First National Bank v. Wood

27 N.E. 1020, 128 N.Y. 35, 38 N.Y. St. Rep. 422, 83 Sickels 35, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 953
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 27 N.E. 1020 (First National Bank v. Wood) 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
First National Bank v. Wood, 27 N.E. 1020, 128 N.Y. 35, 38 N.Y. St. Rep. 422, 83 Sickels 35, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 953 (N.Y. 1891).

Opinion

*38 Peckham, J.

The report of the referee shows that at the time the notes in question were executed by the firm of O. K. Wood & Co., it was solvent, and that it had at such time net assets of the amount of over $65,000, which increased annually up to 1882, when the sum was over $152,000. It further appeared that in 1876 the firm was composed of three members, viz.: Orville K., Victor A. and Albert G. H. Wood, and it had had mutual dealings with a firm called V. A. Wood & Co., which was composed of but two of the three members of O. K. Wood & Co., viz.: Orville K. and Victor A. Wood, and there had been a settlement of such mutual dealings, and after the settlement it appeared that the firm of O. K. Wood & Co. was indebted to the firm of V. A. Wood & Co. in a certain amount then stated, and for one-half this sum it was arranged the firm should give its note to V. A. Wood, and for the other half to O. K. Wood.

In carrying out this agreement the firm, at the request of V. A. Wood, made its note for his one-half of the debt, payable to his wife, and delivered it to V. A. Wood, who accepted it and immediately delivered it to his wife as a gift, who received it and still retains it. Practically the same thing was done with the other half of the indebtedness to O. K. Wood. The firm paid interest on the notes each year up to 1881 by giving its notes therefor. Eight years subsequent to the giving of the original notes and in May, 1884, the firm of O. K. Wood & Co. became insolvent and made an assignment for the benefit of its creditors, in which it preferred as creditors the wives who held the notes above mentioned, to the amount thereof and interest.

In December, 1884, the plaintiff recovered judgment for nearly $8,000 against the firm of O. K. Wood & Co., upon an indebtedness of which the sum of $1,500 accrued December 3, 1879, and the residue subsequent to that date. The plaintiff having issued execution upon its judgment, which was returned unsatisfied, commenced this action to set aside the assignment and for the appointment of a receiver and the payment of its judgment out of the property coming to Mm. *39 The evidence is not returned and it is clear from the facts found that the referee based Iris finding that the assignment was fraudulent and void as against the plaintiff upon the sole fact that this preference was given as above stated.

An accounting had been had between these firms and a settlement reached, and it then appeared that the O. K. Wood & Co. firm owed the other firm the amount named. This is admitted. The notes were given in acknowledgment of such indebtedness. If they had been given directly to the members of the Y. A. Wood & Co. firm, that firm could have maintained an action upon them at their maturity against the makers if the notes had not been paid. One partner may give a note upon firm matters to another partner in the same firm, and the holder may maintain an action at law upon it without an accounting. (Townsend v. Goewey, 19 Wend. 424; Crater v. Bininger, 45 N. Y. 545; see, also, Cole v. Reynolds, 18 id. 74.)

Here there was an accounting, and the notes having been given in acknowledgment of the debt then existing and being in the hands of third persons, no question can arise in tire law of partnership relating to the so-called anomaly of one person suing himself. But the case of Cole v. Reynolds (supra), shows there is no difficulty even there where the case is that of two firms with one or more common members. The result of the action of the parties was simply a transfer of the firm debt to the respective wives. At this time the firm was solvent. Tire transaction was, in substance, the same as if the makers had made the notes payable to the two members of the other firm and had thus delivered them to such members, and those members had then indorsed and delivered them to their wives as free and voluntary gifts. If the makers of the notes had thus delivered them to the other partners as payees, the title to the debt, of which the notes were evidence, would have then gone to the payees, and if the payees had transferred the notes by gift and delivery to their wives, the title to that debt would have been also transferred with and followed the notes and would have remained, one-half with each of such whies. *40 This result is not in the least affected because the transaction took the form' of a division of the debt into two parts, evidenced by notes for each half and payable one-half to the .wife of Y. A. Wood and one-half to the wife and children of O. K. Wood. This was a matter wholly immaterial to the makers of the notes and when, pursuant to the arrangement, they delivered the notes thus made to the two members of the Y. A. Wood & Co. firm, they did precisely the same thing as if they had made the notes payable to the order of that firm instead of to the order of their wives. And when Y. A. Wood and O. K. Wood transferred the notes thus made to their wives, it was precisely the same as if the notes had been made payable to the firm or to bearer and they had then transferred them. It is true that at the time of the transfer all the equities then existing between the makers of the notes and the two members of the Y. A. Wood & Co. firm, accompanied the notes in their transfer by the members of such firm to their wives. In fact there were no equities. The debt was an honest one; it was due, and the firm that owed it was largely solvent and recognized its obligation and gave the notes. It is admitted that the donees might at that time have maintained an action against the makers on the notes and recovered thereon. If so, it could only be upon the ground that they had become the owners of the notes. They became such owners only by virtue of a voluntary gift accompanied by an immediate and unconditional delivery. This, indeed, did give to the donees a perfect title and absolute ownership to and in the notes, as there were then no equities existing between the original parties. (Byles on Bills [7th Am. ed.] 126; Milnes v. Dawson, 5 Ex. 948.) The notes represented the original debt. How is it then that such ownership, although absolute at the time of the transfer and giving the holders of the notes a right of action, shall nevertheless, if not acted on by collecting the money, be liable at any future time to be changed and, indeed, extinguished by matters subsequently arising between those original parties? I know of no principle which would authorize it.

Upon these facts the defendants had become the absolute *41 owners of the notes to the same extent they would have been if they had paid value therefor, and I am of the opinion that such title and right of recovery are in no way diminished by the subsequent dealings or complications of those original parties between themselves any more than them title wmuld have been affected thereby had they paid a consideration of dollar for dollar equal to the face of the notes. (Byles, supra; Milnes v. Dawson, supra)

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.E. 1020, 128 N.Y. 35, 38 N.Y. St. Rep. 422, 83 Sickels 35, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 953, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-wood-ny-1891.