Barney v. Bond & Mortgage Guarantee Co.

Delehanty, J.

. The facts herein are practically undisputed and are as follows: plaintiff is the owner of two bonds and mortgages guaranteed by defendant, both as to principal and interest, and sues to recover the interest due thereon on October 1 and November 1, 1916, amounting to $146.25 and $118.13, respectively, which was duly received and collected by defendant. Plaintiff, an American citizen, was spending the summer and fall of 1916 in Germany and had been receiving interest on mortgages from defendant by means of drafts sent her by defendant since 1908 and until 1914. After the latter year, presumably on account of the war, these remittances were made by money orders as well as by drafts; and payments *243on account of interest, immediately preceding that in suit, were made her by money order. On June 1, 1916, defendant wrote plaintiff as follows: “ There is an interest check due June 1st, on a mortgage held by you.' We are unable to send you a draft for same, owing to the fact that we are unable to obtain foreign exchange on Germany. Will you kindly inform us what disposition you desire us to make of this check? ” This letter, delayed in the mails on account of war conditions, was received by plaintiff January 5, 1917, and was at once replied to: “ deposit or invest the amount for me until foreign exchange could be obtained again.” In the meantime, without awaiting a reply to its inquiry of June 1, 1916, defendant sent plaintiff two money orders, for 425.25 marks each, which were received and cashed by plaintiff. In 1919, about six months after peace was declared, plaintiff received, in an envelope which had stamped on it opened and held back by the British Authorities,” an envelope containing no other information than two checks, to her order, one dated October 30, 1916, on Deutsche Bank, Berlin, for 664.11 marks, made by Title Guarantee and Trust Company, and the other dated October 3, 1916, for 812.50 marks, on Dresdner Bank, München, made by Lehrenkrauss & Sons, which checks were immediately deposited for collection by plaintiff but were returned to her by. her bank, with the notification that payment had been refused. Thereafter plaintiff, as soon as she was able to prove her American citizenship and obtain her passport, returned to this country and demanded her interest money of defendant, at the same time tendering to it the two checks with the request to refund them in dollars, which was refused. It is conceded that the amount of these checks represented the amount of the interest in question at the then rate of exchange; that when they were received by plaintiff in 1919 the value of the mark had very much depreciated. Upon the foregoing facts it seems to me that the liability of defendant herein, if any such has been established, rests not upon its bond and mortgage guaranty, but upon the rules of agency, as will hereinafter be shown. The agreement of guaranty between the parties hereto provides: “ By the acceptance of this guarantee this company is made irrevocably the agent of the insured, with the exclusive right, but at its own expense, to sue for and receive the proceeds of any policy of title insurance or fire insurance covering the mortgaged premises, and to collect the interest as it falls due on the bond and mortgage hereby guaranteed.” It is quite apparent that this guaranty would become existent only on default of the mortgagor in the payment of principal or interest, and in default thereof the relationship between the parties was that of principal and agent. The *244rule of law applicable to defendant, therefore, is, as was said in Loeb v. Hellman, 83 N. Y. 601, as follows: “ The agent is understood to engage for reasonable skill and ordinary diligence, and is liable only for injuries to his principal growing from a want of that skill and from ordinary negligence.” The question then for determination is whether defendant used reasonable care and skill in transmitting to plaintiff the money in question. It is undisputed that from 1909 to 1914 plaintiff received interest on mortgages from defendant by means of drafts but that after the beginning of the World War these remittances were made by money orders as well as drafts; that the payments immediately preceding the checks in suit were made by money order. If this practice had continued and included the transaction in question I would have no hesitation in saying that due to the long and uniform custom prevailing between the parties in the transmission of these funds there was a ratification by plaintiff of the acts of defendant in connection therewith. But when defendant sent to plaintiff its letter of June 1, 1916, above referred to, that it was unable to send her a draft for the interest then in hand, owing to inability to obtain foreign exchange on Germany and inquiring what disposition she desired to make thereof, then in the exercise of ordinary care and caution it should have retained the funds in its possession until at least a reply to that inquiry was received from plaintiff. It must be presumed that defendant had knowledge that, owing to the delayed condition of the mails to and from Germany and in many instances of confiscation thereof by the British authorities, a reply to its inquiry would take some considerable time before its receipt. Yet, notwithstanding that, we find defendant in the month of October following transmitting by mail to plaintiff the checks in suit which never reached her until 1919, some time after the declaration of peace was effected. Even then, with a depreciated currency existing in Germany, these checks on presentation to the banks on which they were drawn failed to be honored. It is difficult to escape the conclusion that in doing what'it did the defendant was guilty of palpable negligence in the premises. Defendant’s witness Steiger, who was the foreign exchange clerk in the banking house of Lehrenkrauss & Sons, who issued one of the checks in suit, testified that he knew at the time in question that it was not safe to send valuables or negotiable papers in letters; that the English would seize them and that that was especially the case after June 1, 1916; that he knew that if he would send these checks it was very likely that they would not arrive in Germany; that it would have been better and safer to send a money order or a delegation to the bank over there to make the payment to plaintiff; that defendant asked *245for a check without any further inquiry and that his firm was glad to get rid of their balance over there at the high rate of exchange. All this knowledge was available to defendant upon proper inquiry, which accentuates the contention that the proper course for defendant to have pursued, was to have deposited the funds to the credit of plaintiff, awaiting further instructions from her in connection therewith. If, however, defendant then desired to remit the funds instead of purchasing for her checks as was actually done, it should have had its bank instruct its correspondent in Germany to pay the amount to plaintiff or finally to have sent her a money order, in either of which.events the dollars paid therefor could have been recovered in the case of diversion thereof from the proper channels. To hold in the circumstances, as the trial court has done, that plaintiff is relegated to her rights on the checks as her sole remedy, the value of which is almost nil, is unthinkable. We conclude, therefore, that the judgment should be reversed and judgment absolute granted for the amount demanded in the complaint, together with appropriate costs.

Judgment reversed, with $30 costs to the appellant, and judgment ordered in favor of plaintiff for $264.38, with interest from the 1st day of November, 1916, and costs in the court below.

Whitaker, J., concurs.