Havana Central Railroad v. Knickerbocker Trust Co.

92 N.E. 12, 198 N.Y. 422, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 816
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 17, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 92 N.E. 12 (Havana Central Railroad v. Knickerbocker Trust Co.) 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
Havana Central Railroad v. Knickerbocker Trust Co., 92 N.E. 12, 198 N.Y. 422, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 816 (N.Y. 1910).

Opinion

Willard Bartlett, J.

This appeal involves the sufficiency of a complaint which contains the following allegations:

The plaintiff is a New Jersey corporation organized to *426 operate a railroad in the island of Cuba. The defendant is a Hew York corporation authorized to do the business of a trust company, including the receipt of deposits and the withdrawal of the same on checks, drafts or orders, with its principal place of business in the city of Hew York. On February 23, 1906, the plaintiff by C. W. Yan Yoorhis, its treasurer, opened a deposit account with the Central Trust Company of Hew York in its name, under an arrangement by which checks drawn upon said account were to bear the following signature : “ Havana Central Railroad Company, C. W. Yan Yoorhis, Treasurer.” Between April 21st and June 15th, 1906, without the knowledge of any other officer or employee of the plaintiff, C. W. Yan Yoorhis drew and signed three checks upon this account with the Central Trust Company, the first dated April 21, 1906, for $22,461.81, payable to the order of W. M. Greenwood or C. W. Yan Yoorhis, the second dated May 23, 1906, for $21,944.45, payable in the alternative to the same persons, and the third, dated June 14, 1906, for $15,000, payable like the two others. Each of these checks was signed Havana Central Railroad Company, C. W. Yan Yoorhis, Treasurer;” each was indorsed by C. W. Yan Yoorhis, and each was deposited by him in a hank account in his own individual name which he kept with the defendant. The first and third checks were accepted by the Central Trust Company before payment and the amount of each check was paid by the Central Trust Company to the defendant and credited by the defendant to C. W. Yan Yoorhis in his individual bank account already mentioned. The Central Trust Company charged such jsayments to the plaintiff corporation. After the deposit with the defendant of the amounts represented by these checks in the individual account of C. W. Yan Yoorhis he was permitted to draw upon said account and did draw upon it until July 7,1906, when the account was closed.

The complaint further alleges that C. W. Yan Yoorhis .deposited the checks and used the proceeds thereof for his own purposes without any right or authority so to do and that he had no right or authority to draw upon the account of th *427 plaintiff or to use its funds excejit for the purposes of the plaintiff’s business, and that the plaintiff was not at any of the times heretofore mentioned indebted to C. W. Van Voorhis in any sum whatsoever; and that notice or inquiry by the defendant to and of the plaintiff would have revealed these facts and would have shown that by drawing the checks in the form already described and depositing them in his individual account with the defendant, the said C. W. Van Voorhis was wrongfully misappropriating and converting the same to his own use, but the defendant did not make any inquiry of the plaintiff or any one else concerning the checks or give any notice to the plaintiff in regard to their deposit with the defendant. It is alleged that on account of these matters the defendant has had and received $59,406.26 of the moneys of the plaintiff and thereby became indebted to the plaintiff in said sum, no part of which has been paid except that $3,597.91 has been received by the plaintiff from the said C. W. Van Voorhis in reduction of the amount represented by the third check.

It will be observed that the comqdaint contains no averment of any conversion by the defendant. The only conversion alleged is a misappropriation by C. W. Van Voorhis, the plaintiff’s treasurer. The action is for money had and received, the manifest theory of the pleader being that the defendant by receiving the checks for deposit in the individual personal account of the plaintiff’s treasurer under the circumstances disclosed by the complaint has become legally obligated to repay the money represented by those checks to the plaintiff corporation. This theory is based on the proposition that the checks when presented to the defendant for deposit bore upon their face what the learned counsel for the respondent calls “ a shadow,” which ought to have prevented the defendant from taking them or collecting the proceeds without inquiry from some responsible officer of the plaintiff corporation other than its treasurer as to his authority to draw checks against the funds of the corporation payable to his own individual order.

*428 The complaint does not allege that C. W. Van Voorliis, the plaintiff’s treasurer, was not authorized to draw checks in this form. It merely avers that he had “ no right or authority to draw upon said account of the plaintiff or to use its funds except for the purposes of the plaintiff’s business.” This averment does not negative the idea that the purposes of the plaintiff’s business may have required its treasurer on occasion to draw checks upon the corporation account payable to himself individually; the allegation simply amounts to an averment that he was not authorized to draw these particular checks to his own order, and that the defendant could have ascertained that fact upon due inquiry. The case really turns upon a determination as to what were the rights of the defendant and its duties toward the plaintiff upon the presentation of the checks for deposit in the individual account of the treasurer.

The defendant could properly regard the checks as the property of C. W.- Van Voorliis. The possession of a bank check payable to the order of the holder is presumptive evidence of ownership. (2 Daniel on Negotiable Instruments [4th ed.], § 1652.) In behalf of the respondent it is argued that the fact that the checks were drawn by the treasurer in behalf of the corporation payable to himself individually cast suspicion upon them, and imposed upon the banking institution to which they were offered for deposit a duty to make some inquiry as to their validity before it dealt with them as the property of the payee. If it be conceded that the offer of such a check for deposit to the individual account of an officer calls for some inquiry on the part of the bank to which it is offered as to the extent of his authority in the premises, I am of opinion that the Knickerbocker Trust Company in the present case did all that the law demands. When it caused the three checks to be presented to the Central Trust Company for payment it thereby virtually made a twofold inquiry of that institution (1) Whether the checks bore the genuine signature of an officer authorized to sign checks in behalf of the Havana Centra Railroad Company ; and (2) whether C. W. Van Voorliis, tli *429 treasurer of the Havana Central Railroad Company, had authority to draw checks upon the account of the corporation payable to his individual account. The drawee of a bill of exchange is bound to know the signature of the drawer and his capacity to draw the bill. (1 Daniel on Negotiable Instruments [4th ed.], §§ 534, 535.) The acceptance of the bill is an acknowledgment of the genuineness of the signature and the authority of the drawer. So the payment of these checks by the Central Trust Company upon their presentation at the instance of the Knickerbocker Trust Company was an acknowledgment by the deposit bank of the Havana Central Railroad Company that C. W.

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.E. 12, 198 N.Y. 422, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/havana-central-railroad-v-knickerbocker-trust-co-ny-1910.