Gilliland v. Lincoln-Alliance Bank & Trust Co.

145 Misc. 827, 261 N.Y.S. 826, 1932 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1741
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 145 Misc. 827 (Gilliland v. Lincoln-Alliance Bank & Trust Co.) 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
Gilliland v. Lincoln-Alliance Bank & Trust Co., 145 Misc. 827, 261 N.Y.S. 826, 1932 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1741 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1932).

Opinion

Gillette, J.

This is an action brought by the plaintiffs, the duly appointed, qualified and acting water commissioners of the Monroe Avenue water district of the town of Brighton, Monroe county, N. Y., against the defendant, the Lincoln-Alliance Bank and Trust Company, as the sole defendant, which defendant later moved to bring in the other named defendants on the theory that if it was held liable to the plaintiffs the defendant bank in turn should recover against these additional defendants.

The defendant Katherine S. Klink, as administratrix of the estate of Harold L. Klink, did not answer and is in default, and the defendant bank should have judgment against her.

On the 29th day of February, 1924, the town board of the town of Brighton, N. Y., appointed Harold L. Klink a water commissioner of the Monroe Avenue water district in that town and he continued to act as such until the time of his death by suicide in the month of December, 1929.

Some time after bis appointment Mr. Klink was named treasurer of the water district and as such received the assets and funds of the district and deposited the moneys belonging to the water district in the Union Trust Company of Rochester, N. Y., and the [829]*829Merchants Bank of Rochester, N. Y. (later Union Trust Company of Rochester, Merchants Branch) in two accounts entitled “ Monroe Avenue Water District by H. L. Klink, Treas.” Mr. Klink, as treasurer, received the assets and funds of the water district and the account in the Merchants Bank was opened on March 19, 1925, in which a considerable number of deposits were thereafter made. The other water district account in the Union Trust Company was opened on December 21, 1927, with a deposit of $24,951.40, in which account nothing was ever deposited, the only additional credits being certain interest items.

Exhibits 12, 13, 14 and 15 are the ledger sheets showing the water district account in the Merchants Bank, and Exhibit 7 is the ledger sheet showing the account in the Union Trust Company of Rochester. In plaintiffs’ finding of fact No. 6 there is a detailed account of the various items drawn out of these two banks and deposited in the defendant bank in Klirik’s personal account from February 19, 1926, to August 31, 1929, which aggregate the amount of $21,290.17, and it is the contention of the plaintiffs that these checks were delivered to the defendant bank and received by it out of the trust funds of the Monroe Avenue water district and were credited by the defendant bank to the personal account of Harold L. Klink, and that the defendant bank had notice of the trust character in which Harold L. Klink acted and that these moneys were trust moneys and that the defendant bank received these checks and moneys with notice and knowledge of their trust character and of their source, and that the defendant bank fraudulently, improperly and unlawfully paid out these trust moneys for the personal and individual purposes of Harold L. Klink and paid some of the moneys to the defendant bank itself on the personal and individual indebtedness of said Harold L. Klink to the defendant bank, all in violation of the trust on the part of Harold L. Klink and of which the defendant bank had notice and knowledge, and the defendant bank has not accounted for or paid over these trust funds so received to these plaintiffs or to the Monroe Avenue water district and has not accounted for the same in any way to the plaintiffs as water commissioners, but has appropriated and used said moneys, and that a demand has been made for an accounting of these trust funds upon the defendant bank, which has been refused. And the plaintiffs ask for a judgment that the defendant bank shall account for all of these trust funds and for the interest upon the same and pay over the amount thereof to the plaintiffs, and that the plaintiffs may have judgment against the defendant bank for this amount.

Plaintiffs upon the trial were able to reconstruct the source of [830]*830all or most of the funds deposited in the Merchants Bank with the exception of two items, one of November 21, 1927, amounting to $490, and one July 10, 1929, amounting to $101.36, the first of which is claimed by the defendant bank to represent a repayment to the district account by Klink and for which the defendant bank is given credit in the findings. The personal account of Klink in the defendant bank is outlined in the ledger sheets, Exhibits 29 to 44.

It is the contention of the plaintiffs, which seems to be borne out by the evidence, that Klink drew checks on the two district accounts and deposited the same in the defendant bank. The evidence further shows that Klink in dealing with the funds of the district was guilty of many forgeries, larcenies and embezzlements, and the new commissioners were unable to obtain an accounting from him as treasurer of the district. They finally took the matter into court and on December 7, 1929, obtained a peremptory mandamus order directing him to deliver all account books, bank books, canceled checks, receipted bills and other papers pertaining to the financial affairs of the water district to Messrs. Williams and Thorny, auditors for the water district (Exhibit 1). When he failed to comply with this order the commissioners, on December 16, 1929, obtained an order to show cause why he should not be punished for contempt of court (Exhibit 2), which was duly served upon him, and on December 21, 1929, an order was granted punishing him for his contempt (Exhibit 3); and it was while this order was in the sheriff’s hands to be executed that he took his life.

Klink did not turn over to the water district bis canceled checks drawn on the water district funds, but seven checks in all were found and produced in evidence, five of them forgeries and two of them unaltered and obtained from the Union Trust Company by the auditor for the district on November 29, 1929 (receipt, Exhibit 10). These last two checks (Exhibits 23 and 24) were drawn on the Union Trust Company to the order of Harold L. Klink and were deposited in his personal account in the defendant bank. The other five checks (Exhibits 16 to 20) were drawn on the Merchants Bank originally, payable to cash, in the amounts of $100, $100, $100, $75 and $100, indorsed by Harold L. Klink and deposited in the defendant bank; and it.is apparent that he took an ink eradicator and removed the name of the payee, the amount and the indorsement, and then substituted as payee someone to whom such a payment would appear to be proper, and forged that payee’s name on the back of the check and changed the amount to a figure which he needed to balance his books, in order to have an apparently clean record for the State Auditors, and these checks when intro[831]*831duced in evidence appeared to be payable to the following persons and in the following amounts:

George H. Bliven.................................. $619 31

W. S. Lozier...................................... 75 00

Rochester Vulcanite Pavement Company............. 1,100 00

George H. Bliven.................................. 880 00

George H. Bliven.................................. 510 00

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Bluebook (online)
145 Misc. 827, 261 N.Y.S. 826, 1932 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilliland-v-lincoln-alliance-bank-trust-co-nysupct-1932.