
    Sadie Estelle Hoffman, as Administratrix, etc., of Charles R. Hoffman, Deceased, and Max S. Grifenhagen, as Sheriff of the County of New York, Respondents, v. Columbia-Knickerbocker Trust Company, Appellant.
    
      Conversion — loan — value of bonds — action in aid of attachments.
    
    Appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court, entered in the New York county clerk’s office on the 11th day of May, 1914, upon a decision after a trial at Special Term.
    Judgment affirmed, with costs. No opinion. Present—Ingraham, P. J., Clarke, Scott, Dowling and Hotchkiss, JJ.; Hotchkiss, J., dissented.
   Hotchkiss, J. (dissenting):

The action was for possession of the bonds or in default thereof for the amount of the plaintiff’s debt covered by the attachment. It is not clear to me that, under the circumstances, any possessory action would lie, but if it would, when it appeared that possession could not be had, plaintiffs were entitled to no more than compensation for what they had lost. The respondents say in their brief “ the value of the security is immaterial,” and this seems to have been the theory of the complaint, which contains no allegation of the value of the bonds nor did the court make any finding of such value. Whether there is any presumption to be universally applied that an individual is prima facie solvent and able to pay his debts, or whether the rule is merely that where a party urges as his defense the insolvency of another it is incumbent on him to prove it (Walrodv. Ball, 9 Barb. 271, 276), need not be determined. A diligent search has failed to reveal any case where, in the absence of any evidence whatsoever, a plaintiff upon whom rests the burden to show loss arising out of a transaction incident to corporation bonds has been permitted to recover the par value of such bonds on a presumption of value only and without a particle of proof thereof. The record is full of evidence to show that the bonds were never treated by defendant as in fact worth anything like their par value, and defendant offered to prove the price at which the $200,000 of bonds finally remaining in its hands were sold at public auction after due advertisement, but plaintiffs’ counsel said he raised no “ question about that.’’ The action seems to have been brought, tried and decided on the theory that the value of the bonds lost to plaintiffs by reason of defendant’s act was immaterial. This I think was error, because if the defendant’s total loan exceeded the value of all the bonds held by it as collateral at any time, plaintiffs lost nothing by reason of defendant’s surrender of a portion of those bonds from time to time as installments were paid on account of the loan. For the same lack of proof of value plaintiffs failed to show any loss or damage by reason of the disposition of the remaining $200,000 in bonds. The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted.  