Spies v. National City Bank

68 A.D. 70, 74 N.Y.S. 64
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 68 A.D. 70 (Spies v. National City Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spies v. National City Bank, 68 A.D. 70, 74 N.Y.S. 64 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

There is no substantial dispute as to the facts in this case. It seems that on August 14,1893, the defendant, a national bank doing business in the city' of New York, discounted for the plaintiff, doing business in the city of New York under the name of Marcial & Co., a promissory note for $4,786.62 made by one Ong and indorsed by the plaintiff who was the payee thereof. Prior thereto the defendant had discounted for the plaintiff a note for $8,000 payable on demand, and held as collateral security therefor 100 shares of the capital stock of the Central Car Company of Connecticut.. This note contained a provision that such collateral security should be applicable upon the same conditions to any other note or claim, whether matured or not, held by the bank against the plaintiff This Central Oar stock thus held as collateral was surrendered to the plaintiff, who substituted therefor thirteen bonds of a Wisconsin railroad company. The note for $8,000, to secure which these bonds were held by the defendant, was not paid, and the defendant, about January, 1899, sold the railroad bonds. The proceeds therefor were applied to the payment of the $8,000 note, and the balance, amounting to $1,469.06, was applied by defendant on account of the amount due on the Ong note, and the question to be determined is, whether the defendant had the right to make such an application.

When the Ong note became due it was not paid by the maker. Subsequently the defendant commenced an action against the maker of the Ong note in the State of Louisiana, where he resided, and in February, 1894, obtained a judgment against him for the amount due on the note. Thereafter the defendant sold and transferred this judgment to one Hiller for fifty per cent of the amount due thereon, and subsequently there was entered in the court in Louisiana, in which the judgment had been recovered, what was called an order of subrogation, by which it was ordered that “ A. Hiller be subrogated to all the plaintiff’s rights, claims and demands in and to the judgment therein against the defendant It. M. Ong,” of which Ong had notice. Under the law of Louisiana it would appear that [72]*72such a subrogation would in effect be an assignment or transfer to Hiller of all the plaintiff’s right and claim in the judgment; would make Hiller the owner of the judgment on the record with the right to enforce it against the judgment debtor, and would divest the National City Bank of any title to the judgment or right' to enforce it. It was -also proved that by the law of Louisiana, under sections of the Civil Code, an order called a “ judicial confession ” becomes a judicial proceeding, amounting to full proof against him who has made it, and cannot be revoked unless it be proved to have been made through an error in fact, and that paroi evidence would not be admitted “ against or beyond what is contained in the' Acts, nor on what may have been said before or at the time of making them, or since ; ” and the construction given to this provision in the Code by the courts of Louisiana would seem to be that such a judicial act would be conclusive as against the party making it, and would vest absolutely in the transferee of the judgment all rights against the judgment debtor which the party making the transfer had, and could neither be explained nor modified by. evidence of a paroi agreement made at or before the .making of the judicial act that could in any way affect the right of the transferee of this judgment or in any way reserve to the transferee any right to enforce this judgment or any interest in the proceeds that would result from such an enforcement.

There can be no doubt, I think, but that the right of the defendant to recover from the maker of this note the amount due thereon was merged in this judgment. This judgment being in force, he could not maintain an action against the maker of the note based upon, his obligation to pay it. His sole right as against the maker was to enforce the judgment. The defendant was' the owner of this judgment into which had been merged the obligation of the maker of the note. The obligation ■ as against the plaintiff as indorser of the note, however, still continued, but upon his payment of the amount due on the note he was entitled to be subrogated to the right of the holder of this note to enforce the judgmeift against the maker, and this being the situation, had the defendant voluntarily transferred the judgment that it had obtained against the maker for the amount of the note to a third party, putting it out of its power to transfer-to the indorser the obligation of the maker upon [73]*73the indorser’s paying the amount due on the note, the indorser would have been discharged.

In Shutts v. Fingar (100 N. Y. 539) the court, speaking of the obligation of the holder of a note to an indorser, says: “ Upon payment of such obligation an indorser is entitled to demand its possession from the creditor, with the right of subrogation, to all securities and remedies possessed by him against the prior parties thereon unimpaired by any act or loches of such creditor.” And after discussing the authorities, the court continues: From the foregoing considerations it would seem to follow that, in order to sustain the contention of the respondent, we would be required to hold that an indorser remains liable upon a note after his principals have been discharged from their obligation upon it, and that his right of subrogation entitles him only to the possession of a security rendered worthless by the neglect of the creditor. Where such consequences are produced by the direct action of the creditor all of the authorities concur in holding that it constitutes a good defense to the indorser, and it is difficult to see why the same consequences produced by the deliberate loches and inaction of the creditor should not lead to the same result.”

The defendant, however, seeks to avoid the application of this principle by proving an oral understanding between himself and the transferee of the judgment, with the knowledge and assent of the judgment debtor, that the assignment of the judgment was made under the condition that the bank specially reserved all of its rights, claims and demands against the payees and indorsers of the note.” The circumstances under which this judgment was assigned or transferred was as follows: The maker of the note, having become insolvent, made an arrangement with his creditors in New Orleans to settle with them at twenty-five cents on the dollar of their indebtedness. The defendant refused to accept such conditions, and negotiations were then entered into between a representative of the defendant in New Orleans and one Alfred Hiller, who had agreed to advance to the maker of the note- the money necessary to secure this judgment, and it was finally agreed that the defendant should transfer this judgment to Hiller for fifty cents on the dollar upon the express condition that all rights of the defendant against the payee and indorsers of the note other than the maker should be [74]*74reservéd; and the arrangement was carried out by ..this order of subrogation, the transfer was effected, Miller paying the costs and attorney’s fees and one-half of the judgment, aggregating $2,629.28, it being understood that Hiller was acting in behalf of Ong, the judgment debtor, and subsequently Ong paid to Hiller the amount that he paid the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
68 A.D. 70, 74 N.Y.S. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spies-v-national-city-bank-nyappdiv-1902.