Matteawan Manufacturing Co. v. Chemical Bank & Trust Co.

244 A.D. 404, 279 N.Y.S. 495, 1935 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5836
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 3, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 244 A.D. 404 (Matteawan Manufacturing Co. v. Chemical Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matteawan Manufacturing Co. v. Chemical Bank & Trust Co., 244 A.D. 404, 279 N.Y.S. 495, 1935 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5836 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Townley, J.

This action was brought by plaintiff, a depositor of the Chemical Bank and Trust Company (hereinafter called the Chemical Bank), against both defendants for money had and received. The complaint in two causes of action states that two checks, one for $5,000 and another for $21,000, were converted by the Chemical Bank and defendant The Midnight Mission (hereinafter called Mission).

The diversion of the proceeds of these checks resulted from the ' acts of a thief named Parkman, an employee of Henderson & Co., stockbrokers. Plaintiff Matteawan Manufacturing Company (hereinafter called Matteawan) was a corporation in which various members of the Henderson family held stock. The Midnight Mission was a charitable organization in which the same family were interested. All three associations had their offices in the same place. Parkman was a confidential clerk and customer’s man of Henderson & Co. He had also been for years a director and cashier of Matteawan, and trustee, secretary, assistant treasurer and general manager of the Mission. His confidential employment with the three groups had lasted for over twenty years. He prepared most of the checks of Matteawan on its six bank accounts and was in charge of its check books. No other officer of Matteawan ever paid any attention to the books. Matteawan never had a general audit. No audit had been made of the Mission’s affairs in fifteen years. Parkman made all the entries in the Mission’s books, made all its bank deposits and for many years had been the only person to draw checks upon its bank account. He was authorized to draw checks on his sole signature. For fifteen years, Parkman had been misappropriating sums from Matteawan’s account which misappropriations had aggregated $15,000. He had also within the same time taken some $21,000 from the Mission. His own income per annum totaled about $4,650. He carried a speculative margin account with Henderson & Co. in his wife’s name which at the time of the transactions in suit was under-margined by about $6,000. In this situation the checks involved in the complaint were drawn.

The first check, dated September 14, 1931, for $5,000, was drawn on the Hanover National Bank to the order of the defendant Chemical Bank. Parkman prepared the check and presented it to [408]*408Donald, plaintiff’s secretary, for signature, stating that it was to effect a transfer of funds from the checking account at the Hanover National Bank to the time account at the Chemical Bank. The secretary signed and handed Parkman the check to deposit.. Parkman, instead of depositing it to plaintiff’s account at the Chemical Bank filled out a deposit slip to the credit of the Mission which also had an account there. Parkman then deposited the check with that slip. The Chemical Bank accepted the deposit and placed it to the credit of the Mission and the proceeds were collected from the drawee. Parkman, by two Mission checks signed by himself as officer of the Mission, withdrew $5,000 which was appropriated to his own purposes. These amounts were drawn out in two installments, one for $3,000 on September 17, 1931, and the other for $2,000 October 7,1931, thus leaving the credit balance of the Mission the same as it would have been if the $5,000 had not been put in. Most of the $5,000 went to the benefit of Henderson & Co. to make good the margin in Parkman’s wife’s account. Some household bills, however, were also paid out of this money.

Judgment has been granted against the Mission in favor of the plaintiff on its first cause of action for $5,000. The allowance of this claim was error. The decision of the Court of Appeals in the case of Credit Alliance Corp. v. Sheridan Theatre Co. (241 N. Y. 216) is conclusive. In that case the president of the Sheridan Theatre Company borrowed money from the Credit Alliance Corporation, plaintiff, stating that it was for the theatre company. The president gave promissory notes of the theatre company to which he signed his own name as president and forged the other necessary signatures. The credit company gave the president a check payable to the theatre company which he deposited in the theatre company’s bank account. He then drew the theatre company’s check to his own order and used the money for his own purposes. The Credit Alliance company sought to recover from the theatre company in an action for money had and received. The Court of Appeals held that the president of the theatre company had been acting for himself rather than for the defendant corporation when he made the deposit in its own account and that his knowledge could not be attributed to the defendant. The court said: The money, having been immediately withdrawn by Spiegel [defendant’s president] and converted to his own use without the corporation’s knowledge of the transaction or that the funds had ever been placed to its credit, it enjoyed no benefit and exercised no dominion over the same.” The Appellate Division, which was reversed in that case, had held that the mere fact that money came into the treasury of the other corporation made that corporation eo instanti hable [409]*409to the plaintiff in an action for money had and received. (210 App. Div. 599.) The Court of Appeals said that the mere possession of the money did not make the theatre company a debtor of the plaintiff. To create the relation of debtor and creditor, there must be a consent to be a debtor by some act of acceptance of the money deposited. We think that the facts in that case cannot be distinguished from the facts concerning the deposit of $5,000 and that it was error to grant judgment for that amount against the Mission.

Parkman had also defaulted as trustee of the Mission. Between October, 1929, and November, 1930, he had abstracted some twenty-one bearer bonds from the Mission’s safe deposit box without the knowledge or authority of the officers of the Mission. He sold these bonds for $20,895.98 and converted the' proceeds. He wanted to repay this sum.

On February 10, 1932, he prepared a check of the plaintiff for $21,000 drawn on the Chemical Bank to the order of that same bank. He presented it to Donald for signature saying that it represented a transfer of funds. Plaintiff at that time had only one account with the Chemical Bank and had Donald thought for a moment he would have realized that the explanation was meaningless. However, the check was signed. Parkman testified that he thereafter wrote upon its face the words Credit to the order of Midnight Mission ” without Donald’s knowledge, made out a deposit slip in the name of the Mission and deposited the check with the defendant bank. The bank credited the Mission with the amount of the check. The canceled check was returned to Matteawan and destroyed by Parkman.

That $21,000 was disposed of for the purchase of exactly the same number of bearer bonds as had been previously abstracted and converted from the funds of the Mission. A small cash balance remains in the Mission’s account. The order for the purchase of •these bonds was made on Henderson & Co. and they were paid for by a check drawn on the Mission’s account and signed by Parkman. Henderson & Co. delivered the bonds to Parkman on March 16,1932.

Parkman then telephoned to the treasurer and trustee of the Mission, Gawtry, and asked Gawtry to go with him to the safe deposit' box of the Mission to cut coupons. Gawtry had never been to the box of the Mission but went in place of Mr. Norman Henderson then recently deceased who had theretofore always gone to the box with Parkman.

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Bluebook (online)
244 A.D. 404, 279 N.Y.S. 495, 1935 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matteawan-manufacturing-co-v-chemical-bank-trust-co-nyappdiv-1935.