National Trust Co. v. . Gleason

77 N.Y. 400, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 789
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 27, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 77 N.Y. 400 (National Trust Co. v. . Gleason) 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
National Trust Co. v. . Gleason, 77 N.Y. 400, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 789 (N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

Raparlo, J.

The complaint in this action avers that about the 5th of July, 1873, the defendants were possessed of certain documents purporting to be forty-two first mortgage bonds of the Buffalo, New York and Erie Railroad Company, and that they obtained and received from the plaintiff $30,000 on the deposit of said pretended bonds with the plaintiff as security, but the plaintiff afterwards discovered that said bonds were forged and worthless, wherefore it alleges that the defendants have had and received to and for the use of the plaintiff the sum of $30,000, are indebted to the plaintiff in that sum. The complaint also *403 contains averments excusing the plaintiff from tendering the bonds to the defendants, and demands judgment for the $30,000, and interest.

The answers of the defendants who have answered deny the material allegations of the complaint, and the answer of the defendant Amelia A. Gleason sets up, in addition, that at the times of the transactions alleged in the complaint she was a married woman, the wife of the defendant Valentine Gleason.

The action was purely ex contractu, and one which, under the common-law system of pleading, would have been denominated an action of assumpsit for money had and received. No tort is alleged. There is no averment that the defendants had any connection with or knowledge of the forgery of the bonds, or that they were engaged in any conspiracy to defraud the plaintiff. No right or claim to damages for any wrong is set up, but simply an indebtedness for money had and received to the use of the plaintiff, or perhaps for money borrowed.

To maintain such an action it is necessary to establish that the defendants have received money belonging to the plaintiff or to which it is entitled. That is the fundamental fact upon which the right of action depends. It is not sufficient to show that they have by fraud or wrong caused the plaintiff to pay money to others, or to sustain loss or damage. That is not the issue presented in the action.

The plaintiff introduced evidence which, as is claimed, establishes that all the defendants were acting in concert, and were guilty in a greater or less degree of complicity in the forgery of the bonds. That the bonds were passed off upon the plaintiff by the defendant Charles Rolston, who received from the plaintiff the money advanced by it, and afterwards absconded.

. Upon this evidence (throwing out of view the special questions raised as to the liability of the defendants who were married women, and of those defendants as to whom it. is claimed that the evidence was insufficient to connect *404 thorn with the forgery) it was a question of fact for the jury whether Rolston, in receiving the money, was acting in behalf of those engaged with him in the forgery, and was carrying out the common purpose with the authority and for the benefit of all his confederates. It was not necessary to establish that each defendant personally received a share of the proceeds of the bonds. If the whole proceeds were received by a common agent, those for whose benefit it was • thus received were jointly liable for the entire sum ; and. this result would not be varied by the circumstance that the common agent failed to account, and absconded with the proceeds.

It was nevertheless a question of fact and not of law whether the several defendants who were g’uilty of complicity in the forgery were interested in the money received by Rolston. More complicity in a forgery or other crime docs not, as matter of law, render every guilty party liable in a civil action, ex contractu, for money had and received, or as borrowers, to every person who has been defrauded of money by means of such crime. To charge a party in an action of that character the receipt of the money by him, directly or indirectly, must be established. His complicity in the crime is not the cause of action, but only an item of evidence tending to establish his interest in the proceeds.

These questions are fully presented in the case at bar, by exceptions to the charge, and by requests to charge. As to the defendants Mrs. Gleason and H. S. Corp, they were also presented by a motion for a nonsuit. Among other grounds specified on that motion were the third, that as to Mrs. Gleason, who was a married woman, the plaintiffs had not shown that she had received any portion of the money ■obtained by Rolston from the plaintiff, or that any portion of it went to the benefit of her separate estate, and the sixth, that there was no evidence that either of the defendants participated in the money obtained by Rolston from the plaintiff. Before.the charge was delivered the counsel for all the defendants requested the court to charge, among other- *405 things, second, that to entitle the plaintiffs to a verdict they must establish that the defendants directly or indirectly aided or assisted, or were in some way knowingly implicated in obtaining, through Rolston, the money from the plaintiffs ; ninth, that if the jury believed that any defendant merely knew of the alleged intended crime of forgery, but did not participate in it or receive any of the proceeds, the jury would not be justified in finding a verdict against him. The counsel for defendants Mrs. Gleason and Corp requested the court to charge : third, that the jury could not find a verdict against Mrs. Gleason unless they were satisfied on the evidence that the money obtained on the bonds passed to the plaintiff, or some part thereof, was received by her and went to the benefit of her separate estate; fourth, that there was no direct evidence that Mrs. Gleason received any part of the money, or that any part of it went to the benefit of her separate estate ; eighth, that before the plaintiff can recover of either of the defendants in this action it must show that such defendant received some portion of the money obtained from .the plaintiff on the forged bonds, either personally or by an agent, and if by an agent the agency must be proved, and in case of the absence or insufficiency of such proof as to any defendant such defendant was entitled to a verdict.

The court charged the jury, among other things, that the law of the case was, “ that those who took part, a guilty part, no matter what that part was, how small or how great, in the commission of the forgery of the bonds of the Buffalo, New York and Erie Railway Company, were responsible in this case for the money that was obtained on any part of those bonds by the defendant Rolston. That it was immaterial what the part taken was, provided anything was done by any one of the parties for the purpose of assisting in accomplishing the success of the forgery; that each was responsible with the other.”

In view of the requests made, directing the attention off the court to the point, it is very clear that the court held and *406

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Bluebook (online)
77 N.Y. 400, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-trust-co-v-gleason-ny-1879.