affected by the change made of. the trust funds, and the cestui que trust'., has his option to claim the property and its increased value, as representing his original fund. The right to follow and appropriate ceases only when the means of. ascertainment fail. It is-a question'of title.. * ? * The counsel' for defendant then urges that the rule clearly is, if the trust fund has become mingled with money or property of the trustees or others, equity increases the proceeds with a trust -to an amount, equal to the original trust fund and interest, and will go no> further. ' He then claims that' the firm funds which went to the purchase of the policies, and the payment of the annual premiums were mingled with the property right of the wife, called her insurable interest in her husband’s life, and so the policies were not wholly the result of the .use ©f those firm funds, and, therefore, the plaintiff can have only a lien On the policies or the moneys arising from their payment, to' the amount of the premiums j>aid with the firm funds', and the interest thereon: ■ This, is really the chief question in the' case. Where moneys have been misapplied and have been used as a' portion' of a larger amount which has been invested in other property, the property-thus, acquired does not as a whole belong to the • owner of the moneys misapplied. It does not belong to him because it has not been purchased or acquired wholly with his.money or funds, and hence it is that such property is held charged with a lien, at least to the amount of the trust funds invested in -it. It is not necessary to here' decide it, because we take another view of the facts',;, but I am not at all prepared to admit that under no circumstance's is the cestui qu,e trust entitled to' recover back anything more than the amount of • his property and interest where there has been a mingling of funds. In' case, the trustee took $1,000 of trust funds and 500 [123]*123of his own and purchased property which advanced in value to. twicé its original sum, I have seen no case where the point has .been, determined that the whole increased value belongs to the trustee* and that only the original sum wrongfully taken and interest can be given to the cestui que trust, though it was by reason of the wrong- . ful use of the trust funds that the trustee was enabled to realize such value. If in such case the cestui que trust were not allowed to, at least, participate proportionately in this increased value, it would appear to be a violation of the principle that the trustee cannot ever be permitted to make a profit out of the use of the trust funds. It seems to me to be a case for the application of the doctrine that the parties became co-owners of the property, at the. option of the cestui que trust, in the proportion which their various contributions bore to the sum total invested. In this case, however* the defendant is enabled to claim a mingling of funds and property only by treating the right of a wife to insure the life of her husband for her benefit as a- species of property of her own which has been mingled with the funds of the firm, the result of the combinanation being the procurement of the policies.”

The opinion then proceeded to discuss this question of alleged right of property in the wife to insure her husband’s life, and it was held that this.was not such right of property as constituted a mingling of funds in the purchase or procurement of the policies.

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Bluebook (online)
19 A.D. 120, 45 N.Y.S. 1005, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dayton-v-h-b-claflin-co-nyappdiv-1897.