
    Lydia J. Roberts, App’lt, v. The Stuyvesant Safe Deposit Company of the City of New York, Resp’t.
    
    
      (Court of Appeals,
    
    
      Filed October 7, 1890.)
    
    1. Safe deposit company—Liability under search warrant.
    Plaintiff, having hired a safe in defendant’s vaults, deposited therein a hox containing a large sum of money, fourteen U. S. bonds and also numerous other bonds, in all over $40,000. Two police officers, a detective and a safe breaker armed with a search warrant, demanded access to plaintiff’s safe, which contained nothing (hat corresponded to the property in plaintiff’s hox except the IT. S. bonds, and those were not identified in the warrant by number, date or issue. Defendant’s officers protested against the proposed action but made no other resistance, and pointed out the safe, which the officers broke open and took out plaintiff’s box and delivered its entire contents to the district attorney. Held, that defendant’s officers neglected to exercise, in the care and keeping of the property which plaintiff had confided to their charge, that degree of diligence and fidelity to which they were bound under the terms of the contract under which the property was deposited, as well as by their legal relations toward plaintiff.
    
      2. Same.
    Where a bailee is sued by the owner for such conversion or negligent loss of the property bailed, it is not a defense or bar to the action to show that after it went into the possession of others it was levied upon under process against the owner.
    Appeal from, judgment of the supreme court, general term,, first department, affirming judgment dismissing complaint.
    
      Ira Shafer, for app’lt; Charles M Miller, for resp't.
    
      
       Reversing 16 N. Y. State Rep. 967.
    
   O’Brien, J.

The legal relations which the defendant held to-the plaintiff and out of which this controversy lias arisen, was that of a bailee or depositary for hire. The fundamental question in the case is, whether the defendant, upon the undisputed evidence-in the record, discharged those duties and obligations to the plaintiff which the law imposed upon it in regard to the care and custody of her property. The defendant is a corporation organized under and possessing all the powers conferred by chapter 111 of the Laws of 1867. It was authorized to receive on deposit asbailee, for safe keeping and storage, jewelry, plate, money, securities and other valuable things, upon such terms, and for such compensation as might he agreed upon by the said corporation and the owners of the property or the bailors. On the 26th day of July, 1873, the defendant delivered to the plaintiff an instrument in the form of a receipt, whereby the defendant acknowledged that it had received from the plaintiff, residing at 206 West-Twenty-first street, in the city of New York, the sum of twenty dollars for the rental of safe No. 6012, in the vaults of the Stuyvesant Safe Deposit Company, for the term of one year from that date, and subject to the rules of the company printed on the-back of this receipt.” One of these rules provides that “ the responsibility of this company with regard to property deposited in the rented safes is limited to the diligent and faithful performance-of their duty by the officers and employees of the company.” Another provided that no person would he allowed inside the vaults for the purpose of opening any safe therein except the renter or his substitute named in the books of the company, and that two persons would not be allowed to enter the vault at the same time unless personally known to one of the defendant’s officers.

