Model Building & Loan Ass'n Ex Rel. Skinner v. Reeves

140 N.E. 715, 236 N.Y. 331, 1923 N.Y. LEXIS 891
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 13, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 140 N.E. 715 (Model Building & Loan Ass'n Ex Rel. Skinner v. Reeves) 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
Model Building & Loan Ass'n Ex Rel. Skinner v. Reeves, 140 N.E. 715, 236 N.Y. 331, 1923 N.Y. LEXIS 891 (N.Y. 1923).

Opinion

Hogan, J.

From January 1st, 1906, to April 14th, 1911, the defendants, appellants, and defendant Herbert Reeves were as copartners engaged in the practice of law under the firm name of Reeves, Todd & Swain. On April 14th, 1911, the defendant Herbert Reeves retired from said firm and after that date was not thereafter a member thereof. The plaintiff as its name implies is a building and loan association organized under the laws of this state and subject to supervision by the superintendent of banks. On March 9,1917, the superintendent of banks took possession of the assets of the loan association and is engaged in a liquidation of the same for the benefit of its creditors.

Prior to the dissolution of the firm of Reeves, Todd & Swain, Herbert Reeves was a director of the loan association and as a member of the firm had the handling and dealing with the affairs and matters of the loan association as counsel, and with matters committed to the firm by the loan association. He likewise had power and authority to draw checks on a trust account carried in the name of the firm in the Guaranty Trust Company. The firm also had a general account in the National Bank of Commerce.

*334 Upon the dissolution of the firm of Reeves, Todd & Swain the loan association had knowledge of the retirement of Herbert Reeves therefrom and thereupon made him its sole attorney and counsel and notified the remaining members of the firm to that effect. Herbert Reeves continued as such sole counsel and attorney until March 9, 1917, the date when the superintendent of banks took possession of the loan association.

The complaint in substance alleges upon information and belief: That the firm of Reeves, Todd & Swain received from plaintiff and divers persons for the plaintiff a large sum of money in connection with divers business transactions of plaintiff which moneys were trust funds (of the association) and were caused (by the firm) to be deposited in their or either of their bank accounts or otherwise to come to their possession or pass through the hands of defendants and to become diverted from the plaintiff’s use and converted -to the use of defendants and that defendants had or were chargeable with due notice that all of said moneys were the property of plaintiff and so diverted, the exact amount plaintiff is unable to state as the defendants falsely and willfully so kept their books that the amount of the true transactions did not appear therein and defendants have falsely, fraudulently and willfully retained in their own interest and converted to their own use a large portion of said moneys and omitted to make in their books any entry thereof or have made such entries as to be misleading and erroneous and as to the items making up said account the same are wholly within the knowledge of defendants which they wrongfully withhold from plaintiff and have refused to account for and pay over after demand, and have repudiated all liability therefor and have converted to their own use a large portion of the money so received by them, to wit, the sum of $100,000 and upwards, the property of plaintiff; that plaintiff is ignorant of the particulars of the several *335 items and the amount converted and diverted and used by defendants except to a partial extent while defendants have full knowledge of the same. Judgment was demanded for a disclosure of the books and accounts of defendants, for an accounting by them, appointing a receiver of all their property, a judgment in favor of plaintiff for the amount found due and for such other and further relief as shall be just and equitable.

We do not deem it necessary to analyze the answers of the defendants other than the answer served by Herbert Reeves, further than to state that the same at length specifically deny the various allegations of the complaint and affirmatively plead the Statute of Limitations. The answer of defendant Herbert Reeves admitted the existence of the firm of Reeves, Todd & Swain and membership therein to the date of dissolution; that the firm acted as attorneys for plaintiff,' but all of plaintiff’s business was looked after by him personally; that he was a director of plaintiff; that after the dissolution of the firm he personally continued to represent plaintiff individually as attorney and as director down to March, 1917; that while acting as such attorney and officer he did receive and misappropriate certain funds of the corporation plaintiff, but that said misappropriations were not participated in, consented to or known by any of the other defendants; that a statement of all of said misappropriations was made by him to a deputy of the banking department on March 9, 1917, and he has since and now is giving all information or data that may be required.

For a separate defense, the pendency of another action against John S. Hanson (the president of the association) and himself upon the same facts and the same cause of action set out in the complaint herein.

This action was commenced March 1, 1919, against defendants, appellants, and against Herbert Reeves March 24, 1919, and was brought on for trial at Special *336 Term. Upon the trial the only oral testimony adduced was briefly that of John S. Hanson, the president of the loan association, who was called by defendants with reference to the rules of plaintiff relating to the association requiring an appraisal of property upon which a loan was solicited, a title policy of insurance, etc. The remaining facts were stipulated for the purposes of the trial and subsequently made the findings of the trial justice with a few exceptions not material to relate.

Amongst the facts stipulated between the parties are the facts hereinabove enumerated down to the point herein where the subject-matter of the complaint is considered.

Other facts stipulated and found by the courts below are in substance: The moneys taken by Herbert Reeves were taken solely for his own use, and used and employed for his own purposes alone; and all of said other four defendants of said firm, Alfred G. Reeves, Ambrose G. Todd, Alexander Rowland and Harold Swain were and are entirely guiltless of any personal participation in said acts of said Herbert Reeves and did not benefit by or from them in any way. The stipulation provided: Where it is stated herein that mortgages were satisfied, it was by satisfaction pieces executed by the Model Building and Loan Association of Mott Haven signed by two officers and checks were signed by four officers.

Then follow eleven pages of the record narrating ten transactions in which Herbert Reeves was involved with reference to the alleged business of the plaintiff which were found in finding of facts No. 9, the several amounts of which aggregated $47,800, for which amount the trial justice directed judgment against the defendant Herbert Reeves with interest from the date of each transaction, with costs. The judgment as entered was for $82,016.99. The complaint was dismissed on the merits as to the four defendants, appellants, upon the ground that the cause of action was barred by the Statute of Limitations. *337

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Bluebook (online)
140 N.E. 715, 236 N.Y. 331, 1923 N.Y. LEXIS 891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/model-building-loan-assn-ex-rel-skinner-v-reeves-ny-1923.