Myers v. Mutual Life Insurance

39 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 321
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 39 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 321 (Myers v. Mutual Life Insurance) 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
Myers v. Mutual Life Insurance, 39 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 321 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1884).

Opinion

Harpin', J.:

Austin Myers died November 9, 1870, leaving his last will and testament, in and by which he appointed the plaintiff his executrix, and in and by which he made the plaintiff his sole legatee.

After the will was admitted to probate, as it was November 24, 1870, she took letters testamentary and assumed the duties of executrix. Testator held in June, 1869, the legal title to a bond and mortgage of one Farley for $75,000 on property situated on Tenth avenue and Seventy-seventh street, New York, and he applied to defendant in July, 1869, for a loan of $30,000, which defendant made, taking therefor the bond of Myers and one Nathan Randall, and an assignment or pledge of the Farley bond and mortgage as security for' the loan of the $30,000 so advanced by defendant.

In June, 1871, Nathan Randall assigned to his son Charles M. Randall, his interest in the Farley bond and mortgage, to secure and pay out of the proceeds thereof certain debts of N. Randall. In June, 1873, Charles M. Randall died and letters of administration were issued upon his estate to his widow, Laura S. Randall. In September, 1871, in behalf of Charles Randall, Mr. Main, as attorney, gave defendant notice of Randall’s supposed interest in the bond and mortgage, and forbade the payment of any moneys arising out of the mortgage to the Myers’ estate, or at most more than one-half of the proceeds, and notice to that effect was given to the Myers’ estate and to Thomas B. Fitch, the agent thereof, in May, 1872. Negotiations were had as to the bond and mortgage [323]*323between tbe parties named and the defendant. In March, 1874, Mr. Main gave notice to defendant that an adjustment had been made, and that certain moneys in the hands of defendant arising from the Farley bond and mortgage might be paid over, and certain moneys were paid over to Fitch & Ellis, as to which defendant has not been found liable. On the 27th day of April, 1874, Mr. Main informed defendant, in behalf of Mr. Randall, that a satisfactory arrangement had been made with the representative of the Myers’ estate, and that no objection existed to the defendant assigning the bond and mortgage to Fitch & Ellis, and the assignment executed by Austin Myers to N. Randall of one-half the Farley bond and mortgage was delivered to Fitch.” On the following day, to wit, April 28, 1874, an instrument in writing was delivered by Fitch to defendant, which read, viz. •

“New Yore, April 28, 1874.

F. S. "Winslow, Esq., President, etc.:

Dear Sir. — Please to assign to Thomas B. Fitch and James M. Ellis, of Syracuse, N. Y., the bond and mortgage of Warren Farley to Austin Myers for $75,000 held by you as collateral to a loan of $30,000 and oblige,

Yours very truly,

MARIA J. MYERS, Executrix.

By Thomas B. Fitoh, Attorney.”

After this was presented to defendant, Fitch on the 29th of April, 1874, paid to defendant $30,000 and interest and received from defendant an assignment of the bond and mortgage to Fitch & Ellis. The $30,000 was paid to defendant by a check drawn by the Mechanics’ Bank of Syracuse on the Continental Bank in New York, signed by Fitch, who was cashier of the Mechanics’ Bank of Syracuse. When Fitch returned to Syracuse he reimbursed the Mechanics’ Bank by executing Mrs. Myers’ note and having it discounted and held by the Mechanics’ Bank until it was subsequently paid up out of moneys derived by collections made on the Farley bond and mortgage. The note was renewed until it was finally paid, July 8, 1875, with interest, through the acts and directions of Fitch, who was then in charge of the Myers’ estate; and in the Myers’ pass-book with the bank on that day was an entry of [324]*324tbe funds to pay the note and interest, to wit, $33,488.24, and the estate in the pass-book was credited with $36,621.31, that being the amount paid by Farley to Fitch on his bond and mortgage. That day Fitch & Ellis executed a satisfaction of the bond and mortgage dated 29th of June, 1875. The entire money, the amount of principal and interest, was collected from Farley and used so much, as stated above, to pay the bank, out of which the Myers* note was paid, and the balance in and about the business of Fitch & Ellis, who were then copartners in a shoe enterprise connected with the Auburn State prison. They paid back to Mrs. Myers, or the estate, $4,000 by depositing it in the bank to, the credit of the Myers’ estate. The balance never was returned to plaintiff and she seeks to recover it from defendant. Fitch became insolvent and died September, 1879, and Ellis is insolvent. The referee has reported against the defendant, holding that it was its duty to “ restore and reassign the bond and mortgage of Farley to the plaintiff on her demand as executrix and personal representative of Myers.” This action was brought in November, 1879. There was some evidence given upon the hearing before the referee tending to prove that Nathan Randall had some legal or equitable interest in the real estate covered by the Farley mortgage, and that he was the owner of one-half of the Farley mortgage, as between him and Myers, and that Myers executed an assignment of one-half of the bond and mortgage to Randall, and that Randall thereafter assigned to his son Charles M. Randall, and we think that the referee might have found that Laura S. Randall, as .administrator of Charles M., had at one time an interest in the Farley bond and mortgage, and as such owner was authorized to assent,,through Mr. Main, his attorney, to an assignment of such interest to Mr. Ellis, her uncle.

The evidence is not entirely clear as to the contents of the paper which Austin Myers executed to Nathan Randall, and it is not therefore made clear that Myers was the only one entitled to redeem from the defendant the Farley bond and mortgage. The circumstances disclosed would seem to warrant a conclusion that the defendant acted in good faith and upon sufficient apparent authority when it assigned the one-half of the Farley bond and mortgage to Ellis. We think the referee erred in refusing to find that Myers [325]*325and Randall were tbe owners and holders, each to the extent of one undivided half,” of the bond and mortgage, and in treating Myers, or his estate or the plaintiff, as entitled to call upon the defendants to make good the one-half of the moneys which would have passed by the assignment from Myers to Randall. The consent of Mann, attorney for Mrs. Laura Randall, as administrator, was sufficient to authorize the assignment by defendant to Ellis of the one-half interest, and upon the evidence before the referee we think he would have been warranted'in finding that the authority of Mrs. Randall was sufficient to protect the defendant from ■any claim of the plaintiff by reason of one-half of the bond and mortgage.

When Fitch entered into the business of managing the Myers estate, he was in good credit and standing financially, and received full charge of the estate. Se took from the plaintiff on December SO, 1870, a power of attorney which expressly authorized him in her place and stead as such executrix, legatee and individually “ to sign, endorse and make and deliver checks and drafts, promissory notes, receipts and dll other vouchers a/nd papers, necessary and proper

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-mutual-life-insurance-nysupct-1884.