McCloskey v. J. Henry Schroder Banking Corp.

7 Misc. 2d 501, 168 N.Y.S.2d 522, 1957 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2995
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1957
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Misc. 2d 501 (McCloskey v. J. Henry Schroder Banking Corp.) 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
McCloskey v. J. Henry Schroder Banking Corp., 7 Misc. 2d 501, 168 N.Y.S.2d 522, 1957 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2995 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1957).

Opinion

Samuel C. Coleman, J.

This is an action in aid of an attachment (Civ. Prac. Act, § 943) brought by the Sheriff and the attaching plaintiff against a bank to reduce to possession a bank account on deposit with the bank in the name of the defendant in the attachment proceedings. The bank has declined to turn over the funds to the Sheriff on the ground that the account constitutes proceeds from a trust receipt transaction in which the defendant and its principal, a Swiss bank, were “ entrusters ”. The trust receipt transaction related to a shipment of coconut oil from abroad. The principal questions gone into on the trial were whether the oil had lost its identity through commingling with other shipments of oil, and whether the proceeds from the sale of the oil had been identified. But the plaintiff also urged that because of the defendant’s inaction with respect to the trust receipt transaction it has lost its special and privileged position in the oil and the proceeds from the sale and can claim no special rights in the bank account; that it had waived such rights. I agree with the plaintiff; and this conclusion makes it unnecessary to consider the questions of commingling and loss of identification. If a determination of that question were necessary, I would say that the defendant has failed to sustain the burden of proof in that respect; the commingling of fungible merchandise and the disposition of the proceeds making identification almost impossible.

The shipment from abroad was a large one. We have not been given the details of the financial arrangements between the Swiss bank and Primateria, the shipper, but on April 20, 1953 documents enabling Agro Products Corporation to obtain control of the oil were transmitted to Agro by the defendant, together with the trust receipt. The trust receipt stated that possession of the documents was entrusted to Agro as trustee to effect customs entry and prepare the merchandise for reshipment and effect payment of $385,805 to J. Henry Schroeder Banking Corp. * * * on or before May 19, 1953, or within one week after reshipment, whichever date first occurs ”. Other provisions emphasize the trust nature of the relation by requiring the trustee to keep the proceeds in trust and to maintain the trust property in such manner that it would be capable of identification, A proper statement of trust [503]*503receipt financing as required by statute was duly filed (Personal Property Law, § 58-e).

By May 19 there had been no reshipment, no sale by Agro and no payment. On that day, the defendant telephoned Agro, asked for payment and was told that an extension would be necessary; automatically an extension was granted to June 19 without inquiry on the bank’s part as to whether any of the oil had been sold or even reshipped. It will be observed that strictly Agro had no power to sell, only the power to prepare the oil for reshipment. Early in June, Agro proceeded to sell the oil and to make shipments of it. By June 11 there had been substantial sales for which Agro received payment. The proceeds thus received were deposited indiscriminately by Agro in its general bank accounts, together with the proceeds of the sale of other coconut oil entrusted to it under similar documents by the defendant and by other banks, some of which had been stored in the same tanks in which the oil involved here had been placed. No payments were made to the defendant. On June 11 Agro asked for a second extension of one month’s time within which to pay and on June 16 an extension was granted until June 30. Again, the extension was asked for and granted almost automatically. There was no inquiry by the bank as to the status of the oil; no inquiry whether there had been any sales or reshipment or whether any proceeds had been received; and Agro said nothing. Between June 19 and June 30 the balance of the oil was sold and paid for, the proceeds being deposited in the manner I have already stated, in one bank account or another, without reference to the source of the proceeds. Indeed, all the oil had been sold and reshipped by June 16, before the first extension had expired. On June 22 Agro made its first and only payment to the bank, $100,805. This payment apparently was accepted without any inquiry as to the amount of oil sold, the date of sale or whether the payment was for all the oil already sold. On June 30, the bank asked for payment of the balance and was told by Agro that it had arranged with Primateria for an additional extension of two weeks’ time. The bank accepted this statement at its face without any inquiry as to the sales or the receipt or disposition of proceeds, and without inquiry whether the Swiss bank had even been consulted on the question of the extension; it merely transmitted to the Swiss bank what Agro told it. The testimony for the bank as to what occurred on June 30 was quite vague and, at best, indicated that the bank was asking for payment in a casual, routine manner, and that, in the same manner, it [504]*504acquiesced in the suggestion that there was or would be a further extension.

Meantime, on June 23, the day after the payment by Agro of the sum of $100,805, Agro did take some further action, which is said to relate to the oil. Primateria had had a bank account in the defendant bank and on June 23, Agro deposited $110,000 in that account for the benefit of Primateria. There were debits against the account and credits to it, and by July 17, the date of the Sheriff’s attachment, the account had been reduced to $12,504.06. It is the right to that deposit which is now in question. The attaching plaintiff asserts that the account is Primateria’s and that, as a creditor of Primateriá, it can obtain the aid of the court to have that account turned over to the Sheriff. It is the bank’s contention that the money represents trust proceeds which belong to it or to its principal, the Swiss bank. And it is with respect to this contention that the matter of waiver arises. .

The question is whether a bank, an entruster in a trust receipt transaction, can remain inert and rely entirely upon the good faith of the trustees. In essence, the bank’s position is that it can stay inactive, that since it can have no knowledge of the details of any transactions, it must rely upon the integrity of the trustee. I think it is mistaken. But for the trust receipt, the bank would have no privileged claim to the proceeds of the oil, as it had conferred upon Agro every indicia of ownership. To avoid the consequences of having done so, it must, it seems to me, take positive steps. It did nothing beyond asking for payment. When the first period for payment arrived, May 19, it asked nothing about the status of the oil, as I have said; it apparently preferred not to know. The same is true in June, when, without requesting payment, it granted a second extension. It seems to have taken the position throughout that the trustee was an ordinary purchaser with a date fixed for payment'of the.account and that it, the bank, was merely extending credit to the purchaser, extending the time for payment.

The events of June 30 confirm the bank’s attitude and position. On that day, when payment was not made, it informed the Swiss bank of that fact and stated to it that “payment date will be extended two weeks ’ ’ and asked for instructions. It failed even to inquire whether any additional oil had been sold or whether there were proceeds; or whether the payment received on June 22 represented full payment to date. The instructions it received were that there would be later ‘ * instructions for extension payment date ”, but that meantime the [505]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Universal Credit Co. v. Citizens State Bank
64 N.E.2d 28 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Misc. 2d 501, 168 N.Y.S.2d 522, 1957 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2995, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccloskey-v-j-henry-schroder-banking-corp-nysupct-1957.