Shipman v. Bank of New York

27 N.E. 371, 126 N.Y. 318, 37 N.Y. St. Rep. 376, 81 Sickels 318, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1638
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 28, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by177 cases

This text of 27 N.E. 371 (Shipman v. Bank of New York) 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
Shipman v. Bank of New York, 27 N.E. 371, 126 N.Y. 318, 37 N.Y. St. Rep. 376, 81 Sickels 318, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1638 (N.Y. 1891).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

This appeal brings here for review a judgment of over $223,000, recovered by the plaintiffs against the defendant, upon a state of facts fully found and stated by the referee. in his report, and in regard to which there is little, if any, -serious dispute between the parties. The form of the action is for the recovery of a sum of money which, it is claimed, the defendant undertook, when accepting the plaintiffs’ deposits, to pay to them or upon their order and direction. *323 It has been found, and is admitted on both sides, that on the 7th of April, 1884, the plaintiffs had upon deposit to their credit with the defendant the sum of $14,499.08. That from this date to the close of business, on the 3d day of October, 1888, the defendant had and received, to and for the use of the plaintiffs, various other sums of money deposited from time to time between these dates by the plaintiffs with the defendant amounting in the aggregate to six million, two hundred and tliirteen thousand, five hundred and eighty-six dollars and seventy-one cents. That between the 7th day of April, 1884, and the close of business, on the 3d day of October, 1888, the defendant paid to the order of the plaintiffs on their checks, drawn against the balance above stated and the deposits subsequently made, various sums of money amounting in the aggregate to six million, thirty thousand and forty dollars and twenty-nine cents. This would leave a balance due to the plaintiffs by the defendant of one hundred and ninety-eight thousand and forty-five dollars and fifty cents, which, with interest, is the sum that constitutes the subject of this controversy. The defendant alleged in its answer that all moneys deposited with it by the plaintiffs were fully paid upon their order and by checks drawn upon it by them, and in order to meet and disprove the plaintiffs’ claim that there was due to them from the defendant at the close of business, on the 3d day of October, 1888, the sum of one hundred and ninety-eight thousand and forty-five dollars and fifty cents, the defendant produced twenty-seven checks, all signed by the plaintiffs and drawn upon the defendant, directing the payment of sums respectively aggregating the total balance above mentioned, and to recover which the plaintiffs brought the action. That the defendant actually paid these checks is not disputed, and the case is thus made to turn upon the question whether they are available to the defendant as lawful vouchers, establishing the fact that the moneys claimed by the plaintiffs were paid out by the defendant upon these checks according to the order and direction of the plaintiffs. A clear understanding of the question involved requires a brief statement of the facts and *324 circumstances under which the twenty-seven checks were signed by the plaintiffs and presented to and paid by the defendant. The plaintiffs are a well known law firm in the city of New York, engaged in an extensive business which, in its organization, had a department kn'own as the “ Beal Estate Department.” In this branch of their 'business they examined titles for clients who were lenders of money on bond and mortgage, carried out and completed such loans, and occasionally examined titles for clients who were purchasers of real estate. One of the members of the firm had general charge of this department, but the details of the business and the execution of the work was entrusted to subordinates. One James E. Bedell, a lawyer who had been admitted to the bairn the year 1868, and had been in the employ of the plaintiffs since 1873, assisting in the real estate department, was, in the year 1881, practically put in charge of the work of this department under the direction of the member of plaintiffs’ firm who had the general charge. Bedell was an experienced and capable lawyer. The plaintiffs believed that he was honest and trustworthy, and, prior to the discovery of the very extraordinary crimes in connection with these checks, they had no reason whatever to suspect or distrust him. During the period covered by the transactions in question the plaintiffs employed one Dodge, a competent expert bookkeeper, who took charge of the plaintiffs’ books and acted as cashier. He kept the account between the plaintiffs and defendant. He filled out all the checks and made all the entries in the check-books, and the checks, when paid by defendant, came to him with the pass-book, which was balanced by the defendant, and the vouchers, including the checks in-question, returned with the book, from time to time, at frequent intervals. The course of the business in which the checks in question were issued was substantially as follows: The plaintiffs’ client who wished to make a loan through them, furnished the money, which went directly into the plaintiffs’ general bank account with the defendant. Against the stun to be loaned and thus put to the plaintiffs’ *325 credit checks were filled up by Dodge, the cashier, from a written statement made by Bedell, showing the amount required to pay liens or charges on the property to be mortgaged, the amount of the plaintiffs’ charges, and aiiy other items entering into the transaction, and the balance to be paid the borrower. After filling up the checks Dodge would take the check-book, with the filled-up checks, to a member of the firm for signature, showing him the entries in the check-book of the deposit of the client’s money and the statement of Bedell as to the payments to be made, and thereupon the check would be signed by the plaintiffs, in the name of the individual jiartner to whom it was presented by Dodge, the firm name being engraved on each check and the individual signature underwritten. Dodge would then take away the check-book and deliver the several checks to Bedell. In this manner the twenty-seven checks in question were entrusted by the plaintiffs to Bedell, their clerk, for delivery to the payees, respectively, therein named, who were in good faith believed by the plaintiffs to be real persons, entitled to -receive the amount of said checks, respectively, from them or their clients. The defendant paid the checks to a third person, upon an indorsement thereon of the payees named, forged' by Bedell, who converted the proceeds to his own use. The names of the payees written in sixteen of the twenty-seven checks, drawn for sums aggregating $112,818.72, were not the names of real but fictitious persons. The remaining eleven checks, drawn for sums aggregating $85,227.08, were made payable to the order of real persons, whose indorsements were in every case forged by Bedell. Only tlnee of the checks, drawn for less than $2,400, were paid to Bedell by defendant. All the others were deposited, from time to time, in various other banks in the city of Hew York, and the money thereon received by Bedell from these banks, and the checks all ultimately paid by defendant through the exchanges in the clearing house, in the due and regular course of business. As to the sixteen checks payable to the order of fictitious persons, the plaintiffs were led by fraudulent contrivances and repre *326 sentations on the part of Bedell, the details of which appear in the record, to believe, and they did in fact believe, until the discovery of the forgeries, that such payees were real persons ; and as to all the checks, the plaintiffs did not intend that any of them should go into circulation or should be paid by the defendant otherwise than through a delivery to and indorsement by the payee named therein.

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.E. 371, 126 N.Y. 318, 37 N.Y. St. Rep. 376, 81 Sickels 318, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shipman-v-bank-of-new-york-ny-1891.