Pyrke v. Standard Accident Insurance

234 A.D. 133, 254 N.Y.S. 520, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8312
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 30, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 234 A.D. 133 (Pyrke v. Standard Accident Insurance) 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
Pyrke v. Standard Accident Insurance, 234 A.D. 133, 254 N.Y.S. 520, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8312 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Rhodes, J.

The appeal brings up for review an order of Mr. Justice McNamee changing the place of trial of the action from Albany county to New York county; also an order made by said justice denying plaintiff’s motion for judgment on the pleadings to strike out the answer as sham and frivolous and to strike out the second and third separate defenses of said answer. The cross-appeal of the defendant brings up for review the provision of said order striking out the first separate defense in said answer. The plaintiff now urges, however, as to the order concerning the pleadings, that it should be reversed only in so far as it refuses to strike out the third separate defense. So we now have before us only the questions concerning the order changing the place of trial and those provisions of the order which struck out the first separate defense of the answer and sustained the third separate defense.

The action is brought by plaintiff to recover upon two separate bonds given by the defendant under the provisions of article 20 of the Agriculture and Markets Law prerequisite to the issuing of the license provided for in said article authorizing Olivit Bros., Inc., a domestic corporation doing business in New York city, to conduct the business of receiving and selling farm produce on commission. The complaint contains two separate causes of action, one seeking to recover under the bond issued for the year 1928; the other upon the bond issued for the year 1929. Each cause of action sets forth the giving of the bond, the issuing of the license, the consignment for sale on commission of merchandise to said Olivit Bros., Inc., the disposal of said merchandise, the amount due therefor and the subsequent bankruptcy of said commission merchant, the failure of the consignors to receive the amount due for their merchandise, with other necessary and appropriate allega[135]*135tions, with a demand for judgment for the amount due said consignor creditors.

The answer sets up as a first separate defense in substance that by the bond in question the defendant guaranteed the fidelity of said commission merchants; that as a matter of law and fact the real obligees thereunder were the consignors; that said commission merchants failed in their duty to the consignors; that said consignors failed to notify the Commissioner of Agriculture thereof during the time when said commission merchants were financially solvent; that as the result of said delay the defendant was deprived of the means to diminish the risk and hazard and to terminate its exposure to further liability and that thereby the defendant has been wholly exonerated and discharged from further liability.

The third separate defense alleges that said Olivit Bros., Inc., is still in existence; that said corporation and its trustee in bankruptcy are within the reach of the ordinary process of the court; that there is a defect of parties herein because neither said corporation nor its trustee is a party to this action.

The questions thus presented here require a determination of the obligation assumed by the defendant under the bonds in question. Defendant insists that Said bonds were conditioned solely upon the fidelity of the principal for an honest accounting and relies on the rule that unreasonable delay on the part of the obligee to act or to give notice would discharge the obligor, citing Atlantic & Pacific Telegraph Co. v. Barnes (64 N. Y. 385); Emery v. Baltz (94 id. 408). Here, however, the bond is given pursuant to and for the purposes required by the statute. While the bond by the law is denominated a fidelity bond, such law then proceeds with some particularity to define the liability imposed thereunder. The obligation assumed therefor does not necessarily depend upon its appellation as a fidelity bond, but is measured by the liability expressly stated and defined in and by such statute. By section 246 of the Agriculture and Markets Law it is provided that an applicant for a license shall “ deliver to the Commissioner a fidelity bond * * * in the sum of three thousand dollars to secure the honest accounting of the consignor of the moneys received or due and owing by said commission merchant from the sale of farm produce sold on commission,” and that the Commissioner may bring an action * * * against the principal and sureties for the recovery of any such moneysBy section 247 the Commissioner has power to investigate the affairs and transactions of any such commission merchant, including the failure to make proper and true accounts and settlements at prompt and regular intervals, or the failure to make payments for goods received or other alleged [136]*136injurious transactions. It then provides that in case of failure by the commission merchant to pay the consignor creditors for farm produce received from said consignors to be sold on commission, or in case of the bankruptcy of, or the revocation of the license of said commission merchant, or the discontinuance of the business of such commission merchant for any other cause, the Commissioner shall proceed to ascertain the names and addresses of all the consignor creditors, together with the amounts due and owing to them by such commission merchant, and it then provides that the Commissioner shall then bring an action on the bond which has been filed in the department by said commission merchant.” It will thus be Seen that the statute provides for different contingencies: (a) Failure by the commission merchant to pay creditors for farm produce received; (b) bankruptcy of the commission merchant; (c) revocation of his license; (d) or the discontinuance of his business for any other reason. On the happening of any of said contingencies the Commissioner is to ascertain the amount due and owing ” to the consignors by such commission merchant, and he shall then bring an action on the bond. The contingencies enumerated seem to contemplate liability not only for money actually received and due and owing by the commission merchant, but in any case where farm produce has been received on commission by said merchant, or where he has become bankrupt, his license revoked or he has discontinued business.

Briefly, the statute seems designed within the limit named in the bond to measure the extent of the liability by the amount of claims. The amount of these claims was presumptively established by the certificate of the Commissoner after the prescribed investigation and the amount of these claims is what the Commissioner is to sue for when he brings his action on the bond. It is clear, therefore, that defendant’s obligation embraces more than liability for an accounting for moneys actually received by the commission merchant. So far as an action on the bond is concerned, there is no privity of relation between either the surety and the consignor creditors, or the Commissioner and the consignor creditors. The relation established by law is between the commission merchant as principal on the bond, the defendant surety and the Commissioner. The statute prescribed no notice to be given to the surety either by the consignors or by the Commissioner. No action is required by the Commissioner until after a default has occurred. He is then to ascertain the amount of the default established presumptively by his certificate, and then, and then only, is he required to commence an action on the bond. It will thus be seen that no obligation is imposed by the statute requiring the giving of prior [137]*137notice to the surety. If any such obligation there be, it must be found in the general principles of law applicable to sureties and guarantors.

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Related

Pyrke v. Standard Accident Insurance
144 Misc. 53 (New York Supreme Court, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
234 A.D. 133, 254 N.Y.S. 520, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pyrke-v-standard-accident-insurance-nyappdiv-1931.