Nassau Bank v. Yandes

51 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 55, 8 N.Y. St. Rep. 415
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 51 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 55 (Nassau Bank v. Yandes) 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
Nassau Bank v. Yandes, 51 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 55, 8 N.Y. St. Rep. 415 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1887).

Opinion

Van Brunt, P. J.:

A stakeholder has always the right where there are conflicting claims to money or property in his hands, to go into court and ask [58]*58to deposit the money or property in court and leave the litigation of the questions to be carried on between the conflicting claimants.

The question which is presented upon this appeal is as to what it is necessary for the plaintiff to establish in order to show that there are conflicting claims. It is claimed upon the part of the plaintiff that all that is necessary for the stakeholder to establish is that suits have been brought or suits have been threatened by divers claimants to the same fund in order to entitle him to the protection of the court, and that the stakeholder is entitled to be removed beyond the shadow of risk in paying over the money where antagonistic rights are asserted. This view is undoubtedly sustained by the opinion of the court in the case of Atkinson v. Manks (1 Cow., 705), where the court say, in substance, that where a party had forbidden a stakeholder to pay over money to another and threatened him with a suit, the stakeholder was not bound to exercise any judgment upon the subject. This rule, however, does not seem to be the prevailing rule now in reference to this matter. As all business is conducted with some risk, as every holder of money in the payment of it over always does so at some risk, the courts have receded from the rule that all that it is necessary to establish is that some claim had been presented and have held that it is necessary, in addition, to prove that such claim had some reasonable foundation, and that there was some reasonable doubt as to whether the stakeholder would be reasonably safe in the payment over of the money. It is claimed that because the defendant, the assignee, came to the plaintiff with an asserted voluntary general assignment, made in the State of Indiana, that this related to a fact which the bank could not know, and that the bank could not know whether the assignment was a valid and voluntary assignment by the laws of Indiana, and that, therefore, the plaintiff was not required to take the risk of the existence of all those facts. It has been held by the courts of this State that a verbal assignment of a balance of account in bank was valid and the bank was liable to suit to recover such balance by the assignee, and that the bank was required to take the risk of the existence of facts, the evidence of which rested exclusively, perhaps, with the assignee and claimant. (Risley v. Phœnix Bank, 83 N. Y., 318.) And, as has been observed, no business [59]*59can be conducted without hazard; the plaintiff, in the payment out of the money of its depositors upon their cheeks, takes a risk of the forgery of the check either in the maker’s signature or in the filling in of the amount; in its transactions with its customers it runs a risk that the indorsements of commercial paper may also be forged, and it get no title, and therefore, the courts seem to have inclined to the rule that a more pretext of a conflicting claim is not enough to show that the plaintiff is in any danger of loss from inability to determine to whom a debt should be paid. In the case of the Baltimore & Ohio Railway Company v. Arthur (90 N. Y., 234), it was held that the plaintiff, in an action of interpleader, must show that there is some question, as between the claimants to be tried, and that he will incur hazard in paying to either.

In the case of Dorn v. Fox (61 N. Y., 264) the court lay down the following rule: “ The rule requiring that in actions of interpleader the plaintiffs should be in doubt as to which of the claimants is in the right, must be construed in a reasonable manner. It, of course, excludes all cases where the rights of parries are clearly settled. On the other hand, so long as a principle is still under discussion * * * it would seem fair to hold that there was sufficient doubt and hazard to justify the protection which is afforded by the beneficent action of interpleader.”

It is not necessary to consider other authorities in order to show that the rule now is that a reasonable doubt must exist in order to justify the. bringing of an action of interpleader, and that any doubt is not sufficient as was said in the case of Atkinson v. Manks (supra.). We are, then, brought to the question as to whether there is any reasonable doubt as to the rights of the assignee of Kitzinger & Co., and of the attaching creditors of said firm, to said fund. It is the settled law of this State that the law of the place where a contract is made or to be performed is to govern as to the nature, validity, construction and effect of such a contract; and being valid in such place it is to be considered valid everywhere, with the exception of cases in which the contract is immoral or unjust, or in which the enforcing it in a State would be injurious to the rights, interests or convenience of such State or its citizens. (Andrews v. Herriot, 4 Cow., 510.) This rule is recognized in Guillander v Howell (35 N. Y., 657) and Warner v. Jaffray (96 id., 248). It [60]*60is true that in the case of Guillander v. Howell it was held that an assignment made in the State of New York of property then being situate in New Jersey, which was void under the laws of New Jersey, carried no title to the property in New Jersey. This conclusion was arrived at because the assignment in question contained preferences which were contrary to the law of New Jersey, and that as the property was within the exclusive jurisdiction of New Jersey, and as that State protected and regulated it, and as the laws of New York had no force in New Jersey as laws, but were by comity only enforced as to a transfer of personal property situated in New Jersey, except when injurious to her own citizens, the laws of New Jersey, when in conflict with the laws of New York in respect to the transfer of such property must control. The same principle was recognized in the case of Warner v. Jaffray, and these are exceptions to the rule which has long prevailed that personal property has no locality, but must be governed by the law of the domicile of its owner, therefore, it seems to be established beyond a reasonable doubt that the property of Eitzinger & Co. held by the Nassau Bank passed to the assignee by the assignment made in Indiana on the 1st of February, 1886.

The next question to be considered is, has the sheriff or the attaching creditors acquired any rights by virtue of their attachments and the levy thereon ? The sheriff may collect and receive all debts, effects and things in action attached by him, and he may maintain any action or special proceeding in his own name, or in the name of the defendant, which is necessary for that purpose or to reduce to his actual possession an article of personal property capable of manual delivery, but of which he has been unable to obtain possession. This, however, gives neither the sheriff nor the attaching creditors any right to attack the assignment on the ground that it was made with intent to hinder, delay and defraud the creditors of the assignors. He can bring suits to collect debts and to reduce to possession personal property, the legal title to which is in the defendant in the attachment suit; but he cannot maintain ' an action to remove an obstacle to the attachment. (Gibson v. National Park Bank, 98 N. Y., 87; Moseley v.

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Related

Gibson v. . Nat'l Park Bk. of N.Y.
98 N.Y. 87 (New York Court of Appeals, 1885)
Thurber v. . Blanck
50 N.Y. 80 (New York Court of Appeals, 1872)
Risley v. . Phenix Bank of City of New York
83 N.Y. 318 (New York Court of Appeals, 1881)
Guillander v. . Howell
35 N.Y. 657 (New York Court of Appeals, 1866)
Baltimore Ohio R.R. Co. v. . Arthur
90 N.Y. 234 (New York Court of Appeals, 1882)
Dorn v. . Fox
61 N.Y. 264 (New York Court of Appeals, 1874)
Atkinson v. Manks
1 Cow. 691 (New York Supreme Court, 1823)
Andrews v. Herriot
4 Cow. 508 (New York Supreme Court, 1825)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 55, 8 N.Y. St. Rep. 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nassau-bank-v-yandes-nysupct-1887.