New England Water Works Co. v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co.

54 A.D. 309
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 54 A.D. 309 (New England Water Works Co. v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New England Water Works Co. v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co., 54 A.D. 309 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

The Iowa Water Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Iowa, on or about April 15, 1897, made and delivered to the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company,-as trustee, a mortgage or deed of trust to secure an issue of 400 bonds of $1,000 each, with interest. The coupons representing the interest on these bonds were payable on the first of- April and October in each year at the office of the defendant in the city of New York. On April 1, 1891, it would appear that there were outstanding 349 bonds, and on March. 28,-1891, the treasurer of the water company sent to the defendant a draft for $4,195.45 in a letter which stated that C. IT. Tenner had assumed the payment of the interest- on $120,000 of the . bonds and would pay as usual the interest on the same, and on the - same day the assistant treasurer of the Iowa Water Company sent to the defendant another draft for $2,000, which .was to be applied to the payment of the coupons due on April first. Before April first Mr. C. H. Tenner called on the defendant and was informed that the amount sent to the defendant was not sufficient to pay all the coupons on the outstanding bonds due on- April first, and that the defendant would not pay out any of the money which it had received until provision was made for the full amount of coupons maturing on April first. After several propositions had been made . by Mr.- Tenner to induce the defendant to. pay the coupons, to which the defendant refused to accede, Mr. Tenner suggested that the trust company pay out the full amount it.liad received, and when this was exhausted that the trust company .should purchase the remaining coupons as they were presented for the account of Tenner & Co., and -the amount paid by the trust company therefor Tenner & Co. [311]*311would pay to the defendant. Mr. Searls, the vice-president of the ' trust company, agreed to this arrangement, and subsequently the trust company paid all of the coupons presented and sent to O. H. Venner & Co. ninety-three coupons that the defendant had paid, but for which they had received no money from the mortgagor, and Tenner & Co. paid to the trust company the amount-thereof. Subsequently, ’ and on June 24, 1891, one S. L. Wiley, an officer of the mortgagor, transmitted to the trust company drafts aggregating $3,663, which the trust company were directed to apply in satisfaction of the interest coupons on the bonds secured by the mortgage before mentioned due April 1, 1891. The letter accompanying this remittance contained the following statement: “O. H. Tenner is under obligation to pay" this money, as well as all future accruing interest on these bonds, together- with the principal, but I make payment of" the same to you under protest, solely for the purpose of preventing any breach of any of the covenants of the mortgage of the Iowa Water Co. securing these bonds. It is my purpose to call on Tenner for the return of this money to me and to force him at once to make good to me this expenditure. * * * I wish you would send these paid coupons to me. Under the terms of" my contract with Tenner, he is under obligation to pay them, and I am advised that when I pay the same 1 can recover the amount with interest from Tenner. I, therefore, wish the paid coupons as evidence that I have discharged them myself. I wish, in the same connection, that hereafter you shall not deliver to Tenner any coupons, nor, indeed, any bonds which may be paid off or discharged. I, myself, am entitled to them and protest against their delivery to Tenner under any circum-' stances.” After the receipt of this letter and remittance by the defendant, Tenner seems to have received notice that money had been deposited with the trust company to pay these coupons. He sent to the trust company the ninety-three coupons which had been delivered to him, which the trust company refused to pay. Subsequently Tenner had a conversation with Mr". Searls, the vice-president of the defendant. The exact purport of this conversation is not clear as Mr. Searls is dead and Mr. Tenner’s recollection of it does not appear to be very distinct. At the close of the interview, however, Searls said he would write to the Iowa Water Company and explain the situation. It is also proved that Mr. Searls did write to Wiley. [312]*312in relation to the payment .of the coupons held by Tenner. The letter was offered in evidence by plaintiff. It stated that Tenner had on or about April first made an arrangement with the trust, company by which the trust company was to pay the coupons which the mortgagor had not provided money to pay, and that he (Tenner) would repay to the trust company the amount paid therefor; that in pursuance of that arrangement the trust company had paid the coupons; had sent ninety of such coupons to Tenner who had q>aid the trust company ■ the amount called for by such ninety coupons, and asked for more explicit directions as to whether ■ or not the defendant should pay Mr. Tenner the amount represented by these ninety coupons. In answer to this the defendant received a letter from Wiley which the defendant offered 'but which appears to have been excluded by the court.. The letter, however, was marked for identification and is part of the record. It stated that the money sent to the defendant was to be held and used by it to prevent any breach in the covenant of the mortgage of the Iowa Water Company securing the payment of the bonds, and directing the defendant that if Tenner had paid and acquired title to the coupons the defendant was not to pay him therefor; that under the plain and unequivocal terms of his contract, Tenner must pay these bonds, both principal and interest. “If he once pays .eitlier bonds or coupons, in whole or in part, we refuse to pay him any part of what he may pay. * "x" *' You must not .pay Tenner or anyone for his use.” The letter also contained a direction to-send to Wiley the amount of money represented by the coupons Tenner may have paid. In accordance with the instruction in this letter the trust company refused to pay Tenner the amount of the ninety-three coupons held by him, but returned the amount thereof to Wiley. .There was no evidence- that the money transmitted by Wiley was the money of the mortgagor or that the defendant had any right to make any use of that money, except aS directed by Wiley from whom it had been received.

Assuming that the defendant as trustee, having received from the mortgagor a certain amount of money with which to pay the coupons, was bound to apply the money that it had received to that purpose, and that a liability was imposed upon the defendant to the holders of coupons which they could enforce, and that the coupons [313]*313held by Venner stood in the position of unpaid coupons which Venner was entitled to enforce against, the mortgagor, he certainly avouM have had no cause of action against the defendant unless the defendant had received money which it Avas authorized to pay for the coupons held by him. Certainly the ■ defendant, receiving this money as it did with specific directions as to the application to be made of it, was neither required nor in fact authorized to use this money except in compliance with these directions. If it had paid this money in violation of Wiley’s instructions it would have been responsible to Wiley for an unauthorized use thereof. The plaintiff’s counsel, on the argument before us, and in his brief submitted, seems to claim that the trust company, having in its possession money sent to it by Wiley under the circumstances detailed, converted that money to its.

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Bluebook (online)
54 A.D. 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-england-water-works-co-v-farmers-loan-trust-co-nyappdiv-1900.