The plaintiff was furnished with a key to the safe thus rented, as provided for by the rules, and she placed a tin box in it for the purpose of holding such property as she desired to place the.”ein. On the 15th of October, 1878, the plaintiff had m this box, which was locked up in the safe rented- from defendant, a large sum of money, some fourteen United States bonds and also numerous other bonds issued by various railroad and telegraph companies, the whole amounting to over $40,000 m value. On that day the recorder of the city of New York issued a search warrant under liis hand and seal, reciting that complaint had been made to him on oath, by one Pinkerton, that about December 10, 1872, 100 United States bonds of the par value of $75,000, and four Louisville water bonds of $1,000 each, had been feloniously stolen and carried away from the Third National Bank of Baltimore by certain persons named in the warrant, as was suspected, and that said property was then concealed in three certain boxes or safes in defendant’s vaults, one of which was the box or safe rented by the plaintiff. The warrant, which was directed to the sheriff of the city and county of New York, or to any policeman of the municipal police of said city, then commanded the officers to whom it was addressed to diligently search in the day-time the said boxes or safes in the said premises where the said property was suspected to be concealed, and when found to bring the same before him to bo dealt with according to law. Armed with this warrant a police captain, accompanied by another police officer and by Pinkerton and a person prepared to break into the safe, appeared at the defendant’s place of business and demanded access to the safe used by the plaintiff. It is found that the defendant’s officers protested against the proposed action of these parties, but they made no other resistance and they furnished the officers with the means of identifying the safe in which the plaintiff’s property was and pointed out the safe to him, and the officer then broke it open and removed the tin box from the safe. After the formal protest on the part of the defendant’s officers, no attempt was made by them to interfere with the officers, who expressed a determination to enter the safe by force. A list of the contents of the box was made by one of defendant’s officers and the police. There was found in it over $9,000 in money, besides . the railroad and telegraph company bonds, but nothing corresponding to the property described in the search warrant except fourteen United States bonds and as to these the warrant contained nothing that would enable any one to identify them by number, date, issue or otherwise, as the stolen property or any part of it which was described in the warrant. The officer carried all the contents of the box away, and instead of bringing it to the recorder, who had issued the warrant and before whom it was returnable, and who had power to inquire in regard to the ownership of the property, the officers delivered the box and its contents to the district attorney. It does not appear that any investigation was ever made to ascertain whether any of the property thus carried away was in fact stolen. There is no proof or finding in the case that it was; and the defense of this action proceeded upon the theory that it in fact belonged to the plaintiff. The defendant’s officers were not taken by surprise when the police captain and his associates appeared and, upon the authority of a search warrant, demanded admission to the vaults. It appears that a day or two before one of the assistants of the district attorney called at the defendant’s place of business and inquired of the bookkeeper if the plaintiff’s husband and another man had safes in the vaults.- The bookkeeper refused to answer the question and upon such refusal he was informed by the assistant in substance that he would show him that he “ must tell.” The next day the bookkeeper was served with a subpoena by the district attorney to testify before the grand jury and to have with him all books and papers of the defendant containing the names of depositors in the safes or vaults of the company. The bookkeeper then consulted with the president and thpy concluded that it would not do to bring the books into court, but that they would take a memorandum from them of the names of the parties, and in this way the district attorney became informed that the plaintiff also had a safe in the vaults of defendant. The defendant’s officers were not bound to resist the execution of the warrant by the employment of force, but the warrant offered no excuse or justification for the removal of property from the defendant’s custody that was not described therein, and hence in this case the police had no right to remove any of the ¡plaintiff’s property found in the safe except possibly the United States bonds. As to all the other property the defendant could have used such means to prevent its removal as would be proper and justifiable in case the same parties attempted to remove it without having any warrant or legal authority whatever.

In carrying away property not called for by or described in the warrant the police and other persons assisting them were trespassers, and we think that the defendant’s officers neglected to make such opposition to the trespass as they could and should have made under all the circumstances. The police could not have properly proceeded to execute the warrant without first exhibiting it, or at least stating its contents, and it must be assumed that they would have done so if requested. There is no proof and no finding that after the safe was broken open and the tin box found to contain property'not mentioned in the warrant, that the defendant’s officers called the attention of the police to this fact or forbid its removal. Indeed none of the defendant’s officers asked to see the warrant, or informed themselves in regard to its contents, or took any means to ascertain whether the contents of the box, or any part of it, was called for by the process under which the police assumed to take possession of the property and remove the same from the defendant’s custody. They made no attempt to notify the plaintiff of what had transpired, although they had her name and address, and she resided not more than three-fourths of a mile distant. They made no attempt to procure a return of the property, which seems to have been delivered to the district attorney, instead of bringing it before the recorder, according to the command of the warrant, to be “ dealt with according to law.” We think that the defendant’s officers neglected to exercise in the care and keeping of the property which the plaintiff had confided to their charge that degree of diligence and fidelity to which they were bound by the terms of the contract under which the property was deposited in the defendant’s vaults, as well as by the.legal relations which they then assumed to the plaintiff. Ouderkirk v. C. N. Bank, 119 N. Y., 263 ; 29 N. Y. State Rep., 573 ; Jones v. Morgan, 90 N. Y., 4. It is, no doubt, true that a bailee for reward, such as the defendant was, may excuse himself for a failure to deliver the pioperty to the bailor when called for, by showing that the property was taken out of his custody under the authority of valid legal process, and. that within a reasonable time he gave notice of that fact to the owner. Bliven, etc. v. Hudson River R. R. Co., 36 N. Y., 403; Western Transportation Co. v. Barber, 56 id., 544; Van Winkle v. U. S. M. S. S. Co., 37 Barb., 122 ; Livingston v. Miller, 48 Hun, 232; 16 N. Y. State Rep., 71; Stiles v. Davis, 66 U. S. (1 Black), 101.

