People v. Central City Bank

53 Barb. 412, 35 How. Pr. 428, 1867 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 236
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 53 Barb. 412 (People v. Central City Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Central City Bank, 53 Barb. 412, 35 How. Pr. 428, 1867 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 236 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1867).

Opinion

Hogeboom, J.

The plaintiffs moved at a special term in the third district (where the venue was laid) for an order against Charles B. Sedgwick, Esq., of Syracuse, to show cause why the custody of the assets of said bank was withheld from L. Harris Hiscock, the receiver appointed therein by Justice Peckham; why an attachment should not issue against him, the said Sedgwick; why he should not be punished for his alleged misconduct; and why the order (of Justice Poster) appointing him, the said Sedgwick, receiver, should not be vacated.

The motion is made upon all the papers in the case, and it is necessary to look into most of them to determine the merits of the application. The Central City Bank suspended payment on Saturday, the 29th day of December, 1866. Upon a petition of the attorney general, accompanying papers stating that fact and the insolvency of the bank, verified on the 31st day of. December, 1866, Justice Peckham, at a special term, granted an order for the defendant to show cause on that day, at 11 o’clock A. m., why the business of said corporation should not be closed and a receiver appointed. This- order, together with the summons and complaint, were personally served upon Hon. LeBoy Morgan, the vice president and a diree[414]*414tor of said bank, on said 31st day of December, at about 10£ o’clock a. m. At the time appointed for showing cause, the plaintiffs appeared, by counsel, and the defendant did not appear. An order was thereupon granted, at special term, by Justice Peckham, that the said Central City Bank be and the same was thereby dissolved, and restraining the bank and its officers from exercising any of its corporate functions, and from receiving or disposing of any of its effects except to the receiver, and appointing L. Harris Hiscock, on filing a proper bond-duly approved, (describing the same,) receiver of the bank, with the usual powers in closing up the affairs of the bank and making a final settlement of the same. This order was filed with the clerk at about 11.35 a. m. of the 31st of December, and on the same day, at about the same hour, the required bond was duly approved, and filed with the clerk. Mr. Hiscock, learning that Mr. . Sedgwick was in possession of the assets, of the bank, called upon him, on the 3d day of January, 1867, exhibiting to him the order appointing him receiver, and demanded of him possession of said assets, with which demand said Sedgwick refused to comply. Thereupon the proceedings before referred to were instituted, to compel such compliance and to punish him for contempt, which resulted in the order made at special term, from which this appeal is taken.

The ground upon which said Sedgwick refused compliance with said order, and declined to deliver said assets, was, that, as he claimed, he himself was the lawful receiver of the bank, and entitled to hold and administer its assets. On the 29th day of December, 1866, (the day on which the bank suspended payment,) George Barnes, the cashier of the institution, instituted proceedings, under the act of 1849, to obtain an injunction against the bank and the appointment of a receiver; that is, he employed counsel and verified a petition, on that day, for [415]*415such purpose. Upon this petition Justice Foster, on the 31st day of December, 1866, at chambers, and as early as 11 o’clock of that day, granted an order that said bank,. on the same day, at 4 o’clock p. m,, show cause why it should not be declared insolvent, and why an injunction should not issue and a receiver be appointed. These papers were, soon thereafter, duly served upon Oliver F. Burt, the president of the bank, (as by said order required,) on said 31st day of December. At the time appointed, the parties appeared, and Justice Foster, at chambers, made an order declaring the bank insolvent, awarding an injunction against the further exercise of its functions, and appointing the said Charles B. Sedgwick receiver of the bank, on his executing and filing with the clerk a bond, with sureties, duly approved, (as specified in said order.) On the same day the requisite bond, duly approved, was executed and filed with the clerk of Onondaga ; and thereupon, also on the same day, said Sedgwick, as such receiver, demanded and received from Oliver F. Burt, the president, possession of the property and assets of the institution, which he still retains.

The proceedings under which the respective parties acted in obtaining the appointment of their respective receivers, considered without reference to each other or to the validity of the statute under which they were respectively had, appear to have been regular’, or at least not invalid. Some objections, partly of a technical character, are taken by the defendant against the plaintiffs’ proceedings, on the question of regularity, but I think they have not sufficient foundation to invalidate the proceedings. Thus, in regard to the orders made by Justice Peclcham, first, the order to show cause; and second, the order appointing a receiver, it is said they are invalid, because not shown to have been made at a regularly adjourned special term, and not to have been actually entered by the clerk. As to the first objection, I think the an[416]*416swer is, it will not be presumed that they were made at a term irregularly held. There is nothing to show that the special term, in question was not the continuance of a term regularly held by the justice, and held open by him for the transaction of further business, at his chambers or elsewhere. The court having been regularly convened, continues open till actually adjourned. An order for its continuance is not essential; and an order made by the court, that it should so continue, is not necessary to be entered with the clerk. If it is so, I think when actually made by the court, (which is the act which gives it validity,) it'is the duty of the clerk to enter it; or, if accidentally omitted, it may be entered by him nunc pro tunc, and would even now, if necessary, be ordered to be entered, to sustain proceedings had under it, otherwise regular. If Justice Beckham’s special term was of this character, as we may presume, there is nothing to impeach their validity in the respect just specified. As to the second objection, that the orders were not entered by the clerk, I have just said they were the orders of the court, approved by the seal of the justice, and must be entered. If not entered immediately, as is of course more appropriate, they may be entered afterwards. It is the clerk’s duty to enter them, without any special directions to that effect, and they may be entered nunc pro tunc when accidentally omitted, and when necessary to sustain proceedings had in good faith, and otherwise unexceptionable. The delay or omission of a clerk to make actual and speedy entry of the order in the minutes, cannot be allowed to prejudice the substantial rights of parties.

Again, it is said that the order to show cause was not properly served, and that no proper evidence of service was furnished to the court or incorporated in the order. The order was served on the vice president, and I think he was a proper person on whom to serve. It now appears that he was also a director, and I rather think that [417]*417would be presumed from Ms office of vice president. Although the evidence of such service is not recited in the order appointing the receiver, I think we may presume that the evidence of it was presented to the court before it allowed them to take the order on the nonappearance of the defendant, which was directed to be served on the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
53 Barb. 412, 35 How. Pr. 428, 1867 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-central-city-bank-nysupct-1867.