We agree with the view taken by the judge below that the action is proper and that the fund should be held subject to the judgment to be entered therein. But we have been impressed with the arguments based upon the expense and hardship which would result from having the fund remain in the hands of the receiver, and we have examined the facts with a view of seeing whether some other disposition might not be made which, without determining the conflicting claims, would be more equitable than allowing the fund to remain intact in the receiver’s hands.
In point of time, the claim of the plaintiff as to the $10,000 voucher takes precedence, and if it can be shown that the amount finally awarded by the government represents to that extent the navy voucher pledged as collateral security to the plaintiff, then the plaintiff should have awarded to it that sum out of the fund. There does not appear to have been any interest allowed by the government, nor do we find any language in the assignment, Exhibit A, from which it can be inferred that $10,000 and interest was pledged, the instrument referred to being one by which Phineas Burgess agreed “ to deliver to or deposit with the Continental National Bank * * * a U. S. Navy voucher * * * for a sum equal to ten thousand ($10,000) dollars, * * * said voucher to be held * * * as collateral security for the payment of a certain promissory note made by Zeno Secor & Co. * * * for ten thousand *158($10,000) dollars, or any note given in extension thereof.” It will be noticed that this is not an agreement to guarantee or pay the note held by the plaintiff, but a contract to deliver to it a voucher for $10,000, which, when received, -the bank might hold or apply as collateral security on account of the note. The right to this sum of $10,000 will, of course, necessarily depend upon whether the plaintiff can connect the United States navy voucher for $10,000 with the judgment for $129,811.45 rendered by the Court of Claims. As the government does not allow or pay interest, and no interest is shown to have been included in this judgment, it would apparently restrict the claim of the plaintiff upon this instrument to $10,000.
Next in order of time is the assignment to the Tradesmen’s National Bank. With respect to that the substantial question is as to the amount of the claim, of which the plaintiff pleads ignorance, but in the affidavit of the plaintiff’s president it is said: “ It is, I believe, somewhere between thirty and forty thousand dollars, but I cannot state accurately.” On the part of the defendants we have the affidavit of the cashier of the Tradesmen’s Bank and of the only surviving member of the firm of Burgess & Secor, reciting that the amount due that bank upon the notes of Phineas Burgess, Burgess & Secor and Charles A. Secor amounts, with interest, to $122,271.68. If this claim, together with the plaintiff’s of $10,000, should be sustained, then it is evident that the fund would be entirely exhausted. In fact, there will not be enough to pay these claims in full, because there are concededly certain amounts which must first be deducted for counsel fees in obtaining the award from the government, which the court below recognized when it directed that the counsel should be allowed to have their fees fixed and paid out of the fund, leaving the balance to be adjusted between the conflicting claimants in the action.
Were this the whole of the case, the disposition to be made of the fund would be simple. But we have next in order the claim of the plaintiff to the fund under a subsequent assignment, which is signed unconditionally only by the administrator of Charles A. Secor, by Zeno Secor & Co. in liquidation, and by James F. Secor. The interest which Zeno Secor & Co. had in the recovery is not made-clearly to appear, but the signature of Burgess & Secor is limited to “ Chas. A. Secor and James F. Secor’s interest in said firm and in *159above claim; ” and the signature of David A. Myerle, “ as executor of Phineas Burgess as to promised lien of $10,000 on his interest in above claim.” And that instrument recites that it is “ for the purpose of better evidencing that the Continental National Bank of New York is and has been entitled to receive any award the Court of Claims may hereafter grant or decree Phineas Burgess or Burgess & Secor on account of his or their claims against the United States government, * * * subject to the claim thereon of the Tradesmen’s National Bank.”
As to the order of priority, it will be noticed, no real dispute exists, because the order is given in the affidavit of the president of the plaintiff as follows: “ The Continental National Bank claims a first lien upon the amount to he received under the assignment attached to the complaint marked ‘A’ (namely, the $10,000 claim). The Tradesmen’s National Bank claims next to be entitled to repayment of a considerable amount advanced by it, the exact amount of which I cannot state. * * * And next, the Continental National Bank claims to be entitled to the remainder of the fund under assignments from the parties interested to represent amounts advanced by it to various "parties as set out in the complaint.” As we have already suggested, therefore, as to the Tradesmen’s National Bank the serious question is as to the amount.
In assailing this, the respondent calls attention to the fact that the claims of the Tradesmen’s Bank are against Burgess individually, while it appears that the parties interested in the contract out of which the fund arose were the various firms in which he had been engaged; that, while Phineas Burgess could assign his interest" to pay his own debts, it is doubtful whether the various other firms could assign their interests to pay his debt to the Tradesmen’s Bank, and that, as a result, it would require the marshaling of the fund for the purpose of determining to whom it legally belongs; and that, as it was created largely by advances made by the plaintiff to the work itself, it could not be diverted to pay Phineas Burgess’ debts. In addition, the agreement with the Tradesmen’s Bank recites that it is given as collateral security, and from this it is urged that that bank must have had other security in hand'which it would be necessary first to apply upon any debt existing in its favor. Again, it is suggested that the notes of Phineas Burgess held by the Trades *160men’s Bank may be barred by the Statute of Limitations. It will be seen, however, that the plaintiff has not in any way destroyed the showing made by the Tradesmen’s Bank that its debt amounts to the sum of $122,211.68, already mentioned, but the doubt created is as to whether such sum is still a claim legally secured by the written assignment referred to, and as to whether the persons who signed such instrument were legally entitled to pledge the entire amount of the fund recovered from the government- as security for the debt due to the Tradesmen’s Bank. None of the defendants raise any such objection to the payment to the Tradesmen’s Bank; on the contrary, they, appear here insisting that that bank is justly entitled to the whole fund, and, while not objecting to tying up the $10,000 claimed by the plaintiff under its first assignment, they assent and request that the balance of the fund should be paid over to the Tradesmen’s Bank. Without determining the validity of the claims of any of the parties to the action, or expressing an opinion as to the merits of the claims to this fund, as these corporations are solvent and entirely responsible, we think that the mere suggestion without proof of some weakness in their legal position, would not justify the withholding of the possession of this fund from them, or the placing of it in the hands of a receiver to be burdened with the additional expense of his fees and disbursements, with the loss of interest, where it appears that such would have to be borne by the fund, and to that extent would be a loss to the Tradesmen’s National Bank, if it finally succeeded upon the trial in establishing its right to the entire fund, or to such fund reduced by the plaintiff’s claim of $10,000 and counsel fees.
We think, therefore, that the proper disposition to make of the fund, instead of appointing a receiver, is to have $10,000 deposited with the plaintiff, and the balance with the Tradesmen’s National Bank, each to hold the separate amounts as the deposit of a fund in court and subject to the orders of the court and its judgment when rendered in the action. To this extent the order appealed from should be modified, without costs.
Williams, Patterson, and Ingraham, JJ., concurred; Van Brunt, P. J., dissented.
Order modified as directed in opinion, without costs.