Kavanaugh v. McIntyre

74 Misc. 222, 133 N.Y.S. 679
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 74 Misc. 222 (Kavanaugh v. McIntyre) 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
Kavanaugh v. McIntyre, 74 Misc. 222, 133 N.Y.S. 679 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Kellogg, J. A., J.

The answering defendants, together with Thomas A. McIntyre, now deceased, and one Ryan, named as a defendant in this action but not served, constituted, in the early months of the year 1908, a brokerage firm engaged in business as such in the city of Mew York under the name of T. A. McIntyre & Co.

One George W. Kavanaugh, a brother of the plaintiff; had, at some time prior to the transactions hereinafter detailed, a cotton account and also a stock account with another brokerage firm, known as A. 0. Brown & Co. Being indebted to his brother, the plaintiff, he transferred to him his interest in this stock account with A. C. Brown & Co.

On the 5th day of February, 1908, the plaintiff was indebted to A. 0. Brown & Co., upon this stock account, to the amount of $3,853.32; and they held, as security therefor, stocks i-n various corporations listed upon the Mew York Stock Exchange of the value of approximately $25,000, being more than six times the amount of the indebtedness.

On that day, by direction of the plaintiff, the firm of T. A. McIntyre & Co. took over this account, received the certificates of stock and paid the amount due Brown & Co., thus succeeding to their interests. They also, apparently through a misunderstanding, took , over the cotton account, which was shortly afterward closed out at a small profit [224]*224which is still due to the plaintiff or his brother, but which does not in any way affect the questions here to be considered.

Almost immediately thereafter and commencing on the very next day, this firm, without any. notice to the plaintiff or demand of any kind upon him, disposed of these various securities, placing the avails thereof in their own bank account.

The various stocks had all been disposed of prior to the 18th of March, 1908;. and three-fourths in value thereof had been disposed of on or prior to February fourteenth, or within nine days after the acquisition of the possession thereof by defendants firm.

On April twenty-third of that year, the copartnership filed a petition in bankruptcy and, during the pendency of this action,' the answering defendants obtained their discharge in bankruptcy, which fact was thereafter pleaded herein as a defense. . ‘

At the commencement of this action, in May, 1908, an order of arrest was granted. A motion to vacate this order was. denied, and from the order of denial an appeal was taken to the Appellate Division of this department, which unanimously affirmed the order appealed from.

The opinion of the court, delivered by Mr. Justice Cochrane, reported in 128 App. Div. 722, renders unnecessary any elaborate consideration of the principles of law here involved.

■ The defendants claimed to be exempt from arrest. Section 9 of the Federal Bankruptcy Law provides that a bankrupt shall not be exempt from arrest upon civil process upon a claim from which his discharge in bankruptcy would not be a release, and, in section 17, in its second subdivision, provides that a discharge in bankruptcy shall not release a bankrupt from liability “ for wilful and .malicious injuries 'to the person or property of another.”'

The decision of the Appellate Division was to the effect that an order of arrést was properly issued in .this case and is, therefore, conclusive upon this court as_ a holding that a liability for a conversion which is wilful and malicious is not released upon discharge in bankruptcy.

[225]*225The learned opinion of Hr. Justice Cochrane holds that the term malicious,” as used in the -statute, includes any wrongful act done intentionally, without just" cause or excuse,— a conclusion at which he arrives after a very elaborate and careful examination of the decisions of the courts and the works of the legal lexicographers.

The allegations of the complaint and the affidavit used on that motion, as stated by the learned justice, were to the effect “ that almost immediately after the defendants came into possession of this property they began to sell it to different parties and continued to make such sales from time to time, without plaintiff’s- knowledge, after they had realized more than sufficient to pay the amount due them from plaintiff and applied the avails to their purposes.” P. 129.

These facts, set forth in the affidavits upon which the order . of arrest was sustained by the Appellate Division, were amply proven upon the trial before this court.

The learned counsel for -the defendants urges that the decision in this case in this department has since been disregarded by the Appellate Division in the first department in Maxwell v. Martin, 130 App. Div. 80, and that the United States District Court in the southern district of ISTew York has expressly refused to follow the decision in the case of Matter of Ennis & Stoppani, 171 Fed. Rep. 155.

The decision in the Appellate Division is, of course, authority here, and would be followed in any event.

An examination of. the decision in Maxwell v. Martin shows that it was based upon the authority of decisions made before the amendment to the act in 1903, upon which amend.ment the decision of our own Appellate Division was, in a measure, founded; and an examination of the case of Matter of Ennis & Stoppani shows the decision of Judge Hand is based upon a narrow construction which holds that a “ conversion ” is not an “ injury to property.” He states, “ Injury to person and property means causing damage to the subject-matter of-the rights, not depriving the owner of them.” This narrow construction of the term “ injury to property ” is not in harmony with the accepted definition.

Bouvier expressly defines it as follows: Injuries to per[226]*226sonal property are the unlawful taking and detention thereof from the owner; and other injuries are some damage affecting the same while in the claimant’s possession or that of a third person, or injuries to his reversionary interests.” See 1 Bouvier Law Diet. (Eawle’s Eev.) 1044.

To hold that a person is not injured in his property where some portion of it is actually taken away from him, hut only when it is all left in his possession, reduced in value, does not give effect to the accepted meaning of the phrase in legal parlance.

The definition of the Code of Civil Procedure (§ 3348, suhd. 10) is, “An injury to property ’ is an actionable act, whereby the estate of another is lessened, other than a personal injury, or the breach of a contract.” Although ex.pressly applicable only to that particular statute, this interpretation of the meaning of -the term is in full accordance with the generally accepted understanding.

The narrow construction contended for, which would permit the perpetration of such a barefaced wrong as in the case at bar without any civil liability surviving a discharge in bankruptcy, would be highly improper and should not be struggled for, if any other interpretation of the statute is in any view permissible.

Mr. Justice Peckham, in writing the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States in Tinker v. Colwell, 193 U. S. 473, in discussing the meaning of the term “malice,” as used in this very section under consideration, wrote, “ We are not inclined "to place such a narrow construction upon the language of the exception.

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Bluebook (online)
74 Misc. 222, 133 N.Y.S. 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kavanaugh-v-mcintyre-nysupct-1911.