In re Glicksberg

234 A.D. 539, 255 N.Y.S. 282, 1932 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10483
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 11, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 234 A.D. 539 (In re Glicksberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Glicksberg, 234 A.D. 539, 255 N.Y.S. 282, 1932 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10483 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinions

Sherman, J.

The petitioner on December 1, 1930, paid to the Bank of United States the sum of $500 with directions to transmit [540]*540it to an individual at Warsaw, Poland, which the bank promised and agreed to do and gave him a receipt therefor. Stamped “ paid ” by the bank, it states the payment by petitioner of the sum of $500, plus a charge of $2.50, malting a total of $502.50 “ for the transmission of U. S. Dollars $500 ” to one Majufes, at Warsaw, subject to printed conditions on its reverse side at the foot of which petitioner placed his signature. This paper (in form a mere receipt) is therein referred to as a “ money order,” and petitioner as the purchaser,” who requests the bank “ to forward to his account and risk the amount stated on the reverse side hereof, or its equivalent in foreign currency at the option of the Bank of United States in accordance with ” its terms and conditions. The Bank of United States was to be “ liable only as agent for the purchaser,” and it had the right to forward the order for execution to a foreign correspondent and instruct him to charge the bank’s credit balance with the amount of the order, to execute the same,” and the bank, as well as its correspondents, had the option of executing it in any foreign exchange or currency regularly used in the place of payment. The bank, its correspondents or representatives assumed no liability for inability to forward or deliver such money except for gross negligence.” It provided for fixing the amount payable in the event that this order should, be converted by the Bank of United States or its correspondents.” It likewise exempted the Bank of United States from liability for delay or non-delivery ” by its correspondents to the payee.

Nothing has been paid to Majufes by the Bank of United States or any of its correspondents. The property and business of the Bank of United States, since December 11, 1930, has been administered by the Superintendent of Banks because of its insolvency. The affidavit of the Deputy Bank Superintendent asserts upon information and belief that the bank had a balance with a certain bank at Warsaw, to which it was accustomed to forward by letter a fist containing the names of individuals in whose favor it might desire that credit be established at that bank, and that on the day following such mailing the Bank of United States would credit the Warsaw Bank with the dollar equivalent, and that upon the receipt of the fist from the Bank of United States,, the Warsaw bank would notify the nominees therein named of the existence of the credit in their favor.

Examining the documents we find that on December 3, 1930, the Bank of United States mailed a letter to the bank in Warsaw, but it mentioned nothing about establishing a credit, its language being, “ Kindly make the following payments for our account, under advice to us.”

[541]*541The name and address of Majufes and the amount $500 are among those there set forth, to whom payment was to be made.

The Superintendent of Banks, on December eleventh, cabled to the Warsaw bank not to pay on any unexecuted directions from the Bank of United States. The Warsaw bank had not at that time received the communication from the Bank of United States relating to payment to petitioner’s nominee. It accordingly has made no payment. The Superintendent of Banks holds petitioner’s money, denies that it should be treated as a special deposit, and claims that it has entered into the general funds of the bank, and that petitioner has become a general creditor and not entitled to a preferential payment.

The determination to be reached in this matter depends upon the relationship of the parties, the language of the writing which expresses the undertaldng of the bank, and the intent to be derived therefrom. Petitioner did not purchase anything from the bank. He did not obtain any draft or foreign credit or instrument of any kind issued by the bank which by its terms was calculated to make him or his nominee the owner of any credit. The engagement of the Bank of United States was to transmit $500 to petitioner’s nominee, as his agent, with the right on its part to perform that agency by means of such machinery currently used to effectuate the transfer of moneys to individuals in another country as it might select. It made a charge for that service. Under those circumstances, no mere debtor and creditor relationship arose, but one fiduciary in character such as obtains between a principal and his agent. If the Bank of United States had proposed to sell to petitioner a credit or a draft it could have used clear language to that end and have delivered to him not a mere receipt but an instrument couched in apposite terms. It chose, on the contrary, to become his agent. Under such circumstances, neither the bank nor the Superintendent of Banks obtained the right to the use of petitioner’s moneys to defray the'bank’s obligations. It was the bank’s duty to treat it as a special deposit.

In Matter of Littman v. Broderick (232 App. Div. 538) the petitioner delivered moneys to the Bank of United States “to be transmitted by cable or radio ” to an individual at Havana, Cuba. This transaction was to be a mere cable transfer and through the Royal Bank of Canada a credit in favor of petitioner’s nominee was established at Havana, but he declined to accept it. Advised that the moneys had not been paid over, the Superintendent of Banks, who had meanwhile taken possession of the Bank of United States, debited the Royal Bank of Canada with the amount with which it had previously been credited. This was in effect crediting it to, [542]*542and appropriating it for, the Bank of United States. This court (Martin, J.) said (p. 539): “ We are of the opinion that the original transaction between the Bank of United States and the petitioner herein resulted in a special deposit and did not create the relationship of debtor and creditor. The cable advice stated that the money was the property of the petitioner, and upon receipt thereof the respondent should have held it for the benefit of the appellant. The respondent was without authority to credit the Royal Bank of Canada with the funds received as they were the property of the petitioner, and not the property of that bank.”

■ In Cutler v. American Exchange National Bank (113 N. Y. 593) moneys were delivered by plaintiffs to defendant for payment to one Hall in Leadville, Col., which payment was not made. The court held: The deposit was a special one for a designated beneficiary and could not be used or dedicated by the defendant to any other purpose.”

In Legniti v. Mechanics & Metals National Bank (230 N. Y. 415) the paper delivered to Legniti by A. Bolognesi & Co. on its face showed that it was a purchase of a cable transfer. Analyzing the effect of a purchase of credit, Judge Crane, in reversing the judgment appealed from, concluded that any money paid by the customer to the banker upon such a purchase became the latter’s property; that the transaction did not establish any trust relationship, the banker not even holding the money as agent or trustee until the foreign credit be established. The opinion continues (p. 420): “ There is a marked distinction between these transactions which I have just described and a direction to a bank or other person to transmit a certain specific sum of money to a person abroad.

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Bluebook (online)
234 A.D. 539, 255 N.Y.S. 282, 1932 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-glicksberg-nyappdiv-1932.