Sistare v. Olcott

15 N.Y. St. Rep. 248
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 15 N.Y. St. Rep. 248 (Sistare v. Olcott) 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
Sistare v. Olcott, 15 N.Y. St. Rep. 248 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinions

Daniels, J.

The judgment has been recovered for damages for the conversion, by the Wall Street Bank, of which the defendant is the receiver, of 250 shares of the capital stock of the Youghiogheny River Coal Company and 105 shares of the capital stock of the American Printing Company, of Fall River, Massachusetts, of the par value of $100 each. The plaintiffs were stock brokers, carrying on business in the city of New York, and had dealings in that business with W. J. Hutchinson, who was the owner of these shares of stock. He hypothecated the shares with the plaintiffs by way of security for his indebtedness to them, and they transferred them to the Wall Street Bank to secure a loan made by the bank to the plaintiffs, amounting to the sum of $30,000. They afterwards paid upon the loan, at the request of the bank, the sum of $10,000. This payment was made on or about the 16th of May, 1884, and, at the time of making it, the plaintiff, William H. M. Sistare, testified that he was informed by the cashier of the bank that he had previously delivered the 250 shares of the Youghiogheny coal stock to Hutchinson. From that act' this witness testified that he in very plain terms dissented and condemned it as unauthorized and unlawful, and the cashier promised to obtain and replace the stock. In about a month after that his statement is that the bank failed, and then he obtained the sum of $20,000 and went to the [250]*250bank with the money to pay the loan and receive back these secureties. At the banking office he states that he had an interview with the president of the bank and informed him that he was there to pay the loan and interest and to demand and receive the securities; that the president of the bank replied that they could not give up the securities, that there was nothing there except an empty envelope, referring to the envelope in which the securities had been placed in the possession and custody of the bank. The witness testified that he then said: “You don’t mean to say you cannot give me anything of all this property ? He said we cannot give you anything. There is nothing here at all but an empty envelope which we found in Mr. Dickenson’s desk.”

This Mr. Dickenson was the cashier of the bank, who proved to be a defaulter, and had previous to this interview absconded. Upon this evidence, which was credited by the referee, he found a conversion of the shares of stock by the bank. And he was supported in that conclusion by the facts, that in effect a formal tender of the money was dispensed with, and the only ground stated for not taking the money and delivering up the securities was that the stock had disappeared. If these facts had not been disclosed in this manner, and the stock had remained in the possession of the bank, then a formal tender of the money in payment of the debt would have been a necessity. But, as the facts appear to be, that formality was excused, and enough was presented, without resorting to it, to establish the conclusion that the stock had been wrongfully converted by the bank. Blewett v. Baker, 58 N. Y., 611; Hayner v. Am. Pop. Ins. Co., 69 id., 435; Wilson v. Little, 2 Com., 443, 449; Lawrence v. Miller, 86 N. Y., 131.

The evidence given to present this state of facts was received without objection, and upon this appeal, it is too late for the defendant to make the objection that it should not have been admitted under the complaint, which alleged a tender to the bank of the full amount and interest due to it on the loan which it had made. Such an objection cannot for the first time be brought into the case upon the hearing of an appeal, or after judgment. Tyng v. Com. Warehouse Co., 58 N. Y., 308, 313.

There was no more than a variance between the allegation of the complaint and the evidence, in any view which can be taken of it. And if the objection had been presented to the referee, he might, under the liberal provisions of the Code relating to this subject, have allowed the complaint to be corrected, by inserting in it a statement of the facts as they were testified to have occurred. As the evidence was made to appear, and was adopted and followed [251]*251by the referee, a conversion of the shares of stock was proved and established on the trial.

As to the 250 shares delivered by the cashier to Hutchinson, the further position has been taken that the plaintiffs were estopped from claiming anything against the bank or its receiver, for the reason that the shares had been sold by Hutchinson, who paid $10,000 of their proceeds to the bank and $10,000 to the plaintiffs in the suit. But the testimony of the plaintiff, who was sworn upon the trial, was that while $10,000 had been received from Hutchinson, it was not paid to the plaintiffs as the proceeds of these shares, but was paid to them as so much money to be applied generally, and that it was so applied by them upon the account they had against Hutchinson. His evidence controverted this statement. He testified that with the check which was sent for the $10,000 a statement or memorandum was added, showing the money to be the proceeds of the sale of these shares of stock. But the plaintiff, who gave his evidence upon the trial, and is stated to have had the management of the business, positively denied having received this memorandum, or to have in any form been apprised of the fact that the money was derived from the shares, and intended to be paid over to the plaintiffs as part of their proceeds.

The evidence concerning this feature of the case was in direct conflict, and it was for the referee, having the witnesses giving the conflicting statements before him and hearing their testimony, observing their appearance, and considering all the probabilities of the controversy, to decide to which side credit should be given, and his decision upon such a conflict is conclusive upon the court to which an appeal may be taken. Without a clear preponderance of evidence against the conclusion of the referee, the court is not at liberty to interpose and set aside his conclusion based upon such a condition of the proof. Sherwood v. Hauser, 94 N. Y., 626.

Neither of the plaintiffs disclosed to any officer of the bank the interview which is stated to have taken place with Dickenson, its cashier, at the time when the $10,000 was paid to the bank. And on the omission to make the disclosure, the position has been taken in behalf of the defendant that the plaintiffs were estopped from after-wards complaining of the delivery of the 250 shares to Hutchinson without their authority and the sale of these shares by him.

But the witness testifying to this interview, while he says he denounced the delivery of the shares of Hutchinson in very strong terms, and stated that he would put the matter in the hands of his counsel and proceed at once [252]*252against the bank to recover the property, was requested by the cashier not to act hastily, for as soon as hé he could get hold of Hutchinson, he would have that stock returned. And the testimony; of the witness is that he took no action concerning the delivery and disposition of this stock on the assurance given to him by the cashier. This was a reasonable excuse for omitting to take the proceedings which were threatened, or to advise the bank of the misconduct of its cashier, in the delivery of the shares. At least that view was not an unreasonable one to be taken and adopted by the referee. And upon that construction of the effect of what had transpired there was no ground of estoppel under the just and liberal rules laid down in Continental N.

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Related

Tyng v. . Commercial Warehouse Co.
58 N.Y. 308 (New York Court of Appeals, 1874)
Blewett v. . Baker
58 N.Y. 611 (New York Court of Appeals, 1874)
Continental National Bank v. National Bank of the Commonwealth
50 N.Y. 575 (New York Court of Appeals, 1872)
Lawrence v. . Miller
86 N.Y. 131 (New York Court of Appeals, 1881)
Sherwood v. . Hauser
94 N.Y. 626 (New York Court of Appeals, 1883)

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.Y. St. Rep. 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sistare-v-olcott-nysupct-1888.