Pearsall v. Nassau National Bank

74 A.D. 89, 77 N.Y.S. 11
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 74 A.D. 89 (Pearsall v. Nassau National Bank) 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
Pearsall v. Nassau National Bank, 74 A.D. 89, 77 N.Y.S. 11 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Jenks, J.:

The bank had no lieu upon the deposits of Mr. Johnson for the payment of the note before the maturity thereof, for the reason stated in Jordan v. National Shoe & Leather Bank (74 N. Y. 467), that such right does not arise from mere possession, but from contract or operation of law, and where . there is no contract the law does not imply one until after the note falls due, remains unpaid and no other rights have intervened. Before the note fell due Mr. Johnson had made and delivered the assignment. As Mr. Johnson had the right to draw out his balance at any time before the note fell due, inasmuch as the bank then had no lien upon it, that right passed to the assignee previous to the maturity of the note, so that when the bank attempted to enforce the lien it dealt not with its debt to the depositor, but with his assignee. (See, too, Coffin v. McLean, 80 N. Y. 560, 563.) In Beckwith v. Union Bank of New York (9 N. Y. 211) an insolvent firm with money on deposit in a bank made a general assignment. Thereafter, but before notice of the assignment to the bank, a bill against the firm held by the bank, larger than the deposit, fell due and was charged up by the bank against the account. The court held that the bank had no lien which would have prevented the assignors from drawing out their deposit before the maturity of the bill, that the right passed to the assignees, and that no notice was necessary to perfect that right except that only in default of notice the bank might have so dealt by its subsequent acts as to have affected his rights. (See, too, Lawrence v. Congregational Church, 32 App. Div. 489 ; affd., 164 N. Y. 115.) In Coates v. First National Bank of Emporia (91 N. Y. 20, 27) it is said that the only object of notice is to guard the debtor against dealings with the assignor in the belief that he still owned the debt. The learned counsel for the appellant contends that the plaintiff as trustee. in bankruptcy took the property as though no assignment had been made, and subject to all lawful liens upon it for the reason that the bankruptcy proceedings avoided the [92]*92assignment, and that the title of the assignee is as of the date when the adjudication of bankruptcy was made, and cites MacDonald v. Moore (1 Abb. N. C. 53), decided by Blatchford, J., in United States District Court, southern district of Now York. It is to be noted that in Thrasher v. Bentley (59 N. Y. 649), more fully reported in 1 Abbott’s New Cases, at page 39, the Court of Appeals, where the point was made that a general assignment was void under the Bankrupt Act, and that the assignee took no title, said : “ We do not discover in the facts of this case anything which shows that this assignment is in hostility to the Bankrupt Act, and, therefore, void. There is no preference created by it in favor of any creditor. On the contrary, it piro vides in terms for the payment of all his creditors in full; and if that may not be, then ratably and in proportion. There is no intimation that the debtor (Syme) has ever been proceeded against or taken proceedings in the bankrupt court. We do not find in the Bankrupt Act any piro vision which makes an assignment of such kind, by a debtor not made a bankrupt, an instrument voider se. On the contrary, there are authorities that such an assignment is not void. It was so held in Sedgwick v. Place (1 Bank. Reg. 204, by Nelson, J.); and on Hawkins's Appeal, in the Supreme Court of Connecticut (see 34 Conn. 548).” (See, too, Syracuse, Binghamton & New York R. R. Co. v. Collins, 57 N. Y. 641; Haas v. O'Brien, 66 id. 597 ; Wilson v. Nelson, 183 U. S. 191.)

.Mr. Collier, in his work on Bankruptcy, says that such an assignment is voidable and not void, and is good except in proceedings instituted in bankruptcy. (3d ed. pp.41,42, citing many authorities.) Moreover, the present act differs from the act as it existed when MacDonald v. Moore (supra) was decided, in that it provides that all property assigned within four months prior to the filing-of the pietition, with intent to hinder delay and defraud creditors, shall be and remain a pmrt of the assets and estate of the bankrupt, and shall ptass to the trustee, whose duty it shall be to recover and to reclaim the same by legal proceedings or otherwise for the benefit of the creditors. The assignment in the case at bar was not set aside’, but was invalidated by the bankruptcy proceedings. I think, then, that before the defendant had any right to exercise a lien, the title to the deposit vested in the assignee, and that when the [93]*93assignment was invalidated by the bankruptcy proceedings, the title of the assignee passed to the trustee, and that there was no interval after the assignee acquired title, and before the trustee took title, during which the title was in Mr. Johnson, so that at or upon the maturity of the note the bank could enforce a lien thereupon as against his property.

The learned counsel for the appellant contends that under the Bankruptcy Act the right of setoff existed from the time the notes were discounted, citing sections 63 and 68 of the act (30 U. S. Stat. at Large, 562, 565). He points out that section 68, to quote his language, “ provides that in all cases of mutual debts or mutual credits between the estate of a bankrupt and a creditor, the account shall be stated, and one debt shall be set off against the other, and the balance only shall be allowed or paid,” and that section 63, also quoting the counsel’s language, provides that “the ‘debts’ of a bankrupt which may be proved and allowed against his estate are a fixed liability as evidenced' by judgment or an instrument in writing absolutely owing at the time of the filing of the petition against him, whether then payable or not,” and hence he contends that the bank had the right of setoff even if the notes had not fallen due before the bankruptcy proceedings were commenced. I think that those provisions must be interpreted as applicable to the proceedings in bankruptcy and to the incidental proof and allowance of claims, but not as intended to change the principles of setoff in actions. (Munger v. Albany City National Bank, 85 N. Y. 580, 588, citing Sawyer v. Hoag, 17 Wall. 610.) When the plaintiff was declared a bankrupt, there was no mutual debt or mutual credit as between him and the bank, for the reason that he had, before even the filing of the petition, parted with his title to the assignee for the benefit of his creditors, and the claim in effect was that of the creditors as against the bank.

In order to render a preference voidable within section 60 of the Bankruptcy Law (sufra, 562), it is necessary, inter alla, to establish that there was reasonable cause on the part of the creditor to believe that a preference was intended. (Sebring v. Wellington, 63 App. Div. 498.) In Matter of Eggert (4 Am. Bank. Rep. 449) Jenkins, O. J., after a review of many authorities, pertinently [94]

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Bluebook (online)
74 A.D. 89, 77 N.Y.S. 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearsall-v-nassau-national-bank-nyappdiv-1902.