Van Schaick v. Manhattan Savings Institution

6 N.E.2d 88, 273 N.Y. 37, 1936 N.Y. LEXIS 1466
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 N.E.2d 88 (Van Schaick v. Manhattan Savings Institution) 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
Van Schaick v. Manhattan Savings Institution, 6 N.E.2d 88, 273 N.Y. 37, 1936 N.Y. LEXIS 1466 (N.Y. 1936).

Opinion

Lehman, J.

The defendant bank purchased from Lawyers Mortgage Company, a corporation organized under the Insurance Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 28), two guaranteed mortgages aggregating about $177,000. The purchase was made by the defendant through a broker. The broker, to induce the purchase, told the president of the defendant bank that he believed that, if the defendant bank would agree to purchase the mortgages, he could arrange to sell for the bank a piece of real property which the bank had purchased upon a foreclosure sale. In" accordance with an agreement arrived at after negotiations through the broker, the bank purchased the mortgages and sold a piece of property which it owned for $76,500. The real property was transferred to Terrace Realty Corporation. The broker who arranged the transaction was the president of that corporation, but he acted throughout the transaction, both in the sale of the guaranteed mortgages to the bank and in arranging for the purchase of the real property from the bank, as agent for the Lawyers Mortgage Company; and Terrace Realty Company held title to the real property only for the benefit of the bank. Fourteen thousand dollars of the purchase price of that property was paid in cash. That money was paid by the Terrace Realty Company to the bank, but Lawyers Mortgage Company promptly gave the Terrace Realty Company its check for the same amount.

Section 20 of the Insurance Law provides:

Restrictions as to real property. Every insurance corporation transacting business in this state may purchase, hold and convey real property only for the following purposes and in the following manner:

“ 1. The building in which it has its principal office and the land upon which it stands.

“2. Such as shall be requisite for its convenient accommodation in the transaction of its business.

*41 3. Such as shall have been acquired for the accommodation of its business.

4. Such as shall have been mortgaged to it in good faith by way of security for loans previously contracted or for moneys due.

“ 5. Such as shall have been conveyed to it in satisfaction of debts previously contracted in the course of its dealings.

6. Such as shall have been purchased at sales upon judgments, decrees or mortgages obtained or made for such debts.

“ 7. Such as shall have been acquired under sections sixteen and seventeen of the general corporation law.”

It is undisputed that the real property which the defendant bank sold was not purchased for any of the purposes authorized by this section of the Insurance Law. The Superintendent of Insurance has taken possession of the assets and business of Lawyers Mortgage Company «as rehabilitator. Because Lawyers Mortgage Company has no right to purchase or hold the property sold by the defendant bank, the Superintendent of Insurance seeks the return of the purchase price paid for the property. The complaint alleges that the plaintiff herein notified the defendant of his intention to rescind such sale, and has offered and is ready to reconvey to the defendant the aforesaid premises, and to pay to the defendant all of the moneys received in the operation of said property, as well as the brokerage commissions paid by the defendant, and to account to the defendant for all moneys received in the operation of said premises.”

There can be no doubt that Lawyers Mortgage Company was the actual purchaser of the real property from the defendant bank and that it had no right to make such purchase even though it acted through a dummy corporation. In that purchase it used the moneys of the corporation for a purpose not permitted by law. The plaintiff maintains that this was not merely an ultra vires act, but a violation of statute which renders the corporation, *42 as well as the officers who authorized that violation, guilty of a misdemeanor under section 29 of the Penal Law. (Gardner v. People, 62 N. Y. 299, but cf. Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Stephens, 214 N. Y. 488.) Upon the trial the complaint was dismissed at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence. The trial judge assumed that the evidence showed that the defendant knew that it was selling the real property to the Lawyers Mortgage Company. He did not decide whether the plaintiff might rescind the agreement of purchase, made through its agent, with the bank, provided it at the same time offers to restore the defendant to the same position it occupied when the agreement was made. The defendant is ready to rescind the sale by it to the Lawyers Mortgage Company and to repay $14,000 it received, provided the purchase by it of the two guaranteed mortgages from Lawyers Mortgage Company be rescinded at the same time, and the purchase price of $177,000, which it paid to Lawyers Mortgage Company, be returned to it. The ground of dismissal of the complaint was that purchase of the mortgages and sale of the real property constituted a single transaction and that there can be no rescission of a part of the transaction.

Assuming as the trial judge did that the defendant bank knew that it was selling the real property to the plaintiff through a dummy, there can be no doubt that the defendant became a party to a transaction not permitted by law. Assuming further, without so deciding, that the law prohibited the transaction and made it illegal and not merely ultra vires, the Lawyers Mortgage Company was certainly at least as guilty as the defendant bank, and, therefore, could not itself rescind the transaction.

The plaintiff, indeed, concedes in his brief that Lawyers Mortgage Company would not itself have had a right to rescind an executed sale on that ground. He maintains, however, that when he takes possession of the business and assets of a corporation organized under the Insurance Law, he represents not only the corporation but the creditors of the corporation, and that acting for the *43 creditors he may rescind illegal transactions of the corporation which the corporation itself could not rescind. (Porter v. Williams, 9 N. Y. 142; Pittsburg Carbon Co. v. McMillin, 119 N. Y. 46; Duval v. Wellman, 124 N. Y. 156.)

Whatever right the plaintiff may have to rescind an illegal transaction of the Lawyers Mortgage Company, rescission of the contract and demand for the return of the consideration paid by the corporation under the contract must, it is plain, be accompanied by return, or offer to return, the consideration which Lawyers Mortgage Company received under the same contract. The bank stipulated that purchase by it of the mortgages and sale by it of the real property should be dependent on each other. In this case the mortgage company received and retains the sum of $177,000 for guaranteed mortgages which may or may not be worth that amount. So long as it retains that money it has no right to demand the return of $14,000 which it paid to purchase real property which may or may not be worth the purchase price.

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Related

Van Schaick v. Carr
170 Misc. 539 (New York Supreme Court, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 N.E.2d 88, 273 N.Y. 37, 1936 N.Y. LEXIS 1466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-schaick-v-manhattan-savings-institution-ny-1936.