Martin v. Gotham National Bank

126 Misc. 7, 211 N.Y.S. 828, 1925 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1042
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 19, 1925
StatusPublished

This text of 126 Misc. 7 (Martin v. Gotham National Bank) 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
Martin v. Gotham National Bank, 126 Misc. 7, 211 N.Y.S. 828, 1925 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1042 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1925).

Opinion

Faber, J.

The complaint alleges, among other things, that the defendants O’Shea and Montville Construction Company were engaged in a contracting business, O’Shea owning practically all of the stock of the company and controlling it; that the defendants Banning and Lockwood were agents and employees of the defendant Gotham National Bank of New York, Banning being one of the assistant vice-presidents; that, prior to the month of April, 1923, the bank had loaned O’Shea or the Montville Construction Company about $2,400, which loan was evidenced by a promissory note of the construction company and O’Shea, payable to the order of the bank, falling due the early part of the month of April, 1923; that the plaintiff became acquainted with the bank and its agents and employees, the defendants Banning and Lockwood, the latter part of April, 1923; that at that time the bank was seeking to collect its said loan made to O’Shea and the construction company, the note having been at that time protested for non-payment; that the defendants Banning and Lockwood represented to the plaintiff that the bank desired to collect its- indebtedness from O’Shea and the construction company, and that said company and O’Shea were also desirous of securing additional money to pay off indebtedness and to finance construction contracts; and that the defendants all made false and fraudulent representations to the plaintiff in April, 1923, upon the faith of which plaintiff advanced $15,000. The complaint then alleges numerous fraudulent statements of fact which it is unnecessary to recite here, and further pleads that the false statements induced plaintiff to make the loan of $15,000; that part of it has been repaid, and that plaintiff is and was willing to turn back and did. tender all papers that he received in the trans[9]*9action upon receipt from defendants of the balance of the loan. The answers of all the defendants are, in effect, general denials. The defendants O’Shea and Montville Construction Company did not appear at the trial.

The proof establishes that in April, 1923, the plaintiff, who had previously been engaged in business in Pennsylvania, in Texas, and the Southwest, had accumulated some $15,000 to $25,000, and came to New York with a view to making a business connection. He wished to invest his money in safe securities or to make a loan for a short period upon good security, if by so doing he could make a business connection, and insure an income for himself. One of the plaintiff’s few friends in New York was a Mr. Lewis, who also knew Banning, one of the defendants, and knew him to be an employee of the defendant bank, and considered him a man of integrity and responsibility. Mr. Lewis gave plaintiff a letter of introduction to Banning. The plaintiff presented this letter, and told Banning of his wishes. Banning had a desk in the main office of the defendant bank, and was held out to be, and in fact was, a responsible executive officer of the bank, whose duties were to obtain new business, to investigate and to make recommendations concerning credit loans and credits, and to attend to collections for the bank, to interview persons who did business with the bank, and, generally, to discharge the duties of a bank officer. Banning told plaintiff, on the occasion of his first visit, that he knew of nothing at that time, but if he heard of anything such as plaintiff desired he would notify him. Subsequently, and on April 11, 1923, he requested plaintiff to call on him. Plaintiff did call, and Banning introduced him to Lockwood, who was a special representative of the bank, and whose duties were to get new business, to investigate and make recommendations concerning credit loans and credits, and to attend to collections for the bank, to interview persons who did business with the bank, and, generally, to discharge the duties of a bank officer, and do whatever the executive officers of the bank assigned him to do. Lockwood told plaintiff of the opportunity to invest $15,000 in the business of O’Shea and the Montville Construction Company. Banning took part in the conversation between Lockwood and the plaintiff. It was in this conversation that Banning and Lockwood made the fraudulent representations which are the basis of this action. Plaintiff told Lockwood he would think the matter over and decide what to do. The next day he called at the bank and had a further talk with Banning and Lockwood, and concluded to make the investment recommended by them.

At this time O’Shea and his Montville Construction Company [10]*10were indebted to the defendant bank on a promissory note for $2,450, which had been protested for non-payment, and had been unpaid since March twenty-sixth, at least two weeks before the negotiations between plaintiff and Banning and Lockwood, which fact was not disclosed to plaintiff. From the proceeds of the $2,450 note, defendant bank had been paid a prior note for $650 which had also been protested for non-payment. The $650 note was given in part renewal of a $950 note previously discounted, from which an original loan of $250 to O’Shea and his company was paid. Such a record shows the financial weakness of O’Shea and his company. In this situation Banning and Lockwood recommended the loan of $15,000 by plaintiff to the Montville Construction Company. They had, prior to meeting the plaintiff, made an agreement with the Montville Construction Company by which Lockwood was to be elected vice-president and treasurer and to have forty shares of the preferred stock of the construction company issued to Lockwood and forty per cent of the net profits of the company were to be paid to him and it was understood that Banning was to have one-half of such forty per cent. The note of $2,450 owing to the bank, and past due, was uncollectible, and the bank stood in a position to lose that amount. As matters then stood, the bank would have lost $2,450 had not the plaintiff advanced the $15,000 loan to the Montville Construction Company, and the defendants Banning and Lockwood made the fraudulent representations complained of to the plaintiff for the purpose, primarily, of securing the defendant bank. This was accomplished, as the bank received $2,450 out of the $15,000 loan by plaintiff.

Defendants Banning and Lockwood represented to plaintiff that O’Shea was worth $80,000 in real estate; that its value had been looked up by the bank; that it was subject only to a $9,000 mortgage on part of it; that O’Shea and his construction company had valuable construction machinery at Long Island City, which had been appraised by the bank, and which was of the market value of $38,000 or $40,000; that Lockwood had inspected the machinery for the bank, and the same had been appraised by the bank, which had taken a chattel mortgage thereon as security for a note; that O’Shea and his company had a certain provisional contract to- lay streets and sewers in Waterbury, Conn., on a cost plus ten per cent basis, the cost amounting to approximately $1,400,000; that the machinery at Long Island City was ample security for advance of $15,000 by the plaintiff, because the bank had inspected it as collateral and had taken a chattel mortgage upon it as security for its loan, and that the bank never took anything without looking into it; that, in making an advance of $15,000, plaintiff would have [11]*11the benefit of the bank’s investigation of O’Shea’s and the Mont-ville Construction Company’s assets; and that O’Shea’s personal indorsement alone was sufficient security for a $15,000 loan.

These statements were knowingly false.

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Bluebook (online)
126 Misc. 7, 211 N.Y.S. 828, 1925 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1042, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-gotham-national-bank-nysupct-1925.