Perth Amboy Mutual Loan, Homestead & Building Ass'n v. Chapman

80 A.D. 556, 81 N.Y.S. 38
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 80 A.D. 556 (Perth Amboy Mutual Loan, Homestead & Building Ass'n v. Chapman) 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
Perth Amboy Mutual Loan, Homestead & Building Ass'n v. Chapman, 80 A.D. 556, 81 N.Y.S. 38 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

The action was brought to recover the value of six bonds of the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company, and six bonds of the Columbus, Hocking Valley and Toledo Railroad Company. The complaiht alleges that the plaintiff was the owner of these bonds; that one Valentine, the treasurer of the plaintiff, “ wrongfully and fraudulently took said bonds and delivered the same to Henry T. Chapman, Jr., the defendant above named; ” that the said defendant wrongfully received the same and now holds said bonds in his possession ; that a demand was made upon the defendant for said bonds, but that the defendant refused and still refuses to deliver the same, or make compensation therefor; that the said bonds were of the value of $20,000, for which amount the plaintiff demands judgment. The answer denies that the bonds belong to the plaintiff, and denies that Valentine, being the treasurer of the plaintiff, wrongfully and fraudulently took said bonds and delivered the same to the defendant ; denies that the defendant wrongfully received said bonds and now holds said bonds in his possession; that a demand has been made upon him for the bonds, or that they are of the value of $20,000.

The plaintiff proved on the trial that it had purchased these bonds specified, with some Chesapeake and Ohio bonds, and that they were delivered to a committee of the trustees of the plaintiff, who kept them in a safe deposit vault in the city of New York ; that on January 23, 1897, it having been determined to sell the bonds, this committee delivered them to Valentine, as treasurer of the plaintiff, for that purpose; that Valentine had purchased the bonds for the plaintiff and was cashier of the Middlesex County Bank, a New Jersey banking corporation; that these bonds were all delivered by Valentine to the defendant shortly after he received them from the trustees; that the Chesapeake and Ohio bonds were sold by the defendant, and the proceeds thereof paid to Valentine and by him to the plaintiff; that it was then decided not to sell the bonds involved in this action until after July 1, 1898, the bonds being left with Valentine as its treasurer; that in October, 1897, there was an [558]*558examination of the affairs of the plaintiff company by an auditor, and Valentine at that time presented to the auditor a receipt signed by the defendant, dated October 18, 1897, which acknowledged the receipt of these bonds in suit, and this receipt was accepted by the auditor as evidence that the bonds in suit were held by Valentine as treasurer of the bank.

These bonds appear to have been held by the defendant as security for advances made to Valentine in stock speculations carried on in the defendant’s office. In July, 1897, an employee in the Department of Banking and Insurance of the State of New Jersey called upon the defendant in relation to securities in his hands, the property of the Middlesex County Bank, and asked the defendant whether he held any bonds as security for a loan to Valentine by the Middlesex County Bank, to which the defendant answered that he did, and the witness then stated that he was the State Bank Examiner of New Jersey and would like to see the bonds. The defendant produced the bonds and said that he held them as the property of George M. Valentine, to secure a loan that Valentine had obtained from the Middlesex County Bank, of which he was cashier. The witness further testified that subsequently, in December, 1898, he had a second interview with the defendant and found the same bonds in the defendant’s possession; that the defendant said he was awaiting the order to sell; that the bonds had been placed in his hands by Valentine for sale, the proceeds to be sent to the bank; that he understood that Valentine had obtained a loan from the bank and these bonds were given to secure that loan; that the witness then asked the defendant for a receipt for the bonds to annex it to his report, when the defendant gave the following receipt:

December 19, 1898.
“ 1 hold for account of the Middlesex County Bank of Perth Amboy, New Jersey, the following securities, viz.:
“ 10,000 Ches. & Ohio R. R. Bonds, 4$.
“6,000 Col. Hocking Valley & Toledo, 6%.
“ 6,000 Lehigh Valley, 4%f0.
“HENRY T. CHAPMAN.”

It further appeared that in June, 1899, the Middlesex County Bank failed, when it was discovered that Valentine, who had been its cashier, was a defaulter, having stolen substantially all of the [559]*559property of the hank. The defendant testified on his own behalf that he first became acquainted with Valentine in 1893, when he was introduced to him by the president of the Middlesex County Bank as its new cashier; that Valentine at that time opened a personal account with the defendant, which was an ordinary account of a customer with his broker; that on January 22, 1897, he received these bonds in suit from Valentine; that Valentine never mentioned that these bonds were the property of the plaintiff, and that the defendant never knew of their interest in them until this claim was made; that about July 1, 1897, before the first call of the Bank Examiner of Hew Jersey, the defendant received a letter from Valentine, which was as follows:

“ My Dear Mr. Chapman :
“ The Bank Examiner was just here and I reported that the securities that you held for me were only there for sale; he may come down to see you to-morrow, July 2d. If he does would like you to make the same report to him and if you have them in' your safe show them; if you have them up as collateral for loan don’t be in but leave word as directed that you are holding same for sale for me.
“Yours truly,
“ GEORGE M. VALEHTIHE.”

The defendant also testified that subsequent to the receipt of this letter he had an interview with the examiner, but that he did not remember what he said to him; it does not appear that at the time there was any amount due from Valentine to the defendant which the defendant had advanced upon the security of these bonds, the defendant expressly testifying that it was impossible for him to say whether he held them as collateral security for Valentine’s obligations when he gave a letter to the Banking Department of the State of Hew Jersey, as at times Valentine was largely in the defendant’s debt and at other times he was not; that it was perfectly proper to give this letter to the Banking Department of Hew Jersey if his account with Valentine showed that the bonds were free.

The defendant’s office manager testified that on the 7th day of July, 1897, these bonds were free in his account so far as a margin was concerned; that on the 19th day of December, 1898, when the [560]*560letter to the Bank Examiner was given, there was $20,000 credit to Valentine’s account. The defendant also testified that shortly after April 6, 1899, he made Valentine a further loan of about $2,500, and made it in part upon the securities of the bonds in suit, and that at that time he had no knowledge of the plaintiff or any claim on its part for any of these bonds; that on July 14 or 15, 1899, he received directions from Valentine to sell all of Valentine’s securities, and in pursuance of that direction he sold the bonds in question on the 15th day of July, 1899. This direction to sell was in writing and required the defendant to sell immediately K

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Bluebook (online)
80 A.D. 556, 81 N.Y.S. 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perth-amboy-mutual-loan-homestead-building-assn-v-chapman-nyappdiv-1903.