Lewine v. National City Bank

162 N.E. 284, 248 N.Y. 365, 1928 N.Y. LEXIS 1272
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 29, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 162 N.E. 284 (Lewine v. National City Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewine v. National City Bank, 162 N.E. 284, 248 N.Y. 365, 1928 N.Y. LEXIS 1272 (N.Y. 1928).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

During the war ordinary commercial transactions between the United States and Russia were interrupted. No Russian citizen might at will convert rubles into dollars to be expended here. And what might be bought was limited to those things likely to aid in the conflict. If such purchases were to be made, permission of the government was required. Application was to a bureau of the Ministry of Finance — called here the Chancellery — for the creation of a dollar fund in New York. It stated the amount required, the bank where it was to be deposited, the kind of goods to be bought, and often, at least, the Russian bank through whom orders were to be transmitted. If approval came the applicant paid the requisite amount of rubles to the Chancellery. It, acting through its own agencies, usually Baring Brothers in London and Kidder, Peabody & Co. in New York, made the deposit in the designated bank here. Often this happened to be the defendant, the National City Bank. Then goods were bought and paid for upon orders received through the Russian bank named for that purpose. This seems to have served two purposes. The New York bank was not acquainted with the merchant in Russia nor did it know his signature. Yet under war conditions speed was essential, and it could easily verify the authenticity of orders given by a bank in Petrograd. Too, the Chancellery wished to keep track of purchasers, wished to see that its permit was not abused and that the dollars furnished by it at a low rate of exchange were not diverted to unauthorized uses. It could most easily do so by its control over its own local banks. But with all these limitations and all these *370 various agencies, the money when finally deposited in New York was the property of the merchant who had purchased it of the Chancellery. The credit was his. Such was the regular course of business and with it all the defendant was entirely familiar. It had been engaged in many such transactions.

Under these peculiar circumstances and with this peculiar knowledge the defendant on May 12, 1916, received a letter from Kidder, Peabody & Co. The plaintiff, it appears, was a Russian merchant. In 1915 he had applied to the Chancellery for permission to deposit $200,000 in the City Bank. He described the goods to be bought and stated that orders would be transmitted through the Azoff Don Bank of Petrograd as to the disposal of the deposit. This bank was a large institution with which he had done business and was a correspondent of the defendant. The Chancellery gave its approval and Lewine thereupon paid it 400,000 rubles. The next he heard was a letter from the Azoff Don Bank informing him that the Chancellery had deposited $200,000 to his credit with the defendant. Of these details of the transaction the City Bank had no notice.

The Kidder, Peabody letter stated that at the cable request of Messrs. Baring Bros. & Co., Ltd., London, sent us in accordance instructions Foreign Section, Ministry Finance, Petrograd,’ ” they sent their check for $451,211.27, to be applied as follows.” Then came instructions as to the disposal of various amounts some to ■ be held “ at disposal ” of named persons, without more, but most “ at disposal ” of some one by order ” of others named. Among the latter is $200,000 disposal Banque Commerce Azoff Don, Petrograd, by order Engineer A. Levine, Petrograd.” As has been said the Azoff Don Bank was a correspondent of the City Bank. A general account existed between them. Involving large transactions as it apparently. did, it must have fluctuated from day to day. At this particular time there was against the Azoff Don Bank ai debit balance of *371 over $1,400,000. This seems of no great significance. What the City Bank did was to credit the $200,000 on this account and to cable and write the Azoff Don Bank that it had done so, saying that the amount had been received by order Engineer A. Levine, Petrograd,” from Kidder, Peabody & Co. at the request of Baring Bros. sent in accordance with instructions Minister of Finance, Section Strangers, Petrograd.” But this the plaintiff did not know. He supposed the $200,000 stood to his credit with the defendant.

Then came some purchases. They were financed by letters of credit issued by the City Bank upon instructions from the Azoff Don Bank saying they were ordered by “A. M. Lewine ” or by “A. Lewine,” whom the defendant may or may not have understood to be the Engineer A. Levine ” referred to in the Kidder, Peabody letter. Probably it did, for they were to be in favor of Lewine’s brother in Brooklyn, and with him the bank had communication. Discovery of the fact could hardly be avoided, but whether discovered or not it is not very material. In any event they totalled over $60,000. One hundred thousand dollars was also properly expended, leaving $39,945 of the $200,000 still unused.

It is unused, for the Russian government fell. No further importations of merchandise into Russia was possible. Lewine fled. The Azoff Don Bank was nationalized, at the time having a credit balance on the books of the defendant of $63,060.58. This sum, however, involved a credit of moneys not in fact belonging to the Russian bank. In reality it was a debtor in about $20,000. (Friede v. National City Bank, 222 App. Div. 644.)

The courts below have held that Lewine may recover this balance of $200,000 from the City Bank. Whether he may or not depends upon the instructions accompanying the receipt of the $200,000. If they mean that the City Bank is to credit that sum to the Azoff Don Bank *372 and that the reference to Lewine is merely to inform the latter as to the customer who is to receive credit on its books, then the defendant has done all it was required to do. If, on the contrary, it was to credit this deposit to Lewine, paying it out only on his order transmitted through the Azoff Don Bank as intermediary, then it should still have that balance in its possession. It should perhaps be said that if the second hypothesis is correct Lewine would be bound by any orders for payment given by the Azoff Don Bank.

We come back then to the meaning of the words used in the letter of instructions, "At the request of * * * Baring Bros. * * * sent us in accordance instructions Foreign Section Ministry Finance ’ * * * we beg to enclose our check * * * to be applied as follows * * * $200,000 disposal Bank * * * Azoff Don * * * by order Engineer A. Levine, Petrograd,” and signed “ Kidder, Peabody & Co.” In fixing the proper interpretation two matters are to be considered. We have not a letter written in ordinary times and under ordinary conditions. The situation was unusual as the defendant knew. Nor are we informed of any general or even of any local custom, existing which places any particular meaning upon the words used. We must give the language its ordinary meaning in view of all the circumstances surrounding the transaction.

When the City Bank received this letter it knew certain things as did the writer. It knew, as has been said, the course of business in Russia during war time, and the rules as to the purchase and importation of merchandise. It knew that Baring Bros, and Kidder, Peabody & Co.

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Bluebook (online)
162 N.E. 284, 248 N.Y. 365, 1928 N.Y. LEXIS 1272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewine-v-national-city-bank-ny-1928.