Sokoloff v. National City Bank

145 N.E. 917, 239 N.Y. 158, 37 A.L.R. 712, 1924 N.Y. LEXIS 493
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 25, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 145 N.E. 917 (Sokoloff v. National City 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
Sokoloff v. National City Bank, 145 N.E. 917, 239 N.Y. 158, 37 A.L.R. 712, 1924 N.Y. LEXIS 493 (N.Y. 1924).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 160 The case is here upon the pleadings.

In June, 1917, the plaintiff paid to the defendant, the National City Bank in the city of New York, $30,225 upon its promise to open an account in favor of the plaintiff in its Petrograd branch, and to repay him this sum in rubles at the rate of twenty-three and one-quarter cents per ruble, or a total of 130,000 rubles, at such times and in such amounts as he by his written orders might demand. The plaintiff, after stating this agreement, alleges that the account was opened; that the plaintiff from time to time drew against it, till the balance was reduced to $28,365 or 122,000 rubles; and that thereafter in November, 1917, and again in February, 1918, checks for the balance were presented and dishonored.

The questions certified to us for answer are directed to two defenses *Page 163

The first defense states that there was a revolution in Russia in November, 1917, which resulted in the formation of the Russian Socialist Federated Soviet Republic; that in the same month the said government decreed the nationalization of all private joint stock banks organized under the laws of Russia or operating therein; that it took possession of said banks by force of arms and decreed that they be merged in the State Bank of Russia; that all the assets and liabilities of the liquidated banks were taken over by the State Bank acting for the Soviet government; that by force of said decree the government assumed the liability, if any, then owing to the plaintiff; that the defendant's Russian assets consisted of money on deposit in other banks, Russian State obligations, securities held in custody for clients, and certain other assets, of the value of over 240,000,000 rubles; that the liabilities of the said branch to its depositors were over 240,000,000 rubles; that the government following the seizure, proceeded to the liquidation of the banks whose activities it had ended; and that by a subsequent decree all deposit accounts were confiscated and were credited to the account of a revolutionary tax. The recital of these happenings is followed by an averment that the plaintiff was fully aware of the probability of future political and governmental changes, and that it was intended by the parties that the agreement should be performed in Russia and that the performance thereof should be governed by the laws of Russia and by any orders or decrees of any government which might exercise authority therein. By reason of these facts, the plaintiff's deposit account is said to have been seized, his title thereto divested, and the defendant's liability discharged.

The second defense is the same as the first except that it pleads the facts as a partial defense rather than a complete one.

The government of the United States refuses recognition of the Soviet Republic as the government of *Page 164 Russia. Problems not easy to solve have followed in the wake of the refusal. We have had occasion to deal with some of them in cases recently before us. Wulfsohn v. Russian SocialistFederated Soviet Republic (234 N.Y. 372) decided that the government of Russia, though unrecognized, was immune from suit in its corporate capacity at the instance of a plaintiff who asserted its existence as a government and sought to hold it to account for governmental acts within its territorial jurisdiction. Russian Socialist Federated Soviet Republic v.Cibrario (235 N.Y. 255) decided that the same government had no standing to sue as plaintiff in our courts till recognition was accorded. These judgments are not decisive of the case before us now. The Russian government is not here either as plaintiff or as defendant. A domestic corporation pleads the acts and mandates of that government to excuse a default and discharge an obligation.

Courts of high repute have held that confiscation by a government to which recognition has been refused has no other effect in law than seizure by bandits or by other lawless bodies (Russian Commercial Industrial Bank v. Comptoir D'Escomptede Mulhouse, [1923] 2 K.B. 630, 638; S.C., H. of L., 40 T.L.R. 837; Banque Internationale v. Goukassow, [1923] 2 K.B. 680;Luther v. Sagor Co., [1921] 1 K.B. 456; S.C., [1921] 3 K.B. 532; cf. White, Child Berney, Ltd., v. Simmons, [1922] 127 L.T. 571). It would be hazardous, none the less, to say that a rule so comprehensive and so drastic is not subject to exceptions under pressure of some insistent claim of policy or justice. In our own country, Oetjen v. Central Leather Co. (246 U.S. 297) and Ricaud v. American Metal Co., Ltd. (246 U.S. 304) are cited sometimes as pronouncements of equal generality, but in truth the point involved was narrower (31 Yale L.J. 535). Property in Mexico, hides and bullion, had been seized under requisitions by Villa and Pereyra, generals of Carranza. The ruling was that title had been thus divested, since, following the seizure, the Carranza *Page 165 government had been recognized as the lawful government of Mexico. There was no occasion to determine whether, in default of recognition, a like effect would have been ascribed to a levy of contributions by a commander in the field (O'Neill Oetjen v.Central Leather Co., 87 N.J.L. 552; Ford v. Surget,97 U.S. 594, 605. 606). We think the case at hand is not so governed by authority but that it may be dealt with upon principle.

Juridically, a government that is unrecognized may be viewed as no government at all, if the power withholding recognition chooses thus to view it. In practice, however, since juridical conceptions are seldom, if ever, carried to the limit of their logic, the equivalence is not absolute, but is subject to self-imposed limitations of common sense and fairness, as we learned in litigations following our Civil War. In those litigations acts or decrees of the rebellious governments, which, of course, had not been recognized as governments de facto, were held to be nullities when they worked injustice to citizens of the Union, or were in conflict with its public policy (Williams v. Bruffy, 96 U.S. 176, 187). On the other hand, acts or decrees that were just in operation and consistent with public policy, were sustained not infrequently to the same extent as if the governments were lawful (U.S. v. InsuranceCompanies, 22 Wall. 99; Sprott v. U.S., 20 Wall. 459;Texas v. White, 7 Wall. 700, 733; Mauran v. Ins. Co., 6 Wall. 1; Baldy v. Hunter, 171 U.S. 388; cf. Dickinson, Unrecognized Governments, 22 Mich. L.R. 29, 42).

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Bluebook (online)
145 N.E. 917, 239 N.Y. 158, 37 A.L.R. 712, 1924 N.Y. LEXIS 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sokoloff-v-national-city-bank-ny-1924.