Lebaudy v. Carnegie Trust Co.

90 Misc. 490, 154 N.Y.S. 900
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 90 Misc. 490 (Lebaudy v. Carnegie Trust Co.) 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
Lebaudy v. Carnegie Trust Co., 90 Misc. 490, 154 N.Y.S. 900 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

Shearn, J.

In this action plaintiff seeks to have if | adjudged that a trust exists with respect to certain moneys of the plaintiff and demands judgment for an accounting and a decree that all moneys found due the j plaintiff should he paid in preference to the general creditors of the insolvent Carnegie Trust" Company, which is in the hands of the superintendent of banks, in liquidation. The trust company was not acting as trustee by virtue of judicial appointment, and therefore, under the authority of Madison Trust Company v. Carnegie Trust Company, 167 App. Div. 4, the plaintiff is not entitled to any preference by the statute. The contention that plaintiff is entitled to a preference in equity requires consideration.

On and prior to April 20, 1909, plaintiff owned certain property situated in the republic of France, consisting of estates in real property and of personalty and choses in action. On shid date, plaintiff delivered to the Carnegie Trust Company a power of attorney duly executed February 25, 1909, .empowering it to receive, take possession of, manage and dispose of all his property in the republic of France, in such manner and on such terms as might be deemed expedient. "With the power of attorney plaintiff delivered to the defendant a letter signed by him dated April 12, 1909, in which,

' referring to the power of attorney and the services to be performed thereunder, it was stated: “For this service the Carnegie Trust Company shall receive a commission of ten per cent (10%) of the net cash receipts derived from the undertaking, and shall hold the proceeds thereof for my account until otherwise instructed.” The trust company, by letter dated April 20, 1909, acknowledged receipt of the power of attorney and said letter of April twelfth, stating: “ Both of the instruments are entirely satisfactory to us, and [493]*493we accept the trust in accordance with the terms therein expressed.” At the time of the appointment of the trust company as attorney for the plaintiff, it was agreed between the parties that the trust company would send its vice-president, James Boss Cur-ran, as its representative, to France, and would endeavor to dispose of all of the property and interests of the plaintiff there. On or about April 23, 1909, the trust company exercised the power of substitution conferred upon it by the power of attorney, and appointed the said James Boss Curran and S. Gf. Archibald, an American lawyer located in Paris, as substituted attorneys of the plaintiff, to exercise all the powers conferred by the original power of attorney. Thereafter Messrs. Curran and Archibald purported to and did act as substituted attorneys of the plaintiff in connection with his property and affairs in the republic of France, and between May 1, 1909, and February 28, 1910, Mr. Archibald collected certain sums of money representing rents and profits from the plaintiff’s property in France and money on deposit. On April 29, 1909, plaintiff delivered to the trust company 149 coupons of Suez Canal bonds with instructions that the coupons be collected and the proceeds credited to the plaintiff’s account with the trust company. The coupons were forwarded by the trust company to Mr. Curran at Paris, who placed them in the hands of a bank in Paris, which collected the coupons and credited the account of the trust company with the proceeds. The trust company received notice of the credit on May 25, 1909, and thereupon opened an account in its trust ledger with Jacques Lebaudy,” the plaintiff. The account was an ordinary debit and credit account and was opened by crediting the plaintiff with the sum of $3,155, representing the proceeds of said [494]*494coupons. The form of- the statement of account, by debit and credit, was approved by the plaintiff, who wrote the trust company that his long experience in banking had satisfied him that this form of statement was the only practical one. From the time the account was opened, all collections made by the trust company for the plaintiff were credited to the plaintiff in this account, and all withdrawals by the plaintiff and expenses incurred by the trust company in executing the power of attorney were charged against the plaintiff in this account. It was agreed between the parties that interest should be paid on the account of the plaintiff with the trust company at the Bank of England rate, in whosesoever favor the balance might be. The trust company, not being a member of the clearing house, maintained a bank account with the National City Bank. This was an ordinary bank account maintained by the trust company in the ordinary course of its business, and in this account the trust company deposited from eighty to ninety per cent, of the general deposits of cash, checks and drafts received by it from its depositors, both ordinary bank depositors and those who deposited funds with it as trustee or in a quasi trust capacity. In this account the trust company also deposited cash, checks and drafts paid to it in the ordinary course of business. Against the credits created by such deposits, made by the trust company with the National City Bank, funds were drawn by the trust company in the ordinary course of its business, for cash and for the payment of funds due from the trust company on account of its own general transactions and on account of checks drawn upon it by depositors which were accepted by it, payable out of its said National City Bank account. There was no fixed level at which the balance to the credit of the trust

[495]*495company in the National City Bank was required to be maintained, and there is no evidence that there was at all times maintained a balance except such as was required from hour to hour during banking hours to meet drafts which had been made on the account and which were being presented constantly during the day to the National City Bank for payment out of the balance. During the period which elapsed between the timé when the proceeds of the collections made by the trust company under the power of attorney were deposited to the credit of its account with the National City Bank and the time when the trust company was closed on January 7, 1911, there were a number of days when, at the close of business, there was to the credit of the account less than $150,000; at the close of business on March 25,1910, there-was a credit balance of only $79,448; and on January 7, 1911, when the trust company ceased doing business, there was a credit balance to said account of $462,015. The only permanent record maintained by the National City Bank of the balance to the credit of the account was the record of the balance standing to the credit of the account at the close of business each day. There were debited against the account every banking day large numbers of drafts upon it in the form of checks, acceptances and certifications, and there were credited to it every banking day large numbers of deposits, made sometimes in twelve or fifteen batches during the day. Moneys deposited with the trust company, as trustee, and moneys deposited with it by individuals known to be acting in trust capacities were re-deposited by it in the National City Bank account, and mingled with the defendant’s ordinary deposits in the same manner in which -the proceeds of the collections made by the defendant under the power of attorney were mingled. [496]*496On March 25, 1910, there was over $400,000 of such trust funds represented in this account, which varied from said low level of $49,448 to over $1,000,000, during the period when plaintiff’s funds were being deposited in said account.

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Related

In re United Security Trust Co.
20 Pa. D. & C. 78 (Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
90 Misc. 490, 154 N.Y.S. 900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lebaudy-v-carnegie-trust-co-nysupct-1915.