Thomson v. New York Trust Co.

266 A.D. 384, 42 N.Y.S.2d 145, 1943 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3576
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 11, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 266 A.D. 384 (Thomson v. New York Trust Co.) 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
Thomson v. New York Trust Co., 266 A.D. 384, 42 N.Y.S.2d 145, 1943 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3576 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinions

Dore, J.

Samuel C. Thomson, plaintiff’s testator (hereinafter referred to as depositor ”) maintained from 1930 to 1940 checking and custodian accounts with defendant New York Trust Company (hereinafter the bank ”). During that period depositor gave his trusted employee and financial agent, Mrs. Mary B. Boberts (hereinafter “ attorney in fact ”), broad powers of attorney. Acting on such powers lodged with the bank, the attorney in fact withdrew securities and converted them to her own use. By the judgment appealed from, the bank on the theory of negligently failing to heed notice ” has been held liable for a considerable part of the thefts committed by the depositor’s own employee.

The facts are really not in dispute. Depositor had a checking account with defendant or its predecessor from 1915 and a safe-keeping account from 1926. On February 5, 1930, he opened with the bank a custodian account of his securities which embraced a security account, an agency cash account containing the income from the securities and debits for expenses; also, a checking account in which balances from the agency cash account were transferred.

On May 16, 1930, depositor delivered to the bank a power of attorney naming his own employee M. B. Boberts as his attorney in fact and authorizing the bank to follow any and all of her instructions whether written or oral in respect to the sale or exchange of his securities expressly including delivery of such securities to the attorney herself.

[387]*387On October 31, 1931, depositor delivered to the bank an additional power of attorney signed and acknowledged by him. This gave the same attorney in fact broader powers including authority to sign checks and promissory notes, to borrow money from the bank in depositor’s name in such sums as she thought proper and pledge any and all of his securities for such loans ; she also was given authority to make and deliver to the bank on depositor’s behalf any such agreements or contracts “ verbally or in writing * * * as my said attorney may deem proper; ” no particular form of signature was required to be used by the attorney in fact.

In 1930 depositor retired from active work, but maintained an office in New York to which he went several times a year. He had an active interest in his own financial affairs and kept in close contact by letter and otherwise with his attorney in fact. She prepared and sent regularly to him detailed statements called white sheets ” purporting to show him the exact state of his checking account, the source of each item of income and the detail of checks cleared. She also sent him regularly other statements prepared by her called blue sheets,” purporting to list all the securities held by him at the date thereof. She also kept for him a complete set of books. From the beginning of her embezzlements in 1930, these statements, reports and books were falsified to conceal her embezzlements. Depositor relied on her statements as correct reports of his checking and custodian accounts with the bank. He always examined them with care, on several occasions pointing out minute errors of which he immediately advised her.

The record establishes and plaintiff conceded that the bank sent, addressed to depositor at his office in New York, monthly statements together with checks and vouchers showing all the transactions in his checking account; also written confirmations of the transactions in the custodian account, and periodical lists of securities held from time to time by the bank in the custodian account. These were all found in depositor’s office after his death. The record also establishes and plaintiff does not dispute that from 1930 until his death depositor never once looked at any of the bank’s statements or reports.

At the outset of her course of stealing, the attorney in fact, as expressly authorized by the power of attorney procured delivery to herself of depositor’s securities, and thereafter converted them. From about April, 1932, to November, 1933, she also used her power of attorney to draw some sixteen checks to her own order on depositor’s account which she [388]*388deposited in her personal account maintained with the bank. Ip November, 1933, a vice-president of the bank Mr. Hovey (who was dead at the time of the trial) told the attorney in fact that this practice was unusual and must stop. She then discontinued such transfers. She continued, however, from time to time thereafter, thefts of depositor’s securities by causing delivery of securities to herself and then converting them.

•On November 18, 1936, the attorney in fact simulated depositor’s name on a $75,000 promissory note and loan agreement and presented such signed documents to the bank. The “ white ” sheet then falsely showed the checking account balance as $80,000. Actually it was approximately $9,000, and the attorney in fact arranged the loan to get additional funds for the depositor’s checking account; but the bank knew nothing of her purposes. The note as signed was accepted by Hovey, initialed by him and by one of the defendant’s clerks. Sufficient of the depositor’s securities were set aside as collateral and the bank paid $75,000 into depositor’s checking account which was subsequently drawn upon and used.

From 1936 to 1940 the attorney in fact continued embezzlement of securities, and, when the depositor died in June, 1940, ignorant of the thefts, she had stolen. $700,000. This was revealed only when plaintiff, as executrix, demanded that the bank turn over a balance claimed as shown in depositor’s records kept by his agent for him.

The attorney in fact made a complete confession and on her plea of guilty was sentenced to a term in Bedford Reformatory which she was serving at the time of the trial. She had made restitution to the depositor to the extent of $36,000. She testified for plaintiff at the trial.

The complaint charges breach of the bank’s contract to return certain securities claimed not to have been withdrawn by depositor and demanded damages of $731,971.40. No claim was made that the bank or any of its officers or employees actually knew the attorney in fact was stealing or guiltily co-op-crated in the theft; nor is any claim made that the bank or its employees acted in bad faith. The charge is that the bank during the course of the transactions had knowledge of facts which would put a reasonably careful banker on notice that the attorney in fact was engaged in irregularities; i. e., in final analysis that the bank was negligent in not heeding notice and is therefore responsible for all loss subsequent to the date of claimed notice.

[389]*389Defendant denied any breach of contract and relied on its defense that it had paid depositor all debts owing, and delivered to him. all securities he was entitled to receive in obedience to his orders and in reliance on the powers of attorney he had given and directed the bank to follow. The bank also set forth sending the monthly statements, vouchers and confirmations, depositor’s retention of them for ten years without complaint, and his negligence in failing to report to the bank any unauthorized withdrawals of money or securities after he knew or should have known of the unauthorized acts of his own agent. Defendant claimed that such negligence and the criminal acts of depositor’s own agent caused the loss and that such loss was not caused by any negligence of the bank.

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Bluebook (online)
266 A.D. 384, 42 N.Y.S.2d 145, 1943 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomson-v-new-york-trust-co-nyappdiv-1943.