Metropolitan Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Hanover Insurance

55 Misc. 2d 593, 286 N.Y.S.2d 129, 1967 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 960
CourtCivil Court of the City of New York
DecidedDecember 27, 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 55 Misc. 2d 593 (Metropolitan Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Hanover Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Civil Court of the City of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Hanover Insurance, 55 Misc. 2d 593, 286 N.Y.S.2d 129, 1967 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 960 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1967).

Opinion

Edward J. Greenfield, J.

In the case of Continental Cas. Co. v. Metropolitan Sav. & Loan Assn. (46 Misc 2d 456) this court held that the savings and loan association, having turned over the proceeds of an account of one of its depositor members to an execution creditor, despite prior notification (duly acknowledged) that the account had been assigned, remained liable to the assignee, and was required to pay a judgment of $6,587.75.

This ease is the sequel to that prior action. The savings and loan association, having been subjected to double liability because it had ignored a notice of assignment, now seeks to recover from defendant, its bonding company, the amount of such judgment together with $2,500 for attorney’s fees incurred in defending the prior suit, a total of $9,087.75.

Defendant Hanover Insurance Company had issued to plaintiff herein, in consideration of premiums paid, its ‘ ‘ Savings and Loan Blanket Bond”, to indemnify the insured against “ (B) Any loss of Property through robbery, burglary, common-law or statutory larceny, theft, hold-up, misplacement, mysterious unexplainable disappearance, damage or destruction, abstraction or removal from the possession, custody or control of the Insured (whether with or without negligence on the part of any Employee) and loss of subscription, conversion, redemption or [595]*595deposit privileges through the misplacement or loss of Property, while the Property is (or is supposed to be) in or on any premises anywhere, • except while in the mail or with a carrier for hire other than an armored motor vehicle company for the purpose of transportation.” It is the contention of the plaintiff that it was compelled to pay the prior judgment because the information about the prior assignment was lost, misplaced, or had mysteriously disappeared. The question for decision is whether plaintiff’s files and records are “ property ”, the unavailability of which requires the bonding company to indemnify it for any consequential loss.

Plaintiff’s testimony was to the effect that when notified that one of its accounts had been assigned, the notice of assignment is attached to the ledger card, and then placed in a red “ jacket ”, as a flag to stop payment. The association vice-president testified that he specifically recalls “jacketing” this particular account six and a-half years earlier. Some time thereafter the form of ledger card was changed, and the bank clerks were charged with the duty of transferring the information to the new cards, and if a red jacket existed, to place it around the new card. Subsequently when a judgment creditor of the original depositor sought to execute on the account, reference to the files failed to reveal any red jacket or notice of assignment. Thus, plaintiff explains, the proceeds of the account were duly turned over to the judgment creditor, it having been unaware at that time that all of the depositor judgment debtor’s interest in and to the account had been assigned to another.

A banker’s or broker’s blanket bond, such as that involved in this suit, is not, as plaintiff urges, broad insurance against the risk of loss in its banking operations. No degree of construction of alleged policy ambiguities can broaden the scope of the coverage beyond what a reasonable reading of the insurance coverages could permit. Primarily, the blanket bond is designed to protect the financial institution against the risks of dishonesty. This may be external dishonesty — robbery, burglary, larceny, theft, holdup, or counterfeiting, or it may be internal as in the case of embezzlement, forgery or employee defalcation. And because pin-pointing the exact cause of the loss or the party responsible with legal proof may so often be difficult or nearly impossible, the coverage is broadened to include loss of valuable property through destruction, misplacement, or mysterious disappearance. The bond excludes coverage for losses attributable to war, fire, lost mail, and nonpayment of loans, and does not assume responsibility for other losses which might be characterized as routine or operational.

[596]*596Plaintiff’s failure to give heed to the operative effect of a prior assignment, resulting in its having to pay out the proceeds of the account twice, is attributable to one of three things. Its employees either (a) failed to make the appropriate entry on the account ledger card, (b) failed to place a red jacket on the card, or (c) misplaced or misfiled the notice of assignment.

It should be abundantly clear that the failure of an employee to make a notation or otherwise perform a clerical act could not, by any semantic torturing of the insuring language, be considered a “loss of property”. Similarly, a failure to flag or jacket an account could not be considered a covered loss. But what if the ledger card, properly jacketed and containing the notice of assignment, was ‘1 misplaced ” or “ mysteriously disappeared ’ ’ with or without negligence on the part of any employee ? Would such documents and internal bookkeeping records be considered ‘1 property ’ ’ within the contemplation of the bond?

“ Property ”, the loss of which is insured against, is defined in the bond as: “ money, currency, coin, bank notes, * * * stamps * * * precious metals * * * jewelry * # * bonds, securities, evidences of debts, debentures, * * * passbooks held as collateral * * * warrants, acceptances, notes, checks, money orders, traveler’s letters of credit, warehouse receipts, bills of lading * * * insurance policies, deeds, mortgages * * * and assignments of said policies, mortgages and instruments, and other valuable papers and documents, and all other instruments similar to or in the nature of the foregoing ’ ’.

In this comprehensive cataloguing of the type of property insured, it is clear that the common characteristic of the items listed is that each of them has a value, intrinsic or symbolic. Either they are of value in and of themselves — as currency, bullion, precious metals and jewelry, or they are papers which evidence ownership of property of value — papers which are transferable, assignable or negotiable, conferring the ownership of the underlying items of value upon a proper transfer.

Is a ledger card on which an entry is made with respect to a deposit property of value ? Obviously not. It confers no rights of ownership upon the holder, it cannot be transferred, and its loss or disappearance does not change in the least the status of the debtor-creditor relationship it purports to record. It is a mere notation, a recorded description of property value with no inherent value of its own. It is a reflection in a mirror, not tangible reality.- Similarly, the red jacket which plaintiff claims disappeared, if it ever was placed on the card of the [597]*597account in question, and which woidd be a flag to the clerks to stop payment was not a ‘1 valuable paper ’ ’ similar to the articles of insured property enumerated in the bond. It was a simple office device to serve to call attention to a particular account, with no more value of its own than a paper clip might have when used as a flag in similar but less sophisticated circumstances. The loss of such items of no inherent value might result in a consequential loss of some proportions, just as for want of a nail a battle was once lost, but this insurance covers direct losses for the actual value of lost or stolen property, and not liability for consequential losses.

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Bluebook (online)
55 Misc. 2d 593, 286 N.Y.S.2d 129, 1967 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 960, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-savings-loan-assn-v-hanover-insurance-nycivct-1967.