In re People

231 A.D. 303, 247 N.Y.S. 160, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 16041
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 9, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 231 A.D. 303 (In re People) 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 People, 231 A.D. 303, 247 N.Y.S. 160, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 16041 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinions

Finch, J.

The Alien Property Custodian, during the war, having demanded of the Second Russian Insurance Company payments due and to become due in the future under a foreign contract with an enemy alien, and the Second Russian Insurance Company having subsequently gone into liquidation, the question here presented is whether the aforesaid claim, brought by the Alien Property Custodian, may be allowed a preference over all other claims.

The Superintendent of Insurance, as liquidator, disallowed this claim. The Alien Property Custodian filed objections. Sent to a referee to hear and report, the preference was disallowed. At Special Term the motion of the Superintendent to confirm the report was denied, the objections on behalf of the Alien Property Custodian [305]*305were sustained, the claim allowed as a Class I claim with interest, and directed to be paid in preference to all other claims.

The facts are not in dispute and briefly are as follows: A German partnership known as H. Mutzenbecher, Jr., made a contract with the Second Russian Insurance Company, dated at St. Petersburg, July 24, 1913, whereby the Mutzenbecher firm was to be the general agent for all the business of the Second Russian Insurance Company outside of Russia, said firm to bear all expenses, to receive a commission of three and one-half per cent upon business obtained by it, and in addition to participate in the profits. The Mutzenbecher firm thereafter caused to be organized a corporation known as Meinel & Wemple, to act as agents for procuring business for the Second Russian Insurance Company and to manage a branch office of that company in this State. In 1916 the Russian government prohibited commercial relations between Russian citizens and citizens of enemy alien countries, in which class Germany was included. The Second Russian Insurance Company then purported to enter into a direct agency contract with Meinel & Wemple. This contract subsequently was held to be colorable merely and that the original contract between the Second Russian Insurance Company and Mutzenbecher continued in force. (Second Russian Ins. Co. v. Miller, 268 U. S. 557.) After the entry of the United States into the World War, the Alien Property Custodian, in 1918, demanded of the New York trustees of the Second Russian Insurance Company the sum of $15,801.31, representing commissions then due to the Mutzenbecher firm, which commissions, as they accrued, had been placed by Meinel & Wemple in a so-called suspense account for the benefit of Mutzenbecher. The amount demanded was paid over and an action brought pursuant to section 9 of the Trading with the Enemy Act (40 U. S. Stat. at Large, 419, as since amd.) to recover it. In that action it was held that the property was that of an alien enemy and that the Alien Property Custodian was lawfully entitled thereto. On or about June 26, 1919, a second demand was made by the Alien Property Custodian upon Meinel & Wemple for all commissions due Mutzenbecher under the aforesaid contract and to become due in the future. At the time of this latter demand there was on deposit in the said suspense account the sum of $13,032.43. At this time also there was pending an appeal from the judgment denying the right in the action brought to recover the amount paid over upon the former demand. It was accordingly stipulated that the sum of $13,032.43 would be returned to the Second Russian Insurance Company and that if the latter were unsuccessful in the action brought to recover the fund which had been seized, this amount [306]*306would be returned to the Alien Property Custodian. ' Subsequently the Second Russian Insurance Company went into liquidation and, on behalf of the Alien Property Custodian, a claim was filed for the said sum of $13,032.43, which claim, at the hearing, was amended so as to include all additional commissions accruing under the contract subsequent to the second demand of the Alien Property Custodian.

From the foregoing it appears that the claim in question is composed of two distinct parts: First, of the aforesaid sum of $13,032.43, which existed at the time of the demand; and second, the amount subsequently deposited in the fund representing commissions accruing after the demand. At the outset, therefore, the question is presented whether the Custodian is not entitled to the sum of $13,032.43, pursuant to the stipulation and the authority of Second Russian Insurance Company v. Miller (268 U. S. 552), in which possession of the amount involved in the first demand was confirmed in the Alien Property Custodian, and also the commissions subsequently accruing in the event they are covered by the aforesaid demand.

As to the first item, the right of the Alien Property Custodian to receive this amount forthwith is established by the decision made in the case of Second Russian Insurance Company v. Miller (supra), which involved a prior demand for accumulated commissions under the same contract. The second demand, in so far as the sum of $13,032.43 is concerned, presented the identical question determined in the case cited, namely, the absolute right of the Custodian to possession or control of the property demanded. The Custodian is also entitled to this amount pursuant to the stipulation of the parties based upon the outcome of the appeal in Second Russian Insurance Company v. Miller (supra).

As to the balance of the claim, representing commissions not yet earned under the contract at the time of the demand, but which subsequently were earned and deposited in the suspense account pending a determination of the appeal in the suit arising out of the first demand, a somewhat different question is presented. It would seem, however, that as to this portion of the claim, also, under the facts, the Custodian is entitled to succeed.

The demand of the Custodian was broad enough to cover all the interest of the alien enemy in the contract in question, and to require the delivery of all commissions presently payable thereunder, and to acquire the right to the delivery of such as might from time to time be received in the future. Authority in the Custodian to make such a demand is found in subdivision 2 of the executive order of the President of February 26, 1918, quoted in full in the case of Matter [307]*307of Miller (281 Fed. 764), which case also is authority for the proposition that every right in the property involved, whether tangible or intangible, passed under the demand to the Alien Property Custodian.

Under the facts in the case at bar it was not necessary, nor would it have been seemly, in view of the pending appeal with reference to the first demand, for the Custodian to have made a separate demand covering each commission arising under the contract. The fact is that these commissions to accrue out of the contract seized were contemplated by all the parties to be included within the demand, and when they were received and deposited in the same fund and account as was the amount already received when the demand was made, the right of the Custodian attached to such moneys subsequently received as absolutely as it did to the moneys existing at the time of the demand. (Matter of Miller, 281 Fed. 764; Garvan v. Marconi Wireless Telegraph Co., 275 id. 486, 488.) The cases of Miller v. Rouse (276 Fed. 715) and Kahn v. Garvan (263 id. 909), relied upon by the appellants, contain no holding to the contrary.

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Bluebook (online)
231 A.D. 303, 247 N.Y.S. 160, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 16041, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-people-nyappdiv-1931.