This action was prosecuted for the recovery of a balance, consisting of the sum of $2,000, of moneys deposited by the intestate with the defendant.. The deposit account was opened on July 13, 1866, and continued until the 15th of the following month, and it was in the usual form of debtor and creditor, containing no indication whatever that the funds deposited were received by the plaintiff, or to be held by him,, or any other person, or by the defendant, as trust moneys. It appeared upon the trial, and was found as a fact by the judge, that the testator himself had no interest whatever in the moneys so deposited, or the amount credited for the deposits. They were the result of collections made by a firm known as Huger Brothers, doing business as agents and brokers on account of *453ships and vessels arriving in and departing from the city of New York. T.ie moneys deposited in the account were collected by Huger Brothers in the course of this business, on account of freights earned by the vessels for which they acted as agents, and they were then liable to pay them over, as they might be required to do so, to the masters, or the owners, of the vessels on account of which the collections were made. They became embarrassed in their business, and were apprehensive that they might be interfered with by efforts on the part of the other creditors to collect debts which they were unable to pay. For that reason, and to protect these moneys against their possible seizure by ordinary creditors, they were delivered to the intestate, who was the bookkeeper of the firm, to be deposited by him in his name, and so held as not to be liable to seizure in suits which might be brought by such creditors of the firm. This was the relation existing between the firm and the intestate as to these moneys; and while they were in his hands, he was accordingly obliged to appropriate and dispose of them as he might be directed by the firm, for the purpose of discharging the obligations created by the collections so far as, at the time, they remained unpaid. But no notice was given to the defendant that it was intended it should hold the moneys, or any jrortion of them, subject to the same obligation, or for the benefit of the persons on whose account the firm collected them. They were, on the contrary, deposited in the ordinary manner, by which, under the law, they became its moneys, and the defendant became a debtor liable for the payment only of an equivalent sum to the person making the deposit, or the firm on whose behalf he acted, whenever a proper demand, in the usual course of business, should be made for that purpose. The defendant sustained the relation to the intestate, and, through him, to the firm in whose employment he was engaged and acted, of a mere debtor; and the debt, in substance, was a debt to this firm of Huger Brothers, for they were the parties in the transaction who were beneficially interested, and had the right, through the intervention of the intestate, to require the payment of the money to them. And if that had been made, and the moneys had been received by the firm, they would, as a matter of legal light, afterwards have been entitled to use it as they might *454deem proper. For such moneys would have been only the proceeds of a simple debt due to themselves. It is true that if they used the money for purposes other than the extinguishment of debts incurred by the collection of those whose proceeds had been deposited, they would be still liable to the persons on whose account the collections were originally made. But that circumstance would not change the title to the indebtedness, or the funds which might be received from the defendant for the purpose of extinguishing it. The ultimate liability of its members to account for the moneys collected by them, would not change their title to the indebtedness existing in their favor against the bank. Notwithstanding the name in which the account was kept, it was still an indebtedness due to this firm ; and the money drawn out, on account of it, would be the money of the firm. In this respect, money differs from property of an ordinary description, for the title to it passes by delivery, and.the course of trade is said to create a property in the holder. (Saltus v. Everett, 20 Wend., 268; Commercial Bank of Albany v. Hughes, 17 Id., 94, 100.)
