Eno v. Sage

83 Misc. 389, 144 N.Y.S. 1062
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 83 Misc. 389 (Eno v. Sage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eno v. Sage, 83 Misc. 389, 144 N.Y.S. 1062 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1913).

Opinion

Giegerich, J.

The action is to determine the claims of various parties to certain securities pledged as collateral to two loans made by Mr. Russell Sage. One for $50,000 was made on December 1, 1896, to the firm of Decker, Howell & Co., stockbrokers, upon its promissory note, payable on demand, and the other, for $2,500, was made on February 16, 1897, to Mr. [391]*391Joseph S. Decker individually, he being then a member of said firm, upon his individual promissory note, payable on demand.. Certain securities were pledged as collateral security for the payment of said loans. The notes were renewed when they became due, and they became the property first of Mr. Sage’s estate and then of Mrs. Sage, his widow. The said notes were, in accordance with the terms of Mr. Sage’s will, indorsed without recourse to Mrs. Sage individually, and, with the collateral security thereto, were transferred to her possession and she is now the legal owner and holder thereof. There is no question as to the primary right of Mrs. Sage to foreclose and sell so much of the securities as is sufficient to pay the loans and interest, her husband having accepted the securities as collateral for said loans, and in making them relied in good faith upon the borrowers’’ apparent title thereto. Tompkins v. Morton Trust Co., 91 App. Div. 274, affd. on opinion below, 181 N. Y. 578; Matter of Mills, 125 App. Div. 730; affd. without opinion, 193 N. Y. 626. Neither is there any question with regard to the rights of all the parties to have all the collateral except $15,000 Galveston-Houston and Henderson first mortgage bonds, $30,000 South Yuba Water Company bonds and $8,000 City of Houston bonds sold and applied upon the loans before the application of these securities. The plaintiff claims the entire $15,000 Galveston-Houston and Henderson bonds by virtue of the transactions hereinafter stated. The defendant Van Norden claims the $30,000 South Yuba Water Company bonds. They unquestionably belonged to him. They had been lodged by him with the firm of Decker, Howell & Co. in December, 1895, for the purpose of obtaining a loan of $15,000, which Mr. Decker informed Mr. Van Norden would be secured from Mr. Sage. A number of years previous Mr. Van [392]*392Norden had had an active account with said firm, but at the time in question this was the only transaction between them. The defendant Wiegand, as the executor of the last will and testament of Henry O. Seixas, deceased, claims, subject to Mrs. Sage’s rights, all of the collateral given for the payment of the individual note of Mr. Decker, to wit, $3,000 of the City of Houston bonds, and claims also, subject to Mrs. Sage’s rights, the $5,000 City of Houston bonds pledged to secure the payment of the loan of $50,000 made by Mr. Sage to Decker, Howell & Co. The facts in relation to the claim of the Seixas estate will be discussed later. The defendant Coughlan, as assignee of Decker, Howell & Co., claims that all bonds must be sold and all surplus paid over to him. It appears. from the evidence that the Galveston-Houston and Henderson bonds have since matured and were collected, with interest, and applied towards the payment of the loan of $50,000. These bonds were the exclusive property of one William M. Fleiss and had simply been lodged by him with Decker, Howell & Co. for safekeeping. No title to such bonds as against Mr. Fleiss could be acquired by any one except a person who had in good faith loaned money upon them in reliance on the apparent title that had been conferred upon the brokers. Tompkins v. Morton Trust Co., supra; Matter of Mills, supra. On July 12, 1897, Decker, Howell & Co. made a general assignment to Alanson Fisher, Jr., for the benefit of their creditors. Shortly after such assignment was made, Mr. Fleiss discovered that the Gralveston-Houston and Henderson bonds had been pledged by the brokers with Mr. Sage and he demanded their return and threatened criminal proceedings unless they were returned to him. Decker and Williams appealed to Mr. Cromwell, their counsel, for assistance, and to avert such prosecution Mrs. Emma [393]*393Williams, wife of one of the partners of the firm, gave to Mr. Mahoney, a clerk in Mr. Cromwell’s office, a bond and mortgage for $12,000' upon a house in Pacific street, Brooklyn, of the value of about $8,000, and Mr. Decker, the other partner, made his promissory note to the plaintiff’s order for $12,000, payable one year after date, and the plaintiff indorsed the same with “ protest waived,” and Mrs. Williams likewise indorsed the same. Upon the strength of Mrs. Williams’ bond and mortgage and of the above note, Mr. Cromwell then paid to Mr. Fleiss $11,625, and the latter made an assignment to Mahoney of all his right, title and interest in the bonds. Mahoney executed an assignment in blank of the bonds and of the same rights. Although the brokers were heavily indebted to the plaintiff at the time of their failure, they implored him to come to their rescue, which he did, as indicated, and he further agreed that he would save Mrs. Williams harmless from her mortgage obligation. Mr. Cromwell having received large sums of money for account of the plaintiff in August, 1900, credited himself with $12,000 in reimbursement of his advances in the matter and charged the plaintiff’s account with the payment of such loan and caused the Williams mortgage to be satisfied and Mrs. Williams to be relieved from her liability as indorser of the note above mentioned. After Mr. Cromwell’s accounts with the plaintiff were settled by judicial proceedings in 1912, the assignment by Fleiss to Mahoney and the assignment by Mahoney came into the plaintiff’s possession and he is still the owner thereof. These assignments provide expressly for subrogation, and the plaintiff by the express terms thereof has succeeded to all of the lights and remedies of such assignors in the bonds. Serat v. Utica, Ithaca & Elmira R. Co., 102 N. Y. 681, It is urged by the defendants that if the assignment of [394]*394Mr. Fleiss’ claims in the Galveston-Houston and Henderson bonds were incident to compounding a felony, equity will not give its assistance to the plaintiff, who took title with such an understanding. I think that the agreement which resulted in the assignment by Mr. Fleiss of his bonds must be held to have been an illegal agreement, inasmuch as part of the consideration for the payment made to him was an implied understanding that he would abstain from the prosecution of a criminal charge against Decker and Williams. This sufficiently appears both from the plaintiff’s admissions in the sixth paragraph of his complaint and from the testimony. So long as the agreement remained executory, it could not have been enforced by any of the parties to it. But it was fully executed. The money was paid and the bonds were assigned. Having been so executed, it could not be upset by any of the parties to the agreement (Haynes v. Rudd, 102 N. Y. 372), and I do not know of any principle which would enable third persons to upset it. See Moseley v. Moseley, 15 N. Y. 334. The title to the money passed to Fleiss and the title to the bonds passed to his assignee, and is now vested in the plaintiff. The law will leave these titles where it finds them. Nor is it the fact, as contended for by the defendants, that the plaintiff has released any security that he had for the moneys advanced in effecting the settlement. While Mrs. Williams was always liable to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
83 Misc. 389, 144 N.Y.S. 1062, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eno-v-sage-nysupct-1913.