Roberts v. Stuyvesant Safe Deposit Co.

3 N.Y. St. Rep. 507
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 3 N.Y. St. Rep. 507 (Roberts v. Stuyvesant Safe Deposit Co.) 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
Roberts v. Stuyvesant Safe Deposit Co., 3 N.Y. St. Rep. 507 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

Van Vorst, J.

The defendants are a corporation created by chapter 111 of the Laws of 1877. By section 2 of the act the defendant was authorized to receive on deposit, as bailee, for safe keeping and storage, jewelry, plate and other articles of personal property, specially described, for such compensation as might be agreed upon, and also to let out vaults and safes and other receptacles for the uses and purposes of the corporation.

On the 20th of July, 1873, the plaintiff hired, for the period of one year, one of the defendant’s safes. A key to the safe was given to her, and only she, or her husband, as her substitute, had any right of access to it. On the 15th of October, 1873, the plaintiff had on deposit, in a tin box in the safe, §9,050 in money, thirteen United States 5.20 bonds of $1,000 each, four Western Union Telegraph bonds, and other bonds and securities, in all of the value of §10,000 and upwards.

On that day Jeremiah Petty, a captain of the police of the fifth precinct of the city of New York, charged with the execution of a search warrant, issued by John K. Hackett, the recorder of the city of New York, directing a search to be made of the box of the plaintiff, as also the box of her husband, Andrew L. Roberts, and one Valentine Gleason presented himself at the place of business of the defendants, and, exhibiting his warrant, demanded admission to the defendant’s vaults, and access to the boxes in question.

[508]*508In these boxes, as the warrant charged, were concealed, as was supposed, certain United States 5.20 bonds, and other bonds stolen from the third national bank in the city of Baltimore.

The warrant directed the officer charged with its execution to bring the property described in the warrant, when found, before the officer issuing the same. Officer Petty was accompanied by two other persons connected with the Police department.

The entrance to the vaults in which the boxes or safes were situated, was guarded by strong iron doors, of which the defendant and its servants had exclusive control. Entrance through these doors was refused by the officers of the defendant. Officer Petty, insisting upon his legal right to enter under the search warrant, clearly stated his determination to go in through the door to the safes.

After some parley the door was opened by the defendant’s servants, and the officer with his assistants entered, and by force, and with tools and instruments in their possession, broke open the plaintiff’s safe, as also the safes of her husband and Gleason, against the remonstrances and protests of the officers of the defendant. Petty and his assistants opened the tin box which they found in the plaintiff’s safe, and took therefrom and carried away the bonds, money and securities which they found therein, and delivered the same the next day to the district attorney of the city of New York. None of the property taken from the plaintiff’s box, with the exception perhaps of the United States 5.20 bonds, was described in the search warrant. It is urged on the plaintiff’s behalf that the defendant, in violation of its duty to her, suffered her safe to be broken open and its contents carried away, and that it is hable to her for the value of her property.

The twelfth rule of the company, which was brought to the knowledge of the plaintiff at the time she hired the safe, limits the defendant’s liability “to the diligent and faithful performance of their duty by the officers and employees of the company.”

In Jones v. Morgan (90 N. Y., 4, 9), Earl, J., in speaking of the case in which one hires a box in the vault of a safe deposit company, of which the person renting keeps the key, that the company, without special contract to that effect, “would be held to at least ordinary care in keeping the deposit,” and that the “ obligation to discharge it could be implied from the relation between the parties. ”

A higher degree of care and responsibility for the absolute safety and return of property specifically deposited with the defendant as a bailee for an adequate reward may [509]*509naturally arise than for the safety of the contents of a safe hired by a person, and of which it is ignorant.

But notwithstanding the fact that the moneys and bonds of the plaintiff were not specially deposited with it as a bailee, yet its duty to the plaintiff obliged the defendant to guard her safe and its contents against the approach or attack of others who had no legal right to open it or to interfere with its contents. Any negligent omission of reasonable care in this regard, any failure to supply proper means and agencies to protect and guard the property against illegal approach, would be a breach of duty and obligation to the plaintiff as a hirer of the safe.

And this, although the defendant did not know before the 15th day of October, 1873, and after the box had been broken open, what, if anything, it contained.

But the defendant was under no obligation to resist the execution of the search warrant, issued by the recorder of the city of New York.

When the officer demanded admission to the vault of the company and to the safe of the plaintiff, under the search warrant, it was the duty of the officers of the defendant to yield. They hesitated, as the evidence shows, and to the extent that they yielded they did so protesting. But opposition, as it would have been illegal, would also have been useless and would have led to the arrest of the persons in charge of the vaults or to violence and breach of the peace. Crocker on Sheriffs, § 80; Bell v. Clapp, 10 Johns. R., 263.

Even under an attachment in a civil suit, the right of an officer charged with its execution to enter premises of a “ safe deposit company,” and to make a seizure, is recognized. United States v. Graff, 67 Barb., 304. In that case the sheriff was directed to “ open the safe and tin box” containing the property sought to be attached.

It is quite true that the money of the plaintiff, and a large part of the other property taken by the officers of the law under the search warrant, was not described therein. But as to the United States bonds of the 5.20 issue, although not described by their numbers in the warrant, yet they were of the general character of those mentioned, and the officers were probably justified in taking them.

But it is quite clear that having broken open the boxes and removed the contents, they had made up their minds to take away all the contents, whether described or not, and to deliver the same to the district attorney, to be disposed of by him according to the rights of the parties under the charges made upon which the warrant had been issued by the recorder.

Officer Petty testified as to his action in this respect as follows: “It would not do for me to leave these securities [510]*510that were in that box open and loose and allow any one to touch them. After I had opened the boxes, of course. if there was anything gone, I could have been blamed for it, and I was not going to take that chance.”

To the question : “Do you mean to say you would take everything in the box, although not described in the warrant ?”

A. “ After breaking it open I considered myself bound fosee that the property was properly delivered to the authorities and let them dispose of it. These boxes I had broken open, and it would not have done for me to have gone-away, and left the contents of the boxes there.”

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Related

Day v. . Bach
87 N.Y. 56 (New York Court of Appeals, 1881)
Jones v. . Morgan
90 N.Y. 4 (New York Court of Appeals, 1882)
Whitaker v. Merrill
28 Barb. 526 (New York Supreme Court, 1858)
United States v. Graff
67 Barb. 304 (New York Supreme Court, 1875)
Stamford Steam Boat Co. v. Gibbons
9 Wend. 327 (New York Supreme Court, 1832)
Montgomery v. Wilson
48 Vt. 616 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1876)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 N.Y. St. Rep. 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-stuyvesant-safe-deposit-co-nysupct-1886.