
    Wenstrom Electric Company, Resp’t, v. Charles H. Bloomer et al., App’lts.
    
      (Supreme Court, General Term, First Department,
    
    
      Filed March 15, 1895.)
    
    Interpleader—Who mat bring.
    An action of interpleader cannot be maintained by one of several claimants to a fund in the hands of a third person, but only by such third person.
    Appeal from an order continuing a temporary injunction.
    
      Franklin Pierce, for app’lts; G. W. Minor, for resp’t.
   Van Brunt, P. J.

The defendants Charles H. Bloomer, Walter C. Bloomer, and Nathan Bushnell were electrical contractors doing business under the firm name of Bloomer Bros. & Co. ; and on the 28th of February, 1894, they entered into a contract with one William Noble, who was then engaged in erecting the Hotel Empire in the city of New York, for the construction and erection by them of an electric light plant in said hotel, the terms of payment to be eighty-five percent, o'f the value of the work done and materials furnished each month as the work progressed, the final payment to be made, on the completion of the work, by the promissory note of said Noble, payable in ninety days. On the 30th of March, 1894, the plaintiff entered into a contract with Bloomer Bros. & Co. for the furnishing of certain dynamos for this work. It agreed to deliver the dynamos f.o. b. cars New York City for the sum of $1,500, terms of payment to be one-third on the successful starting of the plant, and the balance by three months’note of Mr. Noble, indorsed by Bloomer Bros. & Co.; the title and own-ship of the dynamos to remain in the plaintiff until paid for. In July, 1894, the firm of Payne & Sons sold to Bloomer Bros. & Co. engines to be placed in said hotel, but, as they alleged, they would not part with their property until they obtained some security therefor; and accordingly, on the 1st of August, 1894, Bloomer Bros. & Co. assigned to said Payne & Sons the balance due under their contract with Noble, and whereby they authorized said Payne & Sons to receive said balance, and to give a receipt and acquittals thereof, in their firm name. On the'2d of August, 1894, Noble acknowledged the receipt of the information in respect to the assignment, and in writing accepted the order, and promised to pay to them the balance due to Bloomer Bros. & Co., making such payments in accordance with said contract. Thereafter, and on the 11th of October, the said Bloomer Bros, gave an order for $660 to one Winthrop G. Bushnell, the brother of one of the members of the firm, which they claim to be due from the defendant Noble on said contract. The complaint alleges that the defendants Bloomer Bros. & Co. were insolvent, and that the alleged orders to pay Payne & Sons and Bushnell were given in fraud of the rights of the plaintiff, and that Payne and Bushnell were endeavoring to collect the same balance, or so much thereof as their respective claims amounted to, and the plaintiff was also endeavoring to collect its claim from said Noble out of said balance; and that Noble was ready to pay said balance into court according to the terms of his contract, and refuses to pay the same, or any part thereof, or give any note therefor to any of the parties thereto, until ordered and directed by the court; and, further, that if said Noble was allowed to pay the same to the defendants Bloomer Bros. & Co., with whom he made said contract, the plaintiff and all other claimants to said fund would be unable to collect any part of their respective claims out 'of said fund or from Bloomer Bros. & Co. Application was made on these facts for a temporary injunction, which was granted, and upon motion the same was made permanent during the pendency of the action, and from the order thereupon entered this appeal was taken.

It is claimed upon the part of the plaintiff that this is an action of interpleader, and that it may be brought by the plaintiff instead of the defendant Moble. Mo authority for this proposition has been cited, and it seems to be at variance with the practice which «existed in the court of errors, and has continued down to the present time. In order to entitle a party to interpleader, he must be exposed to danger, vexation, and loss from conflicting independent claims to the same thing of which he is the holder, as well as from claims that are dependent. The facts essential to maintain the action of interpleader are that two or more persons have a claim against the plaintiff; that they claim the same thing: that the plaintiff has no interest in the thing claimed ; and that he cannot determine, without hazard to himself, to which of such persohs the thing belongs; and, further, that there is no collusion between him and any of the parties, and that he will bring the money or thing claimed into court. These rules have been recognized in the case of Crane v. McDonald, 118 N. Y. 648; 30 St. Rep. 98, and also in the case of Schell v. Lowe, 75 Hun, 43; 58 St. Rep. 179, which case the similarity between motions made under the Code of Civil Procedure for interpleader and actions of the same nature is adverted to. The section of the Code was intended to prevent the cumbersome procedure by action, and substitute that by motion; and it is apparent that none but a stakeholder can obtain the relieve under the section of the Code recognizing the rule which had prevailed in actions of interpleader. There is not the slightest intimation that Moble is not able to respond to all of these claims, and he is not before the court asking for relief or bringing the fund into court. The order appealed from should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion for injunction denied, with ten dollars costs.  