Fifth Avenue Bank v. Forty-second Street & Grand Street Ferry Railroad

137 N.Y. 231, 50 N.Y. St. Rep. 712
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 28, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 137 N.Y. 231 (Fifth Avenue Bank v. Forty-second Street & Grand Street Ferry Railroad) 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
Fifth Avenue Bank v. Forty-second Street & Grand Street Ferry Railroad, 137 N.Y. 231, 50 N.Y. St. Rep. 712 (N.Y. 1893).

Opinion

Maynard, J.

In September, 1885, the plaintiff, a domestic banking corporation, loaned one Hofele fifteen thousand dollars upon his individual note payable in three months and secured by the pledge of an instrument which upon its face purported to be a certificate for one hundred sixty shares of stock of the defendant; a domestic railroad corporation having its office and principal place of business in the same city with the plaintiff. It was subsequently discovered that this certificate was spurious, and that the signature thereto of the defendant’s president had been forged by one Eben S. Alien, its secretary, who was also its treasurer and transfer agent, and who had in these capacities signed and countersigned the certificate and delivered it to Hofele, who was his partner in business, for the purpose of raising money upon it, to be used in the firm undertaking.

We are required upon this appeal to determine how far the defendant company is liable for the loss sustained by the plaintiff in consequence of this fraudulent and criminal act of one of its principal officers.

[236]*236The good faith of the plaintiff in the transaction, by means of which it became possessed of the forged certificate, seems to he satisfactorily established. Hofele was a stranger to the officers of the bank, and they had no knowledge of his business relations with Allen, or that the latter was, in any way, interested in the proposed loan. Before acting upon Hofele’s application for a discount, the plaintiff’s president sent its confidential clerk to the office of the defendant with the certificate, who, pursuant to instructions, showed it to the person in charge of the office, who was then unknown to the clerk, but who proved to be Allen, its secretary and treasurer, and who was asked if it was genuine and all right and if Hofele was a stockholder of the company, to which an affirmative reply was given, and a description of Hofele, from which the hank might identify him as the person who had presented the certificate and sought the loan upon the strength of it. The clerk reported the result of the interview to the plaintiff’s officers, who thereupon discounted Hofele’s note for the sum named payable in three months and accepted the certificate as collateral' security in the usual form for its payment and for all other present or future demands of the bank against him. The note was renewed from time to time and increased in amount, and some smaller notes given until his indebtedness amounted to $35,000 and upwards. Meanwhile the plaintiff had taken as additional security a like certificate for fifty shares to which the signature of the defendant’s president had also been forged, and which was first received as security for a loan of $5,000. This loan was afterwards consolidated with the other loans and became a part of the total indebtedness for which both certificates were held as security. Upon the pledge of the fifty share certificate, the plaintiff made no inquiries of the defendant, or of any of its officers with reference to its genuineness.

In July, 1889, Hofele ordered the plaintiff to sell the two certificates and signed the usual blank transfer or power of attorney for that purpose upon the hack of them. When they were first hypothecated he had executed a separate power [237]*237of attorney authorizing plaintiff to sell and transfer them in ease of default in the payment of the loans. The certificates were sold by plaintiff’s brokers and the net sum of $48,890 received and placed to Hofele’s credit and his indebtedness charged to his account, leaving an apparent balance due him of $8,479. '

When the certificates were presented by the purchasers at the office of defendant for transfer, it was refused upon the ground that they were forged and spurious, and the treasurer and transfer agent wrote across their face in red ink the words “ no good,” and added their official signatures to the statement. The plaintiff then refunded to the purchasers the amount paid upon the sale of the certificates, and took an assignment from them of all rights of action which they had against the defendant, and upon the refusal of the defendant to recognize the certificates as valid evidences of title to its shares of stock, this action was brought, in which the plaintiff has recovered for its loss on account of the invalidity of the one hundred and sixty share certificate, and the defendant alone has appealed.

With respect to this certificate we fail to discover any omission on the part of the plaintiff which would impeach its character as a bona fide holder. It made inquiry at the office of the defendant, where its books and records were kept, and of the officer in charge, whose duty it was to furnish correct information upon the subject, and it had no reason to suspect that the assurances it received were misleading or false, or that the officers of the defendant had entered into a conspiracy with Hofele to defraud the public.

It resorted to the only source of verification of the truth of Hofele’s statements which was readily accessible; and it exercised all the care and vigilance which a prudent man would be expected to exhibit in the ordinary course of the business in which it was engaged. There was no circumstance proven which required a display of greater diligence. Bor were the rights of the plaintiff affected by the sale of the certificates and their re-delivery to the plaintiff upon a refund of the pro[238]*238ceeds of the sale to the purchasers. Though nominally sold on the account of Hofele, the plaintiff was the real party in interest in the transaction. There was an implied guaranty of the genuineness of the certificates, which the vendor might be required to make good, and as the plaintiff had received the fruits of the transaction, the consideration of which had failed, it could not lawfully withhold them from the purchasers when restoration was demanded. The purchasers were also bona-fide holders of the certificates, and the plaintiff by their assignment acquired the right to the enforcement of whatever remedies they might have in that capacity against the defendant, although it was then aware of their fraudulent issue. While certificates of stock in railroad and other business corporations do not possess the qualities of commercial paper in the full sense of the term, yet as evidences of title, when the transfer indorsed thereon is signed in blank by the shareholder, they become, in effect, so far as the public is concerned, as if they had been issued to bearer.. They are then readily transferable by delivery, and have an element of negotiability which renders them an important factor in the financial and commercial transactions of the country. They may be and are frequently listed upon the stock exchanges, and their sales represent a large proportion of the daily business of these bodies.

The plaintiff must, therefore, be accorded whatever advantage belongs to a holder in good faith of a chose in action of this character, and we have only to consider how far the defendant is responsible for the acts and representations of its officers, by means of which Hofele was enabled to obtain the plaintiff’s money upon the faith of paper apparently valid, but in fact worthless.

The defendant was incorporated under the G-eneral Railroad Law, originally with a capital of $600,000, afterwards increased to $750,000, all of which had been issued, excepting twenty shares, before 1870.

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Bluebook (online)
137 N.Y. 231, 50 N.Y. St. Rep. 712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fifth-avenue-bank-v-forty-second-street-grand-street-ferry-railroad-ny-1893.