New York & Boston Despatch Express Co. v. Carroll

170 A.D. 197, 156 N.Y.S. 14, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5974
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 3, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 170 A.D. 197 (New York & Boston Despatch Express Co. v. Carroll) 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 York & Boston Despatch Express Co. v. Carroll, 170 A.D. 197, 156 N.Y.S. 14, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5974 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Ingraham, P. J.:

The complaint alleges a cause of action based upon the receipt by defendants’ testator of certain insurance moneys upon a policy whereby the insurance company insured the defendants’ testator as “freighter, forwarder, bailee, common carrier, or for account of whom it may concern; loss, if any, payable to” John H. Starin’ “or order to the amount of $20,000 on goods, wares and merchandise, including live stock and baggage while on hoard ” the vessel known as the John H. Starin (subsequently transferred to the Glen Island), owned by the said John H. Starin, ‘ against all loss, damage, detriment or hurt by fire * * *. It is the intent of these insurers to fully indemnify the assured for all general average charges and salvage expenses, and loss, damage, detriment or hurt to said property * * *." The complaint alleges further that the- steamer so insured was destroyed by fire on December 17, 1904, and on March 7, 1905, the defendants’ testator collected from the insurance company the amount of the policy, to wit, the sum of $19,500, for the account of the owner of said cargo so burned as aforesaid; that the testator died in the year 1909, and the defendants duly qualified as executors of his estate.

It seems to be conceded that this complaint set up a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff, under the decision of the Court of Appeals in Symmers v. Carroll (207 N. Y. 632). Among other defenses, the defendants set up the six years’ Statute of Limitations, alleging that this action was commenced March 1,1915, and not within six years after the cause of action stated in the complaint had accrued to the plaintiff and each and every one of its assignors. To that defense the plaintiff served a reply, admitting that the action was commenced March 1,1915, and alleging that the plaintiff had no knowledge or information with respect to the insurance which defendants’ testator had effected on the cargo of the steamer Glen Island,, or of the receipt by said defendants’ testator of any sums upon insurance policies or otherwise, until the attention of one- of plaintiff’s officers was called to a notice which [199]*199appeared in the public prints on March 20,1912, of the decision in the case of Symmers v. Carroll by the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court. Upon the pleadings the defendants made a motion for judgment, which was denied, • and from that order the defendants appeal. Thus the only question upon this appeal is the sufficiency of this plea of the statute.

It is alleged in the complaint that on March 1, 1905, Starin collected from the insurance company the amount of its policy “ for account of the owners of said cargo so burned as aforesaid.” The cause of action, therefore, arose in favor of the plaintiff on the 1th of March, 1905. Starin died in the year" 1909. While a cause of action existed against him to enforce his obligation to pay the portion of the insurance money to the plaintiff, by section 403 of the Code of Civil Procedure “the term of eighteen months after the death, within the State, of a person against whom a cause of action exists * * * is not a part of the time limited for the commencement of an action against his executor or administrator. ” Adding eighteen months to the six years, would make the statute a bar on September 1, 1912, and this action was not commenced until March 1,1915.

This question seems to have been presented in Roberts v. Ely (113 N. Y. 128). In that case a company whose financial agent was defendant’s testator (sic) was in possession of a quantity of teas which were the property of the plaintiff and his partner, and it was agreed that the company of defendant’s testator should hold the teas in storage and insure the same for their benefit; that the teas so insured were destroyed by fire, and the insurance money for the whole collected and received by defendant’s testator in November, 1812, who wrongfully appropriated the whole thereof and paid no portion to the plaintiff or his partner, the plaintiff’s assignor; and the relief demanded was that the defendant account for and pay over to the plaintiff all moneys received by reason of the destruction of the teas belonging to the plaintiff and the plaintiff’s assignor. The Statute of Limitations was pleaded, and the Court of Appeals held that the bar of the statute was a conclusive answer to the claim of the plaintiff upon his own theory of the cause of action. That theory is stated by the Court of [200]*200Appeals as follows: “The plaintiff insists that Geiger & Co., whose rights he represents, became the equitable owners of a specific portion of the insurance money collected, and which came to the hands of David J. Ely, the defendant’s intestate. ” Ely collected from the insurance company $43,535, and the trial judge found that in this sum was included $5,841.25 paid by the insurers on account of the destruction of the teas of Geiger & Co. “Upon all the circumstances, the plaintiff insists that when the insurance money was paid to Ely he took it impressed with a trust in favor of Geiger & Co., to the extent of their interest in the teas destroyed by the fire, as represented in the fund received, and was equitably bound to account to Geiger & Co. for their equitable interest.”

Turning to Symmers v. Carroll (207 N. Y. 632), under which it was held that a cause of action was stated, it was there said: “If Starin held the insurance moneys as trustee, then the owners of the cargo here represented by the plaintiff had the right to call him to account, and it was his duty to state his account and prove the items of his loss. * * * It was his further duty, after paying himself, to divide what remained of the insurance money among the owners of the cargo according to their respective rights and interest.” It seems to me that the cause of action thus alleged is similar to that alleged in Roberts v. Ely, and that the rule there laid down must apply to this case. In stating the rule applicable, the court; in Roberts v. Ely, said: “ Assuming that the plaintiff is right in his construction of the facts, the case falls within the familiar doctrine that money in the hands of one perspn, to which another is equitably entitled, may be recovered in a common law action by the equitable owner upon an implied promise arising from the duty of the person in possession to account for and pay over the same to the person beneficially entitled. The action for money had and received to the use of another is the form in which courts of common law enforce the equitable obligation. * * * The right on the one side, and the correlative duty on the other, create the necessary privity and justify the implication of a promise by the defendant to do that which justice and equity require. * * * Nor is this form of action excluded, because in a general sense there is a [201]*201relation of trust between the parties arising out of the transaction. There are many cases of trust cognizable only in a court of equity. * * * But the fact that money in the hands of one person is impressed with a trust in favor of another, or that the relation between them has a trust character, does not ipso facto exclude the jurisdiction of courts of law. The general rule that trusts are cognizable in equity and are enforceable only in an equitable action is subject to many exceptions, as, for instance, cases of bailments and that larger class of cases where the action for money had and received for another’s use is maintained ex cequo et

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Bluebook (online)
170 A.D. 197, 156 N.Y.S. 14, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-boston-despatch-express-co-v-carroll-nyappdiv-1915.