Gibson v. . Nat'l Park Bk. of N.Y.

98 N.Y. 87, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 582
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 20, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 98 N.Y. 87 (Gibson v. . Nat'l Park Bk. of N.Y.) 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
Gibson v. . Nat'l Park Bk. of N.Y., 98 N.Y. 87, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 582 (N.Y. 1885).

Opinion

Huger, Ch. J.

Hpon a former appeal to this court, the principal questions involved in this case were determined in favor of the respondents. (Bills v. Nat. Park Bank, 89 N. Y. It was there held:

First. That a certified check on a bank by the owner of a *92 fond therein deposited, and outstanding in the hands of the drawer, constituted no such change in the ownership of the fund as exempted it from the lien of an attachment against the owner levied thereon.

Second. That the bank could defeat a liability to hold such deposit subject to the lien of the attachment, only by showing a payment of the check made in good faith to a bona fide holder, or that it was outstanding unpaid in the hands of such a holder.

Third. ■ When a negotiable security representing the amount of a debt has been delivered by a debtor to his creditor, it is essential to a recovery by the attaching creditor of such debt that he obtains possession and returns the security to its maker on or before the trial, or show that it has been paid in violation of faith and is then in the of such maker.

The questions there arose upon an appeal by the plaintiffs from a judgment rendered against them in the courts below, and was determined upon findings of fact which we thought entitled the plaintiffs to recover; we see no reason now to revise any of the conclusions then arrived at. The findings then showed that soon after the attachment had been served upon the bank, one Rodney, who was the assistant treasurer of the attachment debtor, appeared at the bank and opened an account in bis individual name, by depositing to his qwn credit certain securities belonging to the attachment debtor, and amounting in the aggregate to some $55,000, among which was the certified check in question. . That at the time the deposit was so made by Rodney, the bank had good reason to believe, and did believe, that the securities so deposited by him were the property of the railroad company, and that he intended to apply the credit which he obtained by the making of the deposit to pay lawful and just debts owing by the company, and that in fact he did so apply the same.

Upon a retrial of the case upon substantially the same evidence, another referee has made a similar finding with the addition that the defendant “ believed that the transaction took the shape it did to avoid expected attachments.”

*93 The defendant now contends that this finding is unsupported by any evidence, and seeks to review it upon an exception taken thereto.

To sustain this exception, it is incumbent upon the defendant to show that there was no evidence to support the finding, or that the evidence preponderated so strongly against it, that it presented substantially no dispute upon the fact. We do not think this has been made out. The evidence tended to show that the bank had notice previous to January, 1875, of the pecuniary embarrassment of the attachment debtor, the New Orleans, St. Louis and Chicago Railroad Company, and not only that it had been once discommoded by an attachment levied upon its current funds in the hands of the defendant, but anticipated other attachments at the suit of unpaid creditors upon the funds it should accumulate from time to time in New York.

The defendant had already become a party to a scheme by which these funds were kept by the bank, so as not to be liable to attachment at the suit of creditors, and knew that it was the intention of the railroad company, to impede its creditors in reaching them.

Three days prior to the time when the May coupons of said road were payable in New York,.the bank at the request of Rodney, the assistant treasurer, certified a check drawn by him as such assistant treasurer, payable to his order as such assistant treasurer, and thereby allowed him apparently to take into possession of the railroad company, the entire balance of its funds remaining in the bank. Before this check was paid by the bank, or had arrived in the possession of a bona, fide holder, the attachment in question was properly served, not only upon the railroad company, but also upon the defendant bank. Subsequent to this time, but on the same day, Rodney, was informed by the defendant’s officers of the service of the attachment, and thereupon requested permission to open an account with the bank in his individual name. This was granted to him, and he thereupon produced the check in question, and two other drafts or checks amounting in the aggregate to $55,- *94 000, all payable to the order of the said assistant treasurer, and caused them to be deposited to his individual credit in the books of the bank. This deposit was subsequently exhausted Rodney in the debts of the railroad

We think this evidence is sufficient to support the findings of the referee that the bank had reason to and did believe, when the deposit was made, that the funds composing it were the property of the railroad corporation. That they were in fact its funds is not even now questioned, but it is claimed that the bank had then no sufficient reason to believe that they were. It is difficult to see what other inference any of the officers or employes of this bank had authority to draw from the undisfacts.

Rodney was the treasurer of the railroad company, and the drafts and checks presented were payable to him in his official capacity alone. He produced those papers to the officers of the bank, and in their presence, as the officer of the railroad company, assumed to transfer them to his own use. The fact that these securities were payable to Rodney, as assistant treasurer of the railroad company, was notice to everybody into whose hands they might come that the funds represented by them were the property of the railroad company, and that Rodney held them in a fiduciary capacity. (Fellows v. Longyor, 91 N. Y. 324; Shaw v. Spencer, 100 Mass. 382, 389 ; Jackson v. Campbell, 5 Wend. 572; Houghton v. McAuliffe, 26 How. Pr. 270.) The possession by Rodney was, therefore, the possession of the attachment debtor, and was notice to every one who knew his official employment and the character in which he received the securities that the railroad company was their owner.. The general presumption of ownership arising from the possession of negotiable paper is controlled by the positive evidence of the fiduciary character of such possession. (See cases above cited.)

It must be assumed in considering this evidence that knowledge or notice of a fact legitimately communicated to any of its officers while acting in his capacity as an agent of the bank becomes the knowledge of the bank, and that knowledge or *95 notice communicated to the principal, which imposes a duty upon it, becomes by that circumstance the knowledge of all of its agents when acting in an official capacity. ( Village of Port Jervis v. Bank of Port Jervis, 96 N. Y. 550 ; Bank of U. S. v. Davis, 2 Hill, 451.)

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Bluebook (online)
98 N.Y. 87, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibson-v-natl-park-bk-of-ny-ny-1885.