The debt created by the deposits with the defendant, in fact belonging, as it did, to the firm, was subject to all the ordinary equities and claims of deposit accounts, of this nature. It appeared by the evidence that while the account was running, and before July 23, a note made by Huger Brothers was presented to and discounted by the bank, and afterwards, and on or about August 16, it was charged to this account as the account of Huger Brothers. The court in its decision found this to be a proper charge in favor of the bank, on account of the fact, that although the dejaosits were made in the name of the intestate, they were strictly for the benefit of Huger Brothers, and created an indebtedness on the part of the bank to them. It seems to have been understood by the bank that the account, while in form in the name of the intestate, was that of the makers of this note, and for that reason it was deemed proper to charge it as a counter indebtedness which should be deducted from the amount otherwise due on the account. It is not contended but that this would have been an entirely proper charge had it not been for the circumstance that the firm collected the moneys which had been deposited in the course of their business *455as factors, or agents, of other persons ; but it is claimed, that inasmuch as that wi 3 the fact, that the title of these persons to the moneys Aras paramount to the right, of the bank' to charge the note against the indebtedness. If this account had been opened and continued Avith the bank as a trust account, or in any other manner, indicating that these moneys Avere deposited as the moneys of the persons Avhose claims were extinguished in their collection, the result claimed AArould folloAv from that circumstance; but in the dealings had with the bank no notice was given to it that the moneys were not in truth the absolute and unqualified property of the firm on whose account the deposits in fact were made. For that reason the bank had the right to deal with the indebtedness in the form it did. It had the right to assume, from the account opened, and its evident knowledge of the facts, that the moneys deposited were, at the time when the deposits wore made, the property of the firm in whose employment the intestate Avas engaged, and on Avhose behalf he acted in opening and continuing the account; and that the indebtedness Avas, through the intestate, an indebtedness to the firm of Huger Brothers; and acting upon those facts to discount their paper presented to it, and in case of non-payment to charge up the amount due upon it to the account. This seems to follow from the lien secured to bankers upon the accounts of their customers, for the payment of any indebtedness which may be owing from the latter. (Brandas v. Burnett, 12 Clark & F., 787; Currie v. Misa, 10 L. R., Exch., 153 ; Misa v. Currie, L. R., 1 App. Cas., 554.) An equally effectual principle has also been embodied in the statutes of this State, providing, in a case of this description, that a debt owing by the real creditors may be set off in an action brought to recover a sum due to them in the name of a plaintiff having no real interest in the contract upon Avhich the action is brought. (3 R. S., 5 ed., 635, § 12, subd. 10.)
It is claimed that this result avíII produce injustice to those persons AAdiose moneys Avere collected by the firm of Ruger Brothers, and deposited in the name of the intestate with the defendant, but there is nothing in the case shoAving that any claims of this description remained in existence against Ruger Brothers. It did not appear by anything proven upon the trial that they were still indebted *456to any persons for moneys, on whose account these collections had in fact been made. No claimants of that nature appeared to contest the right of the bank to have its own demand deducted from the accounts standing upon its books ; and it was not shown that creditors of this nature in any form made any claim whatever for payment of any debts, out of this account. Without some proof of that nature it could not properly be presumed that demands of the character of those relied upon by way of answer to the claim made by the bank continued to have any existence, and surely, if they did not, there was no legal obstacle on account of the equities of the firm’s creditors, standing in the way of the application made by the bank of the discounted note to the account on its books. The case, however, did not depend upon this mere absence of proof; for it was shown as a matter of fact that this firm of Huger Brothers became bankrupt in the summer of 1866, and obtained a discharge in bankruptcy about April 30, 1869. This discharge under the bankrupt law relieved the firm from their liability to the persons whose debts had been collected in obtaining the money deposited, even if any of them did remain unpaid. For while it may have been received in a fiduciary character, there was no such defalcation on the part of the firm as would prevent the discharge granted from so far operating in its favor. (IT. S. H. S., 991,993, §§ 5111-5119.) The bankrupt law of -184:1 received substantially this construction in the case of Chapman v. Forsyth (2 How. U. S., 202), and the similarity of the provisions contained upon this subject in the present law would appear to require that the same construction should also be given to them.
But it is evident, from the facts appearing upon the trial, that this deposit account was in fact, as well as in law, the property of the firm of Huger Brothers. If it had been collected by the intestate without deduction on account of this note, he would-have been legally bound to have paid the full amount of it over to that firm, and they, under the circumstances, would not have been obligated to have distributed the particular money so collected among the persons from whose debts the moneys were obtained which went into the creation of the deposit account. It was proper under the circumstances, therefore, for the bank to charge up the debts due *457to it, as it did; and all that the intestate in whose name the account stood, was entitled to claim, was the balance remaining after deducting the amount due upon the note. For this balance judgment was directed and entered in the case, and as that was all that could be rightfully claimed the judgment appealed from should be affirmed.
Brady and Barrett, JJ., concurred.Judgment affirmed.