But in this case the persons who took the property had no process that authorized them to do so, and hence the defendant had the right to make such resistance to it as they would have had if the same parties attempted to take it without any process whatever, and if overcome by surprise and force they could pursue and reclaim it by legal proceedings or otherwise, in the same manner as if the search warrant had not been procured. When property in the custody of a bailee for hire is demanded by third persons under color of process it becomes his duty to ascertain whether the process is such as requires him to surrender the property, and if it is not then it is his right and duty to refuse, and to offer such resistance to the taking and adopt such measures for reclaiming, if taken, as a prudent and intelligent man would if it had been demanded and taken under a claim of right to the property by another without legal process. The defendant did not discharge the duty that it owed to the bailor and owner of the property by merely making a formal protest against entering the vaults where the property was. A person who would allow his own property to be taken from him under like circumstances and without doing more to prevent such a result or to repossess himself of it, when taken, would scarcely be called a prudent man. It- follows that the defendant has not shown that the property was taken from its possession by legal process so as to excuse its loss. The answer presents another very important question arising out of transactions in regard to this property after it was taken from the possession of the defendant. It seems that while the property was in the custody of the district attorney it was levied upon by parties who were or claimed to be creditors of the plaintiff. ■ The answer as amended before and at the trial avers the commencement of four different actions against the plaintiff in which attachments were issued and levied, judgments recovered on some of them and levies made upon the property in question and sales thereunder, and an application of the proceeds upon the judgments or some of them.

The case was tried by the court without a jury, and while the findings state the commencement of the actions, the issuance of attachments and levy thereunder, the entry of judgment and levy of execution, there is no distinct finding that the proceeds were applied upon any judgment against the plaintiff. While a bailee who permits the property of the bailor to be taken by a stranger may excuse himself by showing that he yielded to the power of legal process, it does not follow that a seizure under such process, after the bailee has negligently allowed the property to pass into the hands of trespassers or persons who have no right to it, will be any protection to him in any action by the owner. When the defendant permitted the property to be taken from its custody, without using proper diligence and care to retain or reclaim it, the plaintiff’s cause of action accrued and could not be defeated by the action of parties seeking to establish claims against the owner. The rule in such cases seems to be that when a bailee is sued by the owner for the conversion or negligent loss of the property bailed, it is not a defense or bar to the action to show that after it went into the possession of others it was levied upon under process against the owner. If it can be shown that the bailor became re-possessed of the property, or that it came to his use or that he had the benefit of it by application through regular legal proceedings upon a judgment against him, such facts will go in mitigation of damages. 2 Green. Ev., § 276; Ball v. Liney, 48 N. Y., 6; Wehle v. Butler, 61 id., 245, 249; Hanmer v. Wilsey, 17 Wend., 91; Otis v. Jones, 21 id., 394; Higgins v. Whitney, 24 id., 379; Sherry v. Schuyler, 2 Hill, 204; Lyon v. Yates, 52 Barb., 237; Sprague v. McKinzie, 63 id., 60; Peak v. Lemon, 1 Lans., 295; Pierce v. Benjamin, 14 Pick., 356.

