Whiting v. Hudson Trust Co.

202 A.D. 375, 195 N.Y.S. 829, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4904

This text of 202 A.D. 375 (Whiting v. Hudson 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
Whiting v. Hudson Trust Co., 202 A.D. 375, 195 N.Y.S. 829, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4904 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinions

Greenbaum, J.:

The plaintiff is the surviving executor of the last will and testament of one William Richard Denham, deceased. The defendant Hudson Trust Company is a domestic banking corporation. The defendant Howard C. Taylor is the agent and representative appointed by the Supreme Court to execute the trust created by the last will and testament of one Joseph H. Snyder. The remaining defendant is the executrix of the last will and testament of John C. R. Eckerson, deceased. There are thus three different estates involved in this controversy.

The action is brought to recover moneys alleged to belong to the estate of William R. Denham, which were deposited in varying amounts and at various times with the Hudson Trust Company in 1915 and 1916 by one John C. R. Eckerson, now deceased, in an account designated John C. R. Eckerson, Special,” the major portion of which had been withdrawn by him by checks signed “ John C. R. Eckerson, Special.” The judgments entered were the following: (1) A judgment dismissing the counterclaim set up by the defendant Hudson Trust Company. (2) A judgment against the Hudson Trust Company for the sum of $12,064.44, the balance on deposit with it in the account designated " John C. R. Eckerson, Special.” (3) A judgment against the Hudson Trust Company for a further sum of $50,133.60 made up by the amount of $37,980 and interest thereon found to have been illegally paid out by the trust company on the order of John C. R. Eckerson by checks signed by him as “ John C. R. Eckerson, Special.” (4) A judgment against the defendant Taylor as representative of the estate of Joseph H. Snyder for the sum of $38,537.40, being the amount of $29,195 with interest added which had been transferred to the account of the estate of Joseph H. Snyder from the special account known as John C. R. Eckerson, Special.”- (5) A judgment against Edith C. Eckerson, as executrix of the last will and testament of John C. R. Eckerson, for $50,133.60, the amount with interest adjudged to belong to the Denham estate by reason of the deposits under the special ” account. The only judgments that need be considered are Nos. 3 and 4.

The proofs establish that up to the time of the discovery of his defalcations, John C. R. Eckerson was regarded as a man of good f.tniadjw'; in the community and was believed to be a-man of financial [378]*378responsibility. In the year 1915 one William R. Denham, a close personal friend of Eckerson, had a considerable bank account with the United States Mortgage and Trust Company. Being very ill and having every confidence in Eckerson, he executed a power of attorney to him which was filed with the trust company in which he stated inter alia that I make, constitute and appoint John C. R. Eckerson my true and lawful attorney, for me and in my name to draw, accept, make, execute, endorse, transfer, sell and deliver bills of exchange ” and other instruments and “ to keep one or more tanking accounts and draw against and make deposits against such account or accounts,” etc. (Italics ours.)

This power of attorney was executed and filed with the United States Mortgage and Trust Company on April 9, 1915. Denham died on September 21, 1915. Eckerson and one Richard D. Whiting qualified as executors of his estate on or about February 5,1916. On February 9,1916, both executors accompanied by representatives of the New York State Comptroller examined and listed all the securities of the estate^ kept in a vault of the United States Safe Deposit Company and then replaced them in the vault. During the spring of 1916 both executors again together visited the safe deposit company’s vault for the purpose of clipping coupons from bonds. Thereafter, however, the co-executor, now the sole executor of the Denham estate, left the management of the estate largely in the hands of Eckerson excepting that on March 13, 1916, the two executors opened a joint deposit account for the Denham estate with the defendant Hudson Trust Company. The total amount deposited in that account was $18,853.84, all of which was practically intact at the time of Eckerson’s death. The incidents which lead up to the controversy in suit will now be detailed.

On September 13, 1915, a few days before Denham’s death, Eckerson opened an account in the Hudson Trust Company in the name of John C. R. Eckerson, Special.” That account was opened by the deposit of a check drawn upon Denham’s deposit account with the United States Mortgage and Trust Company, dated September 11, 1915, for $7,000, signed in the name of Wm. R, Denham by John C. R. Eckerson, atty. in fact,” payable to the order of John C. R. Eckerson, Trustee,” and indorsed by him as trustee. During April and May, 1916, other deposits were similarly made by Eckerson in this account from the funds of the Denham estate. Plaintiff contends that all of these deposits were made under circumstances which put the trust company on notice to make inquiry concerning the right of Eckerson to claim as his own; funds which belonged to William R. Denham, and after his death to his estate.

[379]*379It may here be noted that Eckerson was the sole surviving executor of the estate of one Joseph Snyder, deceased, and as such executor had kept an account with the Hudson Trust Company since about 1908. Eckerson also had a personal account with that company since 1908, and still another account as agent. The circumstances under which the account John C. R. Eckerson, Special,” was opened were as follows: Eckerson called up Purdy, the then secretary of the Hudson Trust Company on the telephone and told him that he wished to open another personal account, but wanted to differentiate it from his existing personal account and that for bookkeeping purposes he would like to designate it in some other form and asked Purdy to give him some suggestion in the matter. Purdy suggested that the account be designated as No. 2 or Special ” and it was decided that it should be called special ” account. Eckerson called at the bank shortly thereafter for the purpose of opening that account. The testimony of Mr. Purdy, secretary, on the trial was to the effect that when Eckerson called at the bank with a $7,000 check made to his order as trustee ” he told him that was “ not in accordance with our conversation. * * * I said: ‘ This is not,- it can’t go into a special account; what are these funds? ’ He said, ‘ they are mine, they belong to me. I merely want to open a personal account.’ I said: ‘ are these trustee funds? ’ He said: ‘ no they are not, it was money belonging to him.’ And I think the fact that he had made the check or could have made it payable to himself as special. I said: you should have done that. That would have been the proper way to open the account.’ He said: it was now done, and I think he called my attention to the certification and he said he thought the words were interchangeable. I said: Oh, no, that would make considerable difference to us.’ He said that was merely a personal matter with him and would I accept the check. I think I got up and consulted one of the other officers in regard to it, I made the explanation that Eckerson made to me, which I had no doubt was right, I had no reason to doubt it, and the officer concurring with me that we should accept the check and mark it special and open an account that way, and I did it.”

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Bluebook (online)
202 A.D. 375, 195 N.Y.S. 829, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whiting-v-hudson-trust-co-nyappdiv-1922.