Sokoloff v. National City Bank

130 Misc. 66, 224 N.Y.S. 102, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1072
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 11, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 130 Misc. 66 (Sokoloff v. National City Bank) 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
Sokoloff v. National City Bank, 130 Misc. 66, 224 N.Y.S. 102, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1072 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

Alfred ft. Page, Referee.

The defendant is a national banking corporation organized under the laws of the United States, and having its principal place of business in the city of New York. A branch of the defendant was opened at Petrograd in Russia pursuant to permission granted by the Federal Reserve Act and by the Federal Reserve Board. Before opening its branch in Petrograd, the defendant was required to and did obtain the permission of the Imperial Government of Russia, the then existing government, to operate the branch, which permission was given in the form of a charter, prescribing Rules for the operation of the Russian Branches of the National City Bank of New York.” A translation of this charter was annexed to the stipulation of the parties as to facts and marked Exhibit A.. The portions of the .charter upon which counsel have laid stress are the following provisions: That the said bank should maintain a special guaranty fund of 5,000,000 rubles in the State Bank, and in addition thereto all the real and personal property in Russia, and the capital and surplus of the bank should be a guaranty for the bank’s liabilities in connection with its operations concluded in Russia. (1f1f I, II.) That litigations which may arise between the City Bank and private persons in consequence of operations in Russia shall be within the jurisdiction of the Russian courts on the basis of the laws in force in Russia.” (if XXV.) That as regards the discontinuance of operations in the Empire, the Russian branches of the National City Bank of New York shall be subject to Russian laws and to the decrees of the Russian government, both those that are actually in force and such as may be promulgated in the future.” (if XXVII.)

In the month of March, 1917, the Imperial government of Russia was overthrown and was superseded by the Provisional government of Russia, popularly known as the Kerensky government, which was recognized by the government of the United States as a government de facto and de jure, and was the last government of Russia recognized by the United States. On June 27, 1917, the plaintiff, a Russian citizen, who was then residing in the city of New York, paid to the defendant at its head office in the city of New York, the sum of $30,225 and of $883.50 respectively, for which he received the following receipts dated on that day and signed in the name of the defendant by a duly authorized employee:

Received from Boris N. Sokoloff thirty thousand two hundred twenty-five dollars representing the cost of Rs. 130,000 at 23J [69]*69cents which are to be transferred to our Petrograd Branch to open his account,” and

“ Received from Boris N. Sokoloff eight hundred eighty-three 50/xx Dollars, representing the cost of rubles 3,800 00/xx at 231 cents for transfer to our Petrograd Branch.”

Upon the receipt of the sums aggregating $31,108.50 from the plaintiff and the delivery to him of the above-mentioned receipts, the defendant credited to its record of its ruble account with its Petrograd branch 133,800 rubles and simultaneously or immediately thereafter the head office of the defendant advised its Petrograd branch by letter which read in part as follows: “ Kindly charge our account 133,800 rubles and open an account on your books for a like amount in the name of Boris Nikolaevitch Sokoloff.”

The specimen signature of the plaintiff was transmitted by the defendant’s head office to its Petrograd branch with the letter of advice.

On or about August 21, 1917, the Petrograd branch debited its record of the ruble account with it of the head office with 133,800 rubles and opened a new account on its books in the name of the plaintiff, to which it made a corresponding credit of 133,800 rubles.

The plaintiff left the United States and arrived in Petrograd about September 1, 1917, and received from the Petrograd branch of the defendant a bank pass book of the branch in which was entered his deposit of 133,800 rubles. During the months of September and October, 1917, the plaintiff, from time to time, drew against said account, and on or about the end of October, 1917, there remained a balance of 120,370 rubles in his account in the defendant’s Petrograd branch. All orders of the plaintiff on the said account up to that time were duly honored by the said branch.

On or about the 1st of November, 1917, the plaintiff then being in the city of Kharkoff, in the southern part of Russia, instructed the Petrograd branch to transfer 120,000 rubles of his account through the Russian State Bank to the Kharkoff Mutual Credit Society for his account. Upon the receipt of these instructions the Petrograd branch debited the plaintiff with the amount of the transfer and credited the same amount to the record of its account with the State Bank. The Petrograd branch then had a balance of many million rubles with the State Bank at Petrograd. At the same time the Petrograd branch passed the plaintiff’s instructions on to the State Bank, Petrograd, and sent a debit advice to the plaintiff, which the plaintiff thereafter received. Three or five days after sending the instruction to transfer the 120,000 rubles the plaintiff inquired at the Kharkoff Mutual Credit Society and of [70]*70the branch of the State Bank at Kharkoff whether such transfer had been received at Kharkoff, and on being informed that it had not, he wrote a letter to the Petrograd branch of the defendant advising it that the Kharkoff Mutual Credit Society had not received the 120,000 rubles and requesting it to hold the funds at the disposal of his sister. Plaintiff also testified that at the same time he telegraphed to the Petrograd branch to the same effect. The request to cancel was received by the Petrograd branch, and it wrote to the plaintiff that it had acted on his first instructions and, therefore, was not in position to hold such funds at the disposal of bis sister, as they were no longer in the possession of the branch.

On November 7, 1917, the Provisional government of Russia was overthrown by the Bolschevik Revolution, which established the so-called Soviet government, which has been in control of the city of Petrograd ever since its establishment and still controls the said city and all territories of the former Russian Empire as the same was constituted after the Brest-Litovsk peace.

About the middle of December, 1917, the plaintiff’s sister called at the Petrograd branch with a letter from the plaintiff, stating that she was anxious to obtain the funds. She was informed by the person in charge of the said branch that the transfer of the 120,000 rubles had been made in accordance with plaintiff’s original instructions, and that the defendant’s branch accordingly no longer had the funds in its possession. The plaintiff’s sister called once or twice more at the Petrograd branch in connection with said funds. After her first visit the Petrograd branch wrote to the State Bank inquiring whether the transfer of the 120,000 rubles for the account of the plaintiff had been made by it to the Kharkoff Mutual Credit Society, and if not, requesting a recrediting of the Petrograd branch with that amount. The State Bank replied in writing, in substance stating that it could not inform the said branch whether such transfer had been made as disorders had broken out between Petrograd and Kharkoff, and that for the moment the State Bank was not in communication with its Kharkoff branch; that it had issued instructions to the latter to make the transfer of said 120,000 rubles to the Kharkoff Mutual Credit Society.

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Bluebook (online)
130 Misc. 66, 224 N.Y.S. 102, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1072, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sokoloff-v-national-city-bank-nysupct-1927.