Pierson v. . Atlantic National Bank

77 N.Y. 304, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 776
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 20, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 77 N.Y. 304 (Pierson v. . Atlantic National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pierson v. . Atlantic National Bank, 77 N.Y. 304, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 776 (N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

Miller, J.

The notes given when the loans of money were made, to recover which this action was brought, were both signed by F. L. Taintor, payable to the order of A. W. Gill, president, and contained a statement that United States bonds were pledged as collaterals. The checks for the several amounts were signed by Gill as president and payable to the individual order of Taintor. Gill was the president of the Guardian Mutual Life Insurance Company, and Taintor was the cashier of the Atlantic National Bank of New York. The entries made in the books of the plaintiff’s company were in each case, ‘‘ Call loans, gov’ts ; F. L. T. ; $25,000.” The papers and entries, on their face, appear to establish that the loans wrerc made to Taintor individually and not to the bank. They are not, however, conclusive, and are open to explanation by parol testimony. ¡Such evidence was introduced upon the trial, and the referee found in substance that the loans were made to the bank, and held that the bank was liable for the same. It is urged that there ivas no evidence to justify such finding ; and that, in this respect, there was error which demands a reversal of the judgment. The evidence shows that prior to the loans being made, the president of the insurance company had negotiations with the president and cashier of the defendant, who asked whether the Guardian Life Insurance Company had money, and the amount which was actually loaned, $25,000, on two different occasions ; and that afterwards the several loans of $25,000 each were made, and government bonds held by the bank were delivered and held by the Guardian *307 Mutual Life Insurance Company as collateral security to such loans. There is no evidence that these securities delivered and pledged belonged to Taintor individually, or that he claimed any property in them, or that he sought to use them for individual purposes, nor that Taintor applied for a loan on his individual responsibility. It also is proved that the vice-president of the insurance company had conversations with the defendant’s officers in regard to loans to the bank, and told them that if they had good collaterals, they would as soon loan to them as any one. After the loans were actually made, conversations of a like nature between the officers of the insurance company and of the bank were had, and the transactions which took place tend to sustain the theory that the bank, and not Taintor, was the borrower. The securities having been frequently changed by the bank, notice was given at the bank that the loan must be paid or permanent securities deposited. Taintor then suggested that the bonds be left in the bank and receipts given for the same. The bonds were delivered accordingly, and a statement made in writing, signed by the cashier, as such, dated so as to correspond with the date of the loans, and purporting to be from the bank, to the effect that : “ The bank holds for account of A. W. Gill, president,” the bonds in question. The president of the bank, upon being advised of what had been done, said, whatever the cashier signed was all right, and the receipts were all right. In this interview, the bonds were spoken of as being collateral to the loans made to the bank, or as loans. Here ivas a distinct recognition, in the receipts and in the conversation, that the loan was for the bank by both the cashier and the president, which cannot be disregarded. Although two other receipts were produced on the trial by the defendant, which were claimed to have been found in the envelope which, it is said, contained the bonds after the bank had failed, and refer to the bonds as “ collateral on loans to F. L. Taintor,” it is not proved that the officers of the insurance company ever saw them before the trial; and'the evidence warranted the conclusion arrived *308 at by the referee, that the receipts produced by the insurance company, and which were in their possession, were actually given, as sworn to, when the bonds were left with the bank.

It also appears that the Guardian Company previously made another loan, in the same year, of $20,000, with gov-. ernments as collateral; that a check was drawn for the money to the order of the defendant; that entries of the same were made in the books of the company of a similar character to those relating- to the loans now in controversy ; and that the loan last mentioned was finally paid by a check drawn upon the defendant's bank signed by Taintor as cashier. It will be observed that in the entries in cash book and ledger Taintor’s name appeal's to have been used as synonymous with the bank or with his name as cashier.

The general facts to which we have adverted were, we think, sufficient to warrant the conclusion at which the referee arrived ; and his finding, therefore, is upheld by the testimony. Whether the evidence introduced to establish the same was competent, presents other questions which will be hereafter more particularly considered in connection with. the rulings of the referee during the trial, to which exceptions were taken.

Objections were made upon the trial, to the testimony, and exceptions taken to the ruling of the referee as to the same. The objection first made was to a question put to the president of the insurance company, as to transactions with the defendant except the one involved in this suit; and the referee held that the evidence should not extend beyond the pleadings, and allowed testimony in regard to the negotiations which transpired prior to the loans and conversations had with the president of the insurance company and the officers of the bank relating to such loans. I do not see that the testimony given extended beyond the objection made, and therefore there was no error in this respect.

The objection made to the testimony of the vice-president as to what the insurance company did after the loans were made, in connection with the loans, is not, I think, well *309 taken. The witness had no knowledge of the making of the loans, and it was entirely competent to prove, as was done, that the bonds were taken as collateral, and also the deposit of the same by him.

The subsequent testimony of Clapp, the vice-president of the insurance company, as to the conversations with Taintor, the cashier of the defendant, and with the defendant’s president, in regard to the changing of the bonds held as collateral to the loan ; the calling in of the loans by the insurance company, an 1 the depositing of the bonds in the defendant’s bank, was properly received. So also the conversation had between the officers of the two institutions on the subject, after the receipts had been given and the bonds deposited, was not liable to objection.

As to the conversations prior to and at the time when the bonds were deposited, they constituted a part of the transaction relating to the loans and it was not fully complete until the receipts were actually given and the bonds deposited, in accordance with the same. Even if they constituted any contradiction or change of the original contract, as the result of the prior negotiations was in writing, they were admissible to show the entire contract of the parties, which was completed by the giving of the receipts. The conversations after the loans, and after the receipts, were also competent as the declarations oi> parties which characterized the preceding acts in reference to the several loans.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 N.Y. 304, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierson-v-atlantic-national-bank-ny-1879.