People v. American Loan & Trust Co.

70 A.D. 579, 75 N.Y.S. 563
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 70 A.D. 579 (People v. American 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
People v. American Loan & Trust Co., 70 A.D. 579, 75 N.Y.S. 563 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinions

Patterson, J.:

The several matters requiring consideration in this case are brought up-by appeal from an order made at the-Special Term sus[581]*581taining some and overruling other conclusions of a referee. The duty imposed upon the referee by the order of his appointment was to make a proper distribution among creditors of a balance of moneys remaining in the hands of the receiver of the American Loan and Trust Company. That corporation had been dissolved by an order of the Supreme Court made on the 1st day of May, 1891, and in and by such order J. Edward Simmons was appointed its receiver. He entered upon the discharge of his duties, collected the assets of the corporation and from time to time, in pursuance of orders of the court, made payments to preferred creditors of the corporation, but none to unpreferred creditors.

Among the preferred creditors are the Onondaga County Savings Bank, the Monroe County Savings Bank, the Union Dime Savings Institution and the Farmers and Mechanics’ Savings Bank. These several institutions with other preferred creditors have been paid by the receiver the full amount of the principal of their respective claims upon the dissolved corporation. Those claims .were for moneys on deposit with that corporation and under agreements by which interest ■ at varying rates was to be paid upon such deposits. On the 21st day of July, 1891, a dividend of thirty-five per cent was paid to the preferred creditors on the principal of their claims ; on July 13, 1892, another payment of thirty-five per cent was made to them in the same way ; on June 21, 1893, another dividend of twenty per cent was paid them, and on the 2d of July, 1894, a fourth dividend of ten per cent was paid. Each of these several dividends was receipted for as a dividend on the principal amount of the claims of these preferred creditors. The receipt for the fourth and final dividend recited that it was on and completed the payment of the principal of the claim of the creditor receiving it as a preferred creditor of the trust company. The referee in his report allowed these savings institutions and their preferred creditors interest upon their claims. They had insisted before him that they were entitled to legal interest down to the time of the payment of the first dividend, and that such payments should be treated as being first on account of interest and then the balance applied to the payment of the principal and so on with the three other dividends. The referee did not adopt that contention, but reported that the preferred creditors were entitled to interest upon the :prin[582]*582cipal of their claims down to the time of the payment of the first dividend, then to interest upon the balance as upon a new principa;! until the payment of the second dividend, and so on through the whole series of payments. The allowance of interest upon the preferred claims, including those of the savings institutions, would éxhaust the whole of the balance in the hands of the receiver, leaving nothing for the unpreferred creditors. Certain of those unpreferred creditors, namely, Louis Bauer, William L. Koester and Louise B. O’Connor, individually and as administratrix of James Owen O’Connor, deceased, excepted to the report of the referee. 'The claims of those parties amount to about $153,000. The aggregate of unpreferred claims allowed by the referee was $455,000, but none of the unpreferred creditors other than those above named excepted to the report of the referee. Euphemia A. Hawes, the executrix of the last will and testament of Granville P. Hawes, deceased, presented claims aggregating $14,786.46, and of that amount she claimed to ■ be entitled to a preference for $8y365 on one ground and to $5,000 with interest on another ground. The referee refused to allow the preference, but recognized the whole amount of these claims as unpreferred debts. They = had their origin in legal services rendered by Mr. Hawes to the American Loan and Trust Company, some of which services apparently were continued after the appointment of the receiver. Thomas P. Wickes, as receiver of the firm of Stanton & Co., was included by the referee in the schedule of preferred creditors and was. allowed interest upon the claims of that firm. By the order appealed from, the learned judge at Special Term, adopting the conclusion of the referee, adjudged that the claim of Mrs. Hawes, as executrix, was not entitled to a preference. Contrary to the com elusion of' the referee, he held that the savings banks and the preferred 'creditors appearing before him were not entitled to interest. He further held that all the unpreferred creditors were entitled to share in the distributable balance in the hands of the- receiver, and not those only who lmd filed exceptions to the referee’s report. The several specific matters we are to consider on this appeal may, therefore, be stated as follows: First., Is the executrix of the last will and testament of Granville P, Hawes, deceased, entitled to a preference of either of both of the items of $8,000 and $5,000, which [583]*583the referee ranked as nnpreferred claims ? Second. Are the savings banks and Thomas P. Wickes, receiver, entitled to interest on their respective preferred claims ? Third. If those preferred creditors are not entitled to such interest, is the distribution of the balance of the moneys in the hands of the receiver to be made among those nnpreferred creditors who excepted to the report of the referee, or is that balance to be distributed among such unpreferred creditors generally?

First. An examination of the evidence respecting the services rendered by Mr. Hawes shows that the summary of the facts in relation thereto, made by the referee in his report, is an accurate statement of all that Mr. Hawes did under his employment. Prom those facts no other conclusion was permissible than that reached by the referee. The claim to a preference for these services must stand upon the right to a statutory lien, or the right to a common-law lien .as distinguished from a statutory lien, or upon equitable considerations indicating that a fund from which payment is preferentially demanded was either created in whole or in part, or preserved by the services of the attorney who makes a specific claim upon that fund. The $8,000 item is for services rendered by Mr. Hawes as the regular attorney and counsel of the American Loan and Trust Company. That corporation was a trustee under a mortgage made to secure bonds of the Decatur, Chespeake and N ew Orleans Railway Company. The American Loan and Trust Company held in its own right some $400,000 at par value of those bonds and about the same amount of its stock. These securities were held as collateral to a loan made by the trust company to the railway company of about $310,000. The mortgage upon default of the bonds was foreclosed .and Mr. Hawes was paid for his services in that foreclosure. He .also rendered services in connection with the collateral securities held by the trust company, and it would seem that the claim is made to a lien upon the funds in the hands of the receiver, or a right to a preferential payment thereof on the ground that Mr. Hawes had some specific right or lien upon the bonds and stocks so held by the trust company as collateral. All that was ever received by the trust company out of these collaterals appears to have been the sum of $5,950. There does not appear to have been any judicial proceedings in connection with this collateral security; and, hence, [584]

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Bluebook (online)
70 A.D. 579, 75 N.Y.S. 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-american-loan-trust-co-nyappdiv-1902.