The action is to recover trust funds placed in the hands of the defendant, who was the general agent of the Illinois Surety Company, and by him misapplied and converted to his own use. The defendant’s answer is that the moneys were received by him as such agent and that his principal is liable for the fund and that he is not.
The Illinois Surety Company is a foreign corporation doing business in this State and this defendant was their general agent. He was doing business in the name of Mackey & Abbott. Abbott, who was formerly a member of the firm, had died, so that the name as used represented the defendant only. The moneys in question were moneys which the plaintiff placed *194in the hands of the defendant, by reason of the fact that the Illinois Surety Company was upon her bond as administratrix. They were moneys received in settlement of an action for the death of her husband, and originally amounted to $1,500. When they were taken to the defendant for deposit, the widow’s interest of one-third was deducted therefrom and there was deposited the sum of about $940, which was the portion of said recovery which belonged to her children. It was first deposited until she could be appointed guardian of her children when the money was to be turned over to her and deposited by her in some savings bank. After she was appointed guardian, the moneys were given to her, but for some reason she changed her mind and determined to leave them with the defendant and have them sent over to Italy, where she was intending to go and take her children. This arrangement was made through the Italian consul and the moneys were returned to the defendant. Thereafter the plaintiff made a demand upon the Illinois Surety Company for the moneys, which demand was refused upon the ground that the moneys were still with the agent, who was responsible for them. A demand was then made upon the defendant who refused to pay over the moneys upon the ground that because the moneys were received by him as agent of the surety company, the liability was that of the surety company and not his own.
When this $940 was first given to the defendant, all except $700 was put in the defendant’s cash drawer and went to pay the incidental expenses of the office. Seven hundred dollars was put in the Empire Trust Company to the account named Mackey & Abbott, upon which checks were drawn by Mackey only. After the moneys were returned to the plaintiff after she was appointed guardian and were redelivered to the defendant, it would appear that again part thereof was used for some purpose and that $700 or $750 (it- is not clear which sum) was again deposited in the Empire Trust Company to this account of Mackey & Abbott. This account of Mackey & Abbott seems to have been an account by Mackey for deposit and withdrawal of the agency moneys. One of the witnesses swears that he thought Mackey had. another private account. Into this account, however, were deposited all moneys received *195belonging to the Illinois Surety Company and from the account were drawn any moneys necessary to pay the expenses of the agency and for .Mackey’s personal use up to a certain percentage of the deposits to which Mackey was entitled. By arrangement between Mackey and the surety company, Mackey was to pay all the expenses of the agency personally and to receive a certain commission, either thirty or forty per cent of the business done, and he swears that up to the amount of that commission, he would draw out of said account either for expenses or for personal use. The evidence is to the effect that upon a monthly accounting, after he had drawn such sum as would amount to the commissions to which he was entitled, he would pay over the balance to the surety company. There was some effort to prove that formerly there was an account in the name of the Illinois Surety Company which was attached in some action against that company, and that thereafter by agreement of the surety company and Mackey, the surety company account was to be put in the name of Mackey & Abbott, and from that account Mackay was to draw for any purpose he might choose up to the amount of his commissions and the balance to be paid over to the surety company. This evidence was rejected by the trial court and I think rightly so, because however the parties may have characterized the account, it was clearly a personal account of Mackey kept by permission of the surety company from which he could draw for personal use up to a certain amount, with an agreement to pay the balance from said account over to the surety company upon an accounting. That this was so considered is clear from the course of the business shown by the evidence. When this $940 was first deposited, $240 was put in the cash drawer for the current expenses of the business and the balance only was -put into the bank account. Furthermore, upon the dissolution of the agency in December following this transaction, no part of that bank account was turned over. He claims to have satisfied it by paying other moneys to the surety company, the proceeds of sale of certain stock. If, therefore, the facts may be assumed as were offered to be proven by the defendant, the bank account would still, remain the personal account of Mackey and the deposit of the *196moneys therein would be deemed a deposit to his personal account.
With these facts undisputed, the question remains whether Mackey is personally liable to this administratrix for the moneys so left in trust, or whether the fact that the moneys were received as agent of the Illinois Surety Company, which fact will be assumed in this discussion, relieves Mackey from any personal liability and leaves the plaintiff to a remedy against the company alone.
In 39 Cyc. 421, in discussing a deposit by a trustee in a bank, the text reads:
“Moreover, if a trustee would protect himself from loss, he must make the deposit as of trust funds, and not as his own. If he place funds of the estate in bank to his individual credit, it is an appropriation of them to his individual use, and he becomes liable for them upon the failure of the bank.”
In Matter of Stafford (11 Barb. 353) it is held that “ where a trustee deposits the funds of the trust estate in a bank, in his own name individually, and not as trustee, and with his own private funds, he thereby becomes the debtor of the estate, and the creditor of the bank; and in case the trust funds are lost, through the insolvency of the bank, the loss will fall upon the trustee.”
