Opinion
March Term, 1903.
Randolph Horton and George S. Tarbell, for the appellant.
Jared T. Newman, for the plaintiff, respondent.
E.A. Denton, for the defendants respondents.
I do not find that either the court or the Comptroller has ever made any rule prohibiting a county treasurer from selling and delivering a mortgage, or other security, without an order of the court. Nor do I find any provision of law to that effect. With the claim of the respondents, that such an act is prohibited by section 751 of the Code, I cannot agree. The term "surrendered" does not express, or in any sense suggest, the transaction of a sale and delivery. It involves the idea of yielding, of delivering in response to a demand; and I cannot conceive that, by the use of such word, the Legislature intended to include every transfer or delivery that it might become necessary for a treasurer to make in the course of the management of any particular fund. The section prior to the amendment of 1892 (Laws of 1892, chap. 651) applied to money only, and prohibited the payment of it out of court without a court order. (See Laws of 1876, chap. 448, § 751.) It was intended to apply to those instances where the party to whom it was ultimately to be distributed claimed that the event had happened which authorized its delivery to him, and it was so universally interpreted. A transfer of such money, by the treasurer, from one bank to another, or from a bank to an investment in securities of any kind, was never controlled by such section. So long as it remained in the custody of the treasurer, it was still in court and not affected by the section. It was only when the court parted with all control of it, surrendered it to the alleged owner, that such section applied. The amendment of 1892, having the same purpose in view, simply enlarged the prohibition so that it should apply to securities as well as to money. The section was not designed to protect funds or property in court from misappropriation by the county treasurer, but from being surrendered out of the custody of the court, upon claims of ownership unlawfully made.
Nor do I find anything in the other sections of chapter 8, title 3, of the Code that in terms forbids such a sale and transfer by the treasurer.
The scheme of that title is substantially as follows: When a final judgment or decree directs merely that money be paid into court, it must be paid to the county treasurer. There does not seem to be any provision requiring him to invest it, but he must deposit it in such trust companies, etc., as the Comptroller has designated.
The court may, however, and in most instances must, direct in the final judgment or decree that the money when so paid into court shall be invested by the county treasurer in the public securities of the State, of the United States, or in bond and mortgage upon property worth twice the amount loaned. When so directed, it is the duty of the treasurer to invest accordingly.
There is a further provision in section 747, which, in substance, authorizes the court at any time to direct that money which has been paid into court may be changed from one method of investment to another, upon its being made to appear by proper and sufficient evidence that the interests of the owners thereof require it. The purpose of this section is, evidently, not to protect the fund from misappropriation by the county treasurer, but to secure to the persons interested therein the right to have it invested in some manner more advantageous to them than that in which the treasurer has already invested it. All investments are taken in the name of the treasurer, and the title to the same are, by section 749, vested in him. He, therefore, has the ultimate control of it as long as it is in court; and, hence, as in all other trusts, the protection of the beneficiaries seems to depend upon the pecuniary responsibility of the trustee and his sureties. I do not discover in the system any effort to protect the funds from the treasurer, by limiting his custody or management of the same.
Inasmuch as there is no rule or provision of law that forbids the treasurer from selling and transferring a mortgage which he has taken to himself upon the loan of court funds, is there any reason why the usual principles which control the disposition by the trustee of securities belonging to a trust fund should not apply? When by a final decree a treasurer is directed to invest by loaning on bond and mortgage, he is given authority to keep the fund so invested, such is the purpose of the direction, and he has, therefore, authority to change the securities as from time to time his best judgment and the exigencies of the case shall require. And his responsibility for each loan made seems to be similar to that of any trustee who loans for the benefit of the trust. I can see no reason, therefore, why his powers concerning such loans should not be similar to such other trustees. Ordinarily trustees may discharge a mortgage taken. Clearly, it would seem that the treasurer should have that power. Indeed, section 749 gives him authority to sue for and collect, and so, in effect, gives him authority to discharge; for the right to discharge should follow the right to exact payment. And if he may collect and discharge the mortgage, upon what theory should he be prohibited from selling and assigning it? Suppose the mortgagor cannot himself pay the mortgage when it becomes due, but can procure one to purchase and carry it for him, is there any sensible reason why the treasurer may not take the amount due thereon and assign it to the one whom the mortgagor designates? Suppose the treasurer becomes doubtful of the security, but is able to sell it in the market for its full value, should he not have the legal power to do so at once, whenever he thinks the safety of the fund requires? Suppose the fund is invested in government bonds and it becomes necessary to collect a part thereof to meet the claim of an infant owner who has become of age, may he not sell such bonds in the market without an order of court? The same reasons which have ever permitted a trustee, who by the terms of the trust is directed to invest the fund and keep it invested for the benefit of the beneficiary, to sell and assign and give good title, or acquittal, thereof, apply to a county treasurer, concerning his management of the court funds; and I am of the opinion that the question whether he has given good title to any particular mortgage sold and assigned by him should be governed by the same rules. Indeed, section 749 puts the treasurer upon the same footing as guardians, committees, etc., and it has been distinctly held that a guardian may so assign and transfer, before it is due, a mortgage taken by him as such, and that the purchaser acquired good title thereto, although the guardian subsequently misappropriated the amount received for the same. (See Field v. Schieffelin, 7 Johns. Ch. 150.) That it has been the usual practice of county treasurers to so manage such securities see Baldwin v. Crary (30 Hun, 422). (See, also, Chesterman v. Eyland, 81 N.Y. 398. )
Assuming, as I do, that the county treasurer had lawful authority to sell and transfer a mortgage which he had taken as an investment of moneys received under a decree of court directing him to invest the same, the defendant Harrington must be deemed to have acquired a good title to the one in question in exchange for the full value which he paid for the same. There was nothing to suggest that the amount was not needed for the purpose which the treasurer claimed he had in view, nothing to suggest any dishonest purpose or intent on the treasurer's part. He had the title to the mortgage and authority to sell it; and, under the circumstances appearing in this case, Harrington might rely upon that. ( Spencer v. Weber, 163 N.Y. 493, 502.)
I conclude that the judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
All concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event.