Federal Heating Co. v. City of Buffalo

99 Misc. 121
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1917
StatusPublished

This text of 99 Misc. 121 (Federal Heating Co. v. City of Buffalo) 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
Federal Heating Co. v. City of Buffalo, 99 Misc. 121 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1917).

Opinion

Bissell, J.

There is involved in this action the determination of the validity and priority of the various claims of several parties to the funds of the city of Buffalo applicable to the payment of the contract price for the construction of two children’s pavilions for the J. N. Adam Memorial Hospital belonging to the city of Buffalo at Perrysburg, N. Y.

On August 4, 1914, the city entered into a contract with Hager & George, Inc., a corporation, for the construction of these pavilions for the sum of $98,980, which was afterward, by reason of certain changes, reduced to the sum of $96,360.22, of which there was paid to the contractor or its assigns $79,365.95, leaving a balance of $16,994.27, when the completion of the work by reason of the default of the contractor was taken over by the city.

On April 3,1915, Hager & George, Inc., had become indebted to the plaintiffs for materials furnished, and seven liens had been filed against the unpaid balance [125]*125of the contract price then amounting to about $35,000. To enable the work to proceed it was necessary for these liens to be discharged, and after several meetings of the lien creditors and other materialmen with the contractor it was agreed that the moneys which would thereafter become available under the contract, to the extent of $34,369.65, should be assigned to one John M. Hoen, trustee; which was accomplished by two instruments dated April 3, 1915, providing the manner in which the trustee should use the moneys thus assigned when they were paid by the city of Buffalo pursuant to the terms of the contract, and among other things providing that $6,500 of moneys previously assigned to the Bank of North Collins should be paid over to Hoen, and should be used by him to make partial payments upon the then existing liens of the plaintiffs, $1,450 of this sum to be used to pay bills then due to certain specified materialmen who had not filed liens. The specific payments out of the $6,500 aggregated $4,878.29. As a consideration for the assignment to John M. Hoen, trustee, the liens which had been filed by the plaintiffs in this action were discharged of record, and the lienors then looked only to the assignment which was made for their benefit and the benefit of specific materialmen above mentioned.

The assignment made by Hager & George, Inc., to the Bank of North Collins, referred to in the agreement with Hoen, was for $7,000, dated March 24,1915, and delivered by Charles A. Hager to the bank on March 25,1915, which on that day credited to Hager’s individual account $3,500. After the agreement of April 3,1915, $3,428.29 was paid to Hoen, and used by him, in accordance with the agreement, to apply upon the liens, and to pay certain small claims mentioned in [126]*126the agreement. This amount was paid to Hoen on the 6th of April, 1915, by New York draft, drawn by the Bank of North Collins, payable to the order of John M. Hoen, and returned to the bank with this indorsement: “ John M. Hoen, Hager & George, Inc., by John M. Hoen, trustee.” The balance of the $7,000 assignment of which Hoen was to receive $6,500 was credited to the account of Charles A. Hager by the bank on the eighth, thirteenth and twenty-second days of April, after the bank had paid to Hoen the first $3,428.29, so that when the bank credited the $3,500 of the $7,000 assignment to the account of Charles A. Hager it knew that a part of the balance of the assignment had been paid to Hoen under an agreement between Hager & George, Inc., and Hoen, styling himself trustee. Hoen received only $1,200 of the second $3,500 credited to Hager on the $7,000 assignment, making in all $4,628.29 of the $6,500 which it was agreed Hoen should receive of the $7,000 assignment.

Prior to the assignment to Hoen, trustee, dated April 3, 1915, the Bank of North Collins had from time to time advanced moneys on assignments of moneys due under the contract between the city and Hager & George, Inc.; and each time that such advances had been made the bank had received a certificate from the city comptroller showing that such assignment had been made. After the agreement with Hoen, and on the 19th day of April, 1915, the bank received a certificate made by the comptroller that a waiver of the assignment by Hager & George Inc., to J. M. Hoen, trustee, had been filed in thé office of the comptroller of the city of Buffalo, and this certificate specifically stated; “ Said waiver being signed by John M. Hoen as trustee for $3,500 against contract for erecting children’s pavilions at J. N. Adam Hospital.” This certificate was delivered to Charles [127]*127A. Hager, who then delivered it to the Bank of North Collins, which credited to his account the amount of the certificate, and its cashier admits that he noticed that John M. Hoen had waived an assignment from Hager & George to him as trustee, but that he made no inquiry as to Hoen’s authority before executing the waiver, nor did he inquire into the purpose of Hoen’s trust, nor as to the persons for whom he was acting as trustee.

On the 18th of May, 1915, Hoen again executed a waiver of the assignment to him as trustee to the Bank of North Collins, and the city comptroller delivered to Charles A. Hager a certificate to the extent of $7,000 in form similar to the one presented at the bank on April nineteenth. The bank credited the amount of this waiver to the account of Charles A. Hager, and subsequently $5,000 of this amount was paid to Hoen. On May 25, 1915, another waiver of his assignment was made by John M. Hoen as trustee for $2,300, and the comptroller again delivered to Hager a certificate which was taken by him to the Bank of North Collins, which credited the face of the waiver to Hager’s individual account. No part of this $2,300 was paid to Hoen. A fourth assignment was made by Hoen on the 29th of May, 1915, for $800, and a certificate issued in the same form as the previous certificates. It was taken to the Bank of North Collins by Mr. Hager, and the face of. the certificate deposited to the credit of Charles A. Hager. Mr. Hoen received no part óf this money.

Altogether Hoen, trustee, executed waivers of his assignment in favor of the Bank of North Collins in the aggregate sum of $13,600, and the bank received from the city of Buffalo $11,450 upon these assignments, $5,000 of which was paid over to John M. Hoen. [128]*128One thousand four hundred and fifty dollars of this money was used for pay-roll upon a contract for construction work at Scarsdale, N. Y., and had no relation to the construction work at Perryshurg, or the purpose for which the agreement of April 3, 1915, was made; and $400 of the money paid over to Hoen was used for pay-roll upon another contract at Waterford, N. Y. Neither of these payments was for the benefit of the claimants mentioned in the assignment to Hoen. The bank paid out the moneys which it had credited to Charles A. Hager, upon Hager’s individual checks, and made no inquiry as to the purposes for which the money was to be used.

In the latter part of June, 1915, Hoen made another waiver of assignment for $7,000, upon which he made an unsuccessful attempt to obtain money from the Bank of North Collins, and he then served a notice upon the comptroller, in which he stated in substance that the waivers of assignment in favor of the Bank of North Collins had been obtained through fraud, and that he canceled the outstanding waivers. The city thereupon refused to pay the balance of the $2,300 assignment, amounting to $1,350, and the $800 waiver of assignment, and this amount ($2,150) has remained in the city treasury since that time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 Misc. 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federal-heating-co-v-city-of-buffalo-nysupct-1917.