Fortunato v. . Patten

41 N.E. 572, 147 N.Y. 277, 69 N.Y. St. Rep. 671, 1 E.H. Smith 277, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 946
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 22, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 41 N.E. 572 (Fortunato v. . Patten) 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
Fortunato v. . Patten, 41 N.E. 572, 147 N.Y. 277, 69 N.Y. St. Rep. 671, 1 E.H. Smith 277, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 946 (N.Y. 1895).

Opinion

Bartlett, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the General Term of the Court of Common Pleas for the city and county of Eew York affirming a judgment entered upon the report .of a referee determining the order of payment to various creditors out of a fund paid into court by the city of Eew York.

John F. Dawson, in October, 1886, entered into a contract witlrthe city to regulate and grade Edgecomb avenue and other streets.

*280 Prior to April 11, 1887, the appellant Patten loaned to Dawson six thousand dollars, and the latter on that day-assigned to Patten all his rights and interest under the contract. The referee found that this absolute assignment in form was made as security for a debt, being the balance due of five thousand dollars on the loan made by Patten to Dawson. Under the familiar rule that the form of words used in making an agreement is not alone to receive attention, but all the circumstances of the transaction are to be considered ( Williamis v. Ingersoll, 89 N. Y. 521), Patten stands as an assignee of a portion of the moneys due under the contract. It is also found that Dawson entered upon the performance of the contract and thereafter entirely completed the same, and the work was accepted by the city on the 28th of January, 1891.

In December, 1887, Davrson assigned to the Twelfth Ward Bank all moneys due and to grow due under the contract as collateral security for the payment of moneys advanced and to be advanced by the bank to Dawson.

On the 1st day of March, 1889, Dawson made a second assignment of five thousand dollars of the first money to grow due on the contract as collateral security for the payment of that amount, which was the balance then due on the original loan made to Dawson by Patten.

It is provided by the contract in substance that the contractor shall not assign the contract, or any of the moneys payable thereunder, without the consent of the city, signified in writing by the commissioner of public works indorsed on the agreement; that in the absence of such consent no right under the contract, nor to any moneys to grow due by its terms, should be asserted against the city of Flew York.

• The city was not asked to consent to the first assignment to Patten, but it did consent to the ^assignment to the Twelfth Ward Bank and the second assignment to Patten.

Upon the completion of the contract the city owed Dawson a balance of a little over fifty-seven thousand dollars. In February, 1890, the plaintiff began this action to foreclose a *281 mechanic’s lien filed against the money so due, and all persons interested in the fund tvere made parties.

The issues were tried before a referee, who rendered judgment as between Patten and the bank that the assignment of the latter was entitled to priority for the reason that Patten’s assignment was not consented to by the city, and also because the bank had no notice of Patten’s assignment. As this judgment has been affirmed by the General Term, and it appears that if the bank is paid in full Patten will receive nothing, it becomes of importance to inquire whether the judgment can be sustained. • ■

The provision of the contract adverted to has been treated by the court below as rendering void all assignments of moneys to grow due unless the consent of the city was obtained, and as available by any assignee to defeat the rights of a senior assignee who had failed to secure the necessary consent.

"We do not think that this provision is capable of any such construction ; it was inserted in the contract solely for the benefit of the city, and prevents any claim being asserted against it in the absence of consent; it is a shield to protect the city, and not a weapon with which a junior assignee is to fight his way to a more favorable position in the line of payment.

The General Term held that this case is governed by the maxim modus et conventio vincunt legem.

The late Judge Allen of this court liberally translated the maxim as follows : The terms and conditions of a contract have the force of larv over those who are parties to it.” (Lowry v. Inman, 46 N. Y. 129.)

As between Dawson and the city the covenant we are considering does have the force of law, for the reason they are parties to the contract and come within the express terms of the maxim quoted, but the bank is not a party and cannot invoke this provision of the agreement to defeat the claim of Patten.

The city has paid into court the money due under the contract and will be protected by any judgment rendered; no *282 claim is being asserted against it, and the covenant does not apply to the situation now presented.

It was strenuously urged on the argument by the counsel for the bank that the disposition of this case by the court below is justified by Burck v. Taylor (152 U. S. 634). It is sufficient to point out that the case cited dealt with a contract made by an individual with the state of Texas, which contained an absolute, unqualified covenant that it should not be assigned in whole or in part without the written consent of the state.

In the case at bar the substance of the covenant is that if the contract or any of the moneys due under it are assigned without consent no claim can be asserted by virtue thereof as against the city.

In the case at bar no absolute assignment has been made of the contract, but all transfers were of moneys due thereunder as collateral to secure the payment of a debt.

There is a wide difference between assigning moneys due, under a contract and an absolute assignment of the contract itself, as the latter act disturbs that relation of personal confijdence which exists between one desiring work done that 'requires a high order of skill and intelligence and the contractor he may have selected as possessing these necessary -qualifications. (Delaware County v. Diebold Safe & Lock Co., 133 U. S. 419.)

For these reasons, we think, the case of Burck v. Taylor has no application to the case before us.

It is further argued on behalf of the bank that, even if Patten’s assignment is valid, he is estopped from urging his claim as against the bank, as he allowed Dawson to continue in the performance of the contract and that the bank was misled by his apj>arent ownership.

We have already referred to the finding that Patten’s first assignment, while absolute in terms, was intended and treated as a collateral security, and that Dawson’s relations with the' city were not disturbed. It cannot now be claimed, in the face of the proofs and the findings, that Patten was the owner of this contract between Dawson and the city by absolute *283 assignment; he stands in the position of an assignee who is, entitled to receive as collateral security moneys due under the. contract.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.E. 572, 147 N.Y. 277, 69 N.Y. St. Rep. 671, 1 E.H. Smith 277, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 946, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fortunato-v-patten-ny-1895.