In Duffy v. Duncan (32 Barb. 593) the opinion in part reads: “Logan admits that he used the moneys remaining in his hands, and the sum received by Duncan was mingled with his individual moneys and deposited in bank tó his individual credit. It was the duty of the trustees to keep the trust funds entirely separate and distinct from their own moneys. If deposited in a bank it should have been deposited to a separate account and in the name of the trustees as such, to the end that the fund could at all times be traced and identified. By mingling the trust fund with their own they committed a breach of trust, and were legally chargeable with simple interest thereon, although they may have made no profit by their use. They -did create a credit at the bank by their deposit.”
In Summers v. Reynolds (95 N. C. 404, 414) the opinion, in respect of a deposit of trust funds to the personal account of a *197trustee, reads: “ ‘ They swelled the executor’s personal credit at bank; upon his death, they become assets in the hands of his personal representative; and could not have been claimed as the assets of the testator by a representative of that estate; they were liable to-his creditors, were in all respects his property, he charging himself with the amount thereof in account with his cestui que trusts. ’ Such an intermixture of funds held in trust, with his own, so as to constitute one aggregate credit, it must be admitted, is an appropriation of the former to his own ■individual use, for which he at once becomes liable.”
In Jenkins v. Walter (8 Gill & J. [Md.] 218, 221) the opinion reads: “ The fact alleged by the defendant, that he had always a balance in his bankers’ hands equal to the trust money, is in my view of the case immaterial. I consider the trust moneys thus mixed with his own and placed in his banker’s hands, on his own general account, to be an employment of the trust money for his own advantage or his own credit; and that he is therefore responsible for the loss which has resulted from it.”
In Matter of Noble’s Estate (178 Penn. St. 460, 462) the opinion reads: “ So on the same principle a bailiff who takes a note or an executor who deposits trust fund in his own name may be held personally responsible: (McAllister v. Com., 30 Pa. 536.) But where the identity of the fund has been lost by a breach of trust, even the opportunity of election is taken from the cestui que trust. A confusion of goods has taken place, and conversion by the trustee to his own use implied. Such investments were characterized in Morris v. Wallace (3 Pa. 319), as a ‘ legal fraud, liable to all the consequences as such, without regard to the intention, the integrity of the trustee, or the honesty.and good faith of the particular transaction’ and bear interest from the time of conversion. The present guardian brought himself within the reason of this rule; he admittedly mingled the trust fund with his own. True, he claims to have invested them; but he is unable to produce the securities, or show when the investments were made. The cestui que trust is "thus deprived of even the opportunity of election, and is forced to treat the trustee as having assumed the added character of debtor with its incidents.”
It is answered, however, that this wrongful act is the wrong*198ful act of the Illinois Surety Company, but it is also the wrongful act of the agent, who knowingly made this appropriation. The law is so well settled that authority is hardly needed to the proposition where an agent misapplies and misappropriates trust moneys that the agent as well as the principal is liable to the cestui que trust therefor.
In 31 Cyc., at page 1560, the unquestioned rule well established by the authorities cited is thus stated: “ 'While an agent is not liable to third persons for injury resulting from his omission to perform a duty owed'to the principal alone, he is hable to them for injury resulting from his misfeasance or malfeasance, meaning by those terms the breach of a duty owed to third persons generally, independent of the particular duties imposed by his agency. Accordingly an agent may he held liable in damages to third persons for conversion, fraud and deceit * * *. In an action against an agent by a third person for misfeasance or malfeasance it is no defense that he acted as agent or by the authority or direction of another, for no one can lawfully authorize the commission of a tort.”
When this defendant, therefore, received' these trust funds it was not only the duty of his principal, but his own duty to keep them separate and distinct, not only from- the general funds of the company, hut also from his individual funds. When he mingled them in an account which contained a general fund of the company and also an individual fund from which he drew for his personal use, he, as well as his principal, was liable for misfeasance and misappropriation. His wrongful act, therefore, was a breach of duty owing to the cestui que trust for which he can be held personally liable.
One more question may be briefly considered. -It. is contended because the cestui que trust has a claim against the surety company that it has suffered no damage from the misapplication of the agent. This contention may be first answered that where a principal and agent are both liable, it is no answer to either one that there is a claim against the other. The person injured may pursue his remedy against either one. But further, the facts of this case show distinctly the injury done by the defendant to this cestui que trust. If this fund had been kept separate, there would have been no question as to its *199return. If the fund could he identified, the fund itself could he sought and obtained. It is because it was intermingled with a joint fund, if you choose, of the agent and the surety that the plaintiff is here denied relief by both agent and surety on the ground that the other is the responsible party. As the fund cannot be traced, by reason of its intermingling, the plaintiff is left to a personal action, and because of this result, the defendant may well be held personally liable for the amount of this fund, the identity of which he, himself, has destroyed.
The determination of the Appellate Term should be reversed, with costs, and the judgment of the Municipal Court affirmed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., and Dowling, J., concurred; Laughlin and Scott, JJ., dissented.