Intercontinental Credit Corp. Division of Pan American Trade Development Corp. v. Roth

152 Misc. 2d 751, 578 N.Y.S.2d 955, 1990 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 754
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 152 Misc. 2d 751 (Intercontinental Credit Corp. Division of Pan American Trade Development Corp. v. Roth) 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
Intercontinental Credit Corp. Division of Pan American Trade Development Corp. v. Roth, 152 Misc. 2d 751, 578 N.Y.S.2d 955, 1990 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 754 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1990).

Opinion

[752]*752OPINION OF THE COURT

Edward J. Greenfield, J.

Garnishee and nonparty witness Bank Leumi le- Israel B.M. (Bank Leumi) moves (by order to show cause) for an order pursuant to CPLR 2304 and 5240 (1) vacating and/or modifying a restraining notice served upon Bank Leumi, to the extent that it seeks to restrain the bank from transferring any assets of the defendant judgment debtor, Henry A. Roth (Roth), held by the bank outside the State of New York; (2) vacating and/or modifying a subpoena duces tecum served upon Bank Leumi to the extent that such subpoena seeks documents or information regarding assets of Roth held in Bank Leumi branches located outside the State of New York, and regarding an entity known as "Yasour”; (3) vacating and/ or modifying a notice to take depositions to the extent that the notice relates to Roth’s bank accounts located outside the State of New York.

Plaintiff, Intercontinental Credit Corp. (ICC), has obtained a judgment against Roth for a sum in excess of $19 million and seeks to collect against assets of Roth which may be held by Bank Leumi in Israel. Bank Leumi is an Israeli bank which claims to have no branches in New York, although it does have a licensed "agency” in New York. Bank Leumi has a subsidiary named Bank Leumi Trust Co. which is a duly licensed New York bank. Movant maintains that the New York agency does not have access to information or control regarding accounts of customers located in Israel. The bank claims that it has no centralized computer system under which the New York agency could locate the Israeli branches, if any, at which the judgment debtor maintains an account. Essentially, Bank Leumi maintains that under New York law, a New York-based branch cannot be served with process to enforce a judgment against the debtor’s assets located at a foreign branch of the bank, and that the bank would be subject to civil and criminal penalties under Israeli secrecy laws if it were to reveal the information sought by ICC.

It is true, as Bank Leumi maintains, that a New York court cannot attach property not within its jurisdiction (see, McCloskey v Chase Manhattan Bank, 11 NY2d 936; Gavilanes v Matavosian, 123 Misc 2d 868). However, the mere fact that enforcement of the instant judgment as against Roth’s assets held in Israel must be obtained through the Israeli courts, by means of comity, does not necessarily deprive the New York [753]*753courts of their ability to enforce a New York subpoena designed to reveal the whereabouts of assets located in foreign jurisdictions.

Under traditional rules, each bank branch was considered a separate entity and the New York courts declined to direct New York agencies of foreign banks to comply with subpoenas designed to uncover foreign assets. In Cronan v Schilling (100 NYS2d 474, affd 282 App Div 940 [1st Dept 1953]), the court vacated a subpoena duces tecum served on a New York agency of a Swiss bank to the extent that it sought information regarding assets located in Switzerland. The rationale was that since each branch was a "separate entity”, no bank branch could safely pay a check drawn by a depositor without checking with all other branches to ascertain whether an attachment had been served on any of them. In Newtown Jackson Co. v Animashaun (148 NYS2d 66 [Sup Ct, Nassau County 1955]), the court vacated an ex parte order calling for an examination in aid of attachment. The court indicated that the records sought were located elsewhere and that the New York agency of Barclay’s Bank had no knowledge of accounts located in a foreign jurisdiction.

Concepts of banking, however, have been changing in recent years. In Digitrex, Inc. v Johnson (491 F Supp 66 [SD NY 1980]), in an action to enforce a foreign judgment in New York, the judgment debtor moved for an order directing the garnishee bank to release assets which had been frozen pursuant to a restraining notice served on the bank’s main office. The court denied the motion, holding that the restraining notice was sufficient to restrain transfer of assets from an account located at one of the bank branches in the State. Although the court noted the traditional rules (citing Siegel, 1978 Practice Commentaries, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 7B, CPLR C5222:5, 5201:13, and cases such as Cronan v Schilling, supra), the court stated that those rules no longer had vitality in light of the high-speed computers with central indexing capabilities to keep track of depositors’ accounts. The court cited the following quote from counsel for Manufacturer’s Hanover Trust (supra, at 68): " 'The employment of these computers, together with other sophisticated communications equipment, has enabled the Bank to monitor checking accounts from its main office. This, in turn, has permitted the centralization at the main office of many administrative functions, such as the imposition of a hold on a depositor’s account. Under these circumstances, service of a restraining [754]*754notice at the Bank’s main office promotes, rather than endangers, the orderly transaction of the banking business.’ ”

The Appellate Division in the case of Therm-X-Chemical & Oil Corp. v Extebank (84 AD2d 787) placed significant limitations on Digitrex. Therm-X was an action by a judgment creditor to recover against a local bank branch which had paid out funds to the judgment debtor despite a restraining notice served upon the bank at its main office by a judgment creditor. The court dismissed the action, holding that where the main office had no knowledge of accounts maintained at the branch offices and the bank lacked a central computer system, cases such as Cronan (supra) and McCloskey (supra) were still the law and the bank could not be held liable for transfer of funds out of the branch offices. However, Therm-X deals with a limited issue (liability for a mistake in failing to locate an account) and does not appear to preclude an examination by a judgment creditor designed to reveal the location of assets.

In Gavilanes v Matavosian (123 Misc 2d 868 [Civ Ct, Queens County 1984], supra), a New York court ordered Bank America to respond to a judgment creditor’s subpoena relating to the debtor’s assets located in a particular branch in San Francisco. Although Bank America denied that it had the type of central computer system described in Digitrex (supra), the court did not have to deal with the issue because the judgment creditor specified both the bank branch and the account number which the bank was to be required to search. Gavilanes (supra) distinguished the Cronan (supra) line of cases on the ground that these involved prejudgment attachment and stated that once a judgment had been obtained, the court had broad power under CPLR 5223 to compel disclosure of matters relevant to the satisfaction of the judgment. One postjudgment supplementary proceedings case, Walsh v Bustos (46 NYS2d 240), had struck down a demand to have the Bank of Mexico respond to a subpoena seeking information relating to Mexican accounts. The Gavilanes court, however, distinguished Walsh on the ground that the Walsh holding was based upon prejudgment attachment cases.

In Raji v Bank Sepah-Iran (139 Misc 2d 1026 [Sup Ct, NY County 1988]), the court upheld a subpoena designed to locate assets held by the judgment debtor in each branch of the bank. In that case, the bank itself was the judgment debtor rather than a nonparty garnishee. However, Raji

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Bluebook (online)
152 Misc. 2d 751, 578 N.Y.S.2d 955, 1990 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/intercontinental-credit-corp-division-of-pan-american-trade-development-nysupct-1990.