Nathans v. Satterlee

18 Abb. N. Cas. 310
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedApril 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 18 Abb. N. Cas. 310 (Nathans v. Satterlee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nathans v. Satterlee, 18 Abb. N. Cas. 310 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1884).

Opinions

Daly, C. J.

This is an application in proceedings supplementary to execution for an order directing the comp- - troller to pay over to the plaintiff a check for §2,500, drawn upon the Chatham National Bank by the president of the bank, and payable to Satterlee, the defendant, in the supplementary proceedings under the following state of facts : Satterlee was desirous of obtaining from the department of public works a contract for building a reservoir in the 24th ward, in this city, which by the statute, has to be awarded to the lowest bidder. In compliance with the rules of the department of public works he had, to enable him to put in a bid, to deposit with the department the sum of $2,500, as security for the performance of the contract if awarded to him. To enable him to do this he suggested to Louis Joy, whose business it has been to supply Italian laborers to contractors, that if he, Joy, would furnish the $2,500, to-enable Satterlee to put in proposals for the contract, Satterlee would, if he obtained the contract, aid him by employing some of the Italian laborers under his control, in executing the contract; no agreement to that effect it is stated was entered into, but Joy, in expectation of Satterlee’s doing so, if he obtained the contract, told Satterlee that he would procure the amount and deposit it with the comptroller, but that it was to remain his money, and be returned to him if Satterlee did not get the contract. Joy then procured the check referred to, to be drawn by the president of the Chatham Baiik, payable to the order of Satterlee, and brought it to Satterlee that he might indorse it, which he did, by writing his name on the back of it, without, as he swears, looking at the face of the check, or knowing by whom it was drawn. Joy then took the check, together with Satterlee’s written proposals for the contract, and deposited both in the department of public works, received from the deputy of tlie commissioner of public works a written acknowledgment of the receipt, by the department, from Satterlee, of the $2,500 upon his proposal or bid for the contract. Joy then took the receipt to Satterlee and got [313]*313him to endorse his name on the .back of if, which being done, Joy kept it for his security.

The contract was awarded to another than Satterlee, but before the mo.ney. was obtained from the comptroller, into whose hands it passed, upon the awarding of the contract, an order was obtained in the supplementary proceedings enjoining the comptroller from parting with the check, until the further order of this court, and the application is now made by the plaintiff in supplementary proceedings for an order that the check may be applied in part payment of his judgment, which application is resisted by Joy, who claims that this money is not to be applied towards the satisfaction of Sattcrlce’s debts, but is to be restored to Joy, as the contract for the reservoir was not awarded to Satterlee. Satterlee swears that Joy had no interest.in the contract beyond what is above stated ; that he gave him no consideration for the §3,500 ; that Joy did not owe him anything, and Joy testified that he had no interest in the contract, beyond that he hoped and believed that he would have the furnishing of laborers for the work on the reservoir, if Satterlee obtained the contract for building it; that he took the money from the East River Bank, where he had it on deposit, intending to deposit it in bank bills in the department of public works, but afterwards concluded to obtain instead the certified check of the president of the Chatham Bank ; that the name of Satterlee had to be used because the proposals were in his name, that being the rule of the department; that Satterlee never had the money or the possession of the check, except so far as to enable him to indorse his name upon the back of it; that Satterlee neither looked at the face of the check or upon the face of the receipt when he indorsed his name on the back of both ; that he, Joy, never surrendered either to Satterlee, or agreed to loan him the money, or to use the same for any object except for the special purpose already stated ; and he swears substantially, in effect, that he kept the check in his possessin until he deposited it with [314]*314the department, and the receipt afterwards, for his own security.

The plaintiff relies mainly for the granting of the motion upon a special term decision of Judge Clerke, Salter v. Weiner, 6 Abb. Pr. 191." In that case the defendant was arrested and held to bail in the sum of $500, and being unable to* find bail, a third party, in order to keep the defendant out of jail, upon the defendant’s promise to refund the money when bail should be put in by him, gave him $500 in gold, which the defendant deposited with the sheriff, in lieu of bail; afterwards the defendant obtained bail, who justified,' upon which the third party applied to the court for an order for the repayment to him of the amount deposited with the sheriff. Judge Clerke denied the motion, declaring that if the money belonged to the third party, at the time it was deposited with the sheriff, “ it became, by that deposit, the property of the defendant in the action ; that it was loaned money, and that loaned money is the property of ihe loanee.” It was in effect holding, that the money had to remain in the action, and could be applied by the plaintiff in payment of any judgment he might recover against the defendant thc-iein.

It appears from the report of this case, that it was decided orally, and no consideration appears to have been given to the fact that the money was ceposited with the sheriff by the third party. Meyer, as appears by the report, in order to keep the defendant in the action out of jail, and upon the express promise by the defendant that when he put in bail, the money in the sheriff’s hands should be returned to Meyer, all that the plaintiff was entitled to, was the right to imprison the defendant unless he put in bail for his appearance, and as the defendant afterwards did this and thereby complied with all that the plaintiff could require of him, it is difficult to see what right the plaintiff had to the money which the defendant’s friend gave to deposit.

Not only is no authority referred to by Judge Clerke for this decision, but it was in direct conflict with the case [315]*315:of Nunn v. Powell (1 J. P. Smith, 13), where a certain sum of money was deposited for the defendant by a third person -in lien of bail to the sheriff, and special bail having after-wards been perfected, the court ordered the money to be repaid, not to the defendant, but to the person who made the deposit, although the statute (43 Geo. III., c. 46, § 2) declared, that in perfecting bail, the court should order the "money deposited with the sheriff to be repaid to the defendant. The court held that it was practically complying with .the statute, to order it to be repaid after the perfecting of special bail, to the third party to whom it then properly belonged, which decision was many years afterwards approved by Baron Parke in Bull v. Turner ( 1 Tyr. & G. 367), and is stated by Tidd to be the practice, in these words: “ Or if the deposit was made by any other person than the defendant, the court will, upon bail above being put in and perfected, or the defendant surrendered, order it to be repaid to the bail or other person by whom it was actually deposited, and not to the defendant” (1 Tidd. Pr. 228, 9th Lond. ed.; and see also 1 Arch. Pr. 76).

In addition to this, Judge Brady having declared (Hermann v. Aaronson, 8 Abb. Pr. N. S.

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

Related

Fitts v. Becker
36 Misc. 322 (New York Supreme Court, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Abb. N. Cas. 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nathans-v-satterlee-nyctcompl-1884.