McColl v. Fraser

Barker, J.

The object of the action was to charge the funds and property which passed into the hands of thfe assignee with an equitable lien, in favor of the parties for whom the plaintiff had collected moneys as their agent and misappropriated by using the same in his business; *113and requiring tbe assignee, out of tbe moneys realized by bim from tbe assigned property, to refund to tbe plaintiff a sum equal to tbe trust fund by bim misappropriated,- before any of tbe avails are distributed to tbe creditors of tbe assignor under and in pursuance of tbe terms of the assignment. At tbe time tbe assignment was executed, none of tbe funds collected by the plaintiff, as agent for tbe parties named, remained in his hands unexpended as tbe proofs show, and tbe findings are that they bad been previously used in tbe business carried on by bim. Nor did it clearly appear that any item of tbe property transferred to the assignee bad been purchased with, those moneys.

Tbe equity existing in favor of tbe owners of misappropriated funds, if they have any superior to the other creditors, is in tbe nature of a general lien on all tbe property which passed into tbe bands of tbe assignee. Tbe title to the property was vested in tbe assignor and was transferred to tbe assignee subject to all the equities existing in favor of other parties as against tbe assignor. Tbe only witness who gave any evidence in regard to tbe collection and use of tbe money, and tbe capacity in which tbe same was received, was tbe plaintiff himself, and for tbe purposes of this appeal we shall regard bim as a creditable and truthful witness, and that bis evidence substantially establishes the facts upon which tbe claim for an equitable lien is founded in favor of tbe parties for whom tbe plaintiff acted as agent. All tbe money collected by tbe assignor, as agent, and used in bis business, was received within a period of three months preceding tbe assignment.

It is well established that where one person receives into'bis bands the funds of another, be is deemed to bold them in a fiduciary capacity, such as bailee or trustee, unless they were so received with tbe understanding, expressed or implied, that tbe same should be turned into a debt. This rule applies to moneys which come into tbe bands of an agent acting for bis principal. (Libby v. Hopkins, 104 U. S., 307; Ross v. Hart, 8 Taunt., 499; People v. City Bank of Rochester, 96 N. Y., 32.)

Another rule of equitable jurisprudence perfectly well settled and of universal application is that where money held upon any trust to keep, or use or invest in a particular way, is misapplied by tbe trustee’ and converted into different property, or is sold and tbe pro*114ceeds are thus invested, tbe property may be followed wherever it can be traced through its transformations, and will be subject, when found in its. new form, to the rights of the original owner or cestui que trust. (Cook v. Tullis, 18 Wall., 332; People v. Bank of Dansville, 39 Hun, 187.)

We think it quite clear, upon the facts as found by the trial court, in connection with the other facts and circumstances testified to by the plaintiff, that a case was made which gave the owners of the misapplied fund an equitable lien on the assets transferred to the assignee prior and superior to tne rights of the general creditors of the assignor. The assigned prc perty, while it remained in the hands of the agent, could have been reached by proper proceedings instituted by and in behalf of those for whom he acted in selling the farm. The defendant, as assignee, received the property subject to the same equities and impressed with the same trust under which they were held by the assignor. The estate of the insolvent debtor was enriched and enlarged to the extent of the moneys misappropriated and used in the business carried on by him. Our views on that subject are more fully expressed in the case of the People v. The Bank of Dansville (supra).

But we think that the complaint was properly dismissed for the reason that the action is prosecuted in the individual name of the plaintiff, and not in the character of a trustee of the funds which he collected as agent. He had a title to the property which passed into the hands of the assignee, charged with an equitable lien in favor of the cestui que trust. They could have enforced the lien by an acti'bn in their own name, and perhaps also in an action by the plaintiff as trustee for them. The defendant is in no sense a wrong-doer, and his act in receiving the assigned property under the assignment were lawful in every respect. If he had refused to return to the plaintiff the whole or any part of the assigned property upon a demand made therefor, he would not have been guilty of a conversion. He is in the rightful possession of the property, subject to such equities as the cestui que trust may have under the circumstances. The rule that a person in the actual possession of personal property in a fiduciary capacity, such as agent, bailee or trustee, may maintain an action in his own náme to regain possession, or for a, conversion thereof, as against a wrong-doer, does not *115aid tbe plaintiff in Ms efforts to maintain this action in his own name. In such cases the party in possession is entitled to the property as against a tort feasor. (Orr v. Mayor, etc., 64 Barb., 106; Faulkner v. Brown, 13 Wend., 63.)

If the action had been prosecuted by the plaintiff as trustee for and in behalf of those for whom he acted as agent, the question presented in such a case would be somewhat similar to those considered in Wetmore v. Porter (92 N. Y., 76), cited by the appellants’ counsel and upon which he relies in support of his contention. In that case the plaintiff sued in his representative capacity as executory and it was held that it was no defense in an action brought by an executor as such, to recover assets of the estate in the hands of the defendant or for the conversion thereof, that the plaintiff in his individual capacity had acted in collusion with the defendant in despoiling the estate, and it also was held that whoever received property, knowing that it is the subject - of a trust, and has been transferred by a trustee in violation of his duty or power, takes it subject to the right, not only of cestui que trust, but also of the trustee, to reclaim possession or to recover for its conversion. That case was in accordance with the familiar rule, that when the legal title to the property or to a cause in action is in the trustee, he may maintain an action in his own name without joining cestui que trust. (Mellen v. Hamilton Fire Ins. Co., 17 N. Y., 609-615; Western R. R. Co. v. Nolan et al., 48 id., 517.)

The judgment in this action, dismissing the plaintiff’s complaint upon the merits, will not be a bar in an action, if one should hereafter be brought, by the owners of the diverted funds in their own names, for the purpose of enforcing their equitable lien upon the property. Perhaps it would be otherwise if this action had been by the plaintiff as their trustee. This is one of the reasons why this action cannot be maintained by the plaintiff in his individual capacity.

In affirming the judgment, all we need to decide, and all we intend to decide, is that the plaintiff, in his individual capacity, cannot maintain this action.

Judgment affirmed, with costs of this appeal.

Haight and Beadley, JJ., concurred ; Smith, P. J., not sitting.

Judgment affirmed, with costs of this appeal to the respondent.