We do not think that the mere levy of an execution or attachment upon the property by a creditor of the owner, while it is in the possession of the tort feasor, is available as a defense or in mitigation. It must be shown that the owner has the benefit of it in such a way as to operate in law as a restoration of the property. Hone of the authorities that have been brought to our attention maintain the proposition that to show a levy alone is sufficient, and such a rule could not be supported in reason or justice.

The principles that apply in such cases were stated by Earl, J., in Ball v. Liney, supra, as follows: “After a conversion of property, the title still remains in the owner, and the property can be taken from the wrong doer upon an execution against the owner, and sold, and the proceeds applied upon his debt, and the owner will thus have the benefit of the property; and in such case the wrong doer can set up the seizure and sale not as an entire defense, but in mitigation of damages, for the reason that it would be unjust for the owner to recover the value of the property after he has thus had the benefit of it. It is not the fact of the seizure that gives the defense, but that it has been seized under such circumstances that the owner has had, qr could have, the benefit of it.” Three of the judgments set up in the answer were shown at the trial to have been reversed and discontinued, and of course upon such termination of the suits the attachments and executions fell with them. If any of the property in question was applied upon such judgments, the plaintiff therein would be compelled to make restitution, and it is difficult to see how the defendant could derive any greater measure of protection from these suits, and the process and judgments therein than the parties themselves could, had the plaintiff brought an action against them to recover the property or it value. In such a suit the parties who had taken or appropriated the property could not justify or defend under process or j udgments that had been reversed or set aside, and the samej'ule would apply to the defendant. There was, however, one of the judgments in force at the time of the trial. That was recovered for less than $10,000, and the court found that the property in question when taken was worth about $48,000, but, as before remarked, it is not found that any of the proceeds of this property were applied to the satisfaction of this judgment, though there is evidence that would warrant that conclusion. The counsel for the plaintiff requested the court to make numerous findings of fact and law in regard to the manner in which the attachments and executions were served and the levy made, the dissolution of the attachments, the reversal of the judgments and discontinuance of the actions, which the court refused on the ground that they were immaterial. Some of them doubtless were, but many of them were not, and consequently should have been found, as there was no dispute in the evidence in regard to them.

As to the judgment which was in force at the time of the trial, it was claimed by the plaintiff’s counsel to have been entered upon an offer by an attorney for the plaintiff without authority for that purpose and in fraud of her rights, that the execution thereon was issued after the attachment was dissolved, and that it directed the sale of the attached property in the same manner as if the attachment was in force, that the execution was issued to a person who had no authority to serve it or to sell the property and that the sale thereunder was itself fraudulent and unfair. There was evidence to support some of these claims and the court was requested to make specific findings thereon, which requests were refused and for the same reason as the others. The plaintiff had a right to distinct findings as to the amount applied upon any of the judgments, the existence of the judgments themselves and of the attachments and executions, the manner in which any levy relied upon by the defendant was made and whether any lien was acquired under them, and whether the person who made the sale had authority for that purpose. Without such findings, or at least some of them, it could not be legally determined that the property came to the plaintiff’s use or that she had the benefit thereof, as that result depended upon the extent to which judgments existing against her and not reversed or set aside had been extinguished. In this condition of the case it would be manifestly impracticable for us to attempt to decide what effect is to be given to the suits and proceedings therein which were instituted against the plaintiff after the property was taken from the defendant and while in the possession of the district attorney. Hone of these questions are alluded to" in the opinion of the general term, and so far as they were passed upon at all by the trial court it seems to have been upon the theory that it was sufficient for all the defendant’s purposes to show the issuing of the process and a seizure of the property thereunder. Whether these suits and the proceedings in them are available to the defendant in mitigation of damages, and to what extent, are questions to be settled upon another trial or upon fuller findings of fact.

As we are constrained to differ from the courts below in the conclusion that the defendant performed its duty with reference to the property which it held as bailee, we cannot say, as the case now stands, that the plaintiff was not prejudiced thereby.

The judgment should be reversed, and a new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.

All concur.  