EDWIN L. SIEGEL VS. STATE OF NEW JERSEY (NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY) ( 2020 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-0408-17T4
    EDWIN L. SIEGEL,
    Appellant,
    v.
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY,
    UNCLAIMED PROPERTY
    ADMINISTRATION,
    Respondent.
    ____________________________
    Argued October 2, 2019 – Decided December 22, 2020
    Before Judges Ostrer, Vernoia and Susswein.
    On appeal from the Department of the Treasury,
    Unclaimed Property Administration, Claim No.
    400047580.
    Scott B. Piekarsky argued the cause for appellant
    (Phillips Nizer, LLP, attorneys; Scott B. Piekarsky, of
    counsel and on the briefs; Jennifer O'Neill, on the
    briefs).
    Jonathan Peitz, Deputy Attorney General, argued the
    cause for respondent (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney
    General, attorney; Melissa H. Raksa, Assistant
    Attorney General, of counsel; Marc Krefetz, Deputy
    Attorney General, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    OSTRER, J.A.D.
    Edwin Siegel appeals from a final decision of the Unclaimed Property
    Administration, Department of Treasury, denying his claim for abandoned
    property — specifically, the proceeds of two bearer bonds — escheated to the
    State. Siegel argues that his mother-in-law gifted him two New Jersey Highway
    Authority revenue bonds, each in the principal amount of $5,000. But he lost
    the bonds. He tried to claim the proceeds based on photocopies of the bonds'
    title pages. The Administration rejected Siegel's claim, because it decided it
    was only obliged to pay a holder of the original bonds.
    We conclude that the Administration must consider the veracity of Siegel's
    claim. If the Administration is persuaded that Siegel is entitled to reissuance of
    the bonds under the applicable provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code
    (UCC) or under the equitable standard for such relief, and if Siegel provides the
    Administration with reasonable protection against loss, then the Administration
    must pay his claim.
    A-0408-17T4
    2
    I.
    The factual record is sparse. 1 Siegel contends in his brief — without a
    supporting certification or affidavit, see R. 1:6–6 — that his mother-in-law
    gifted the bonds to him and that, at some point, he lost them. And in one of the
    claim forms that he submitted to the Administration, he "ratifies and re-affirms
    as true" his claim that he was the legal and equitable owner of two bonds.
    However, he does not deny that the bonds were unregistered bearer bonds.
    Among his claim documents, Siegel sent the Administration photocopies
    of each bond's title page and legal opinion. According to the photocopies, the
    bonds were "Parkway Improvement Revenue Bond[s], 1971 Series." The $5,000
    principal amount was due January 1, 2011, with 6.5% interest payable each
    1
    Siegel includes in his appendix various documents — including
    correspondence with financial institutions — which he evidently did not present
    to the agency, and the agency evidently did not consider (according to the
    agency's Statement of Items Comprising the Record (SICR)). See R. 2:5–4(b).
    However, we cannot be sure. The SICR omitted the Administrator's August 7,
    2017 decision letter, as well as correspondence from Siegel's counsel to which
    the decision letter refers. Given those oversights, we suspect that the SICR may
    have omitted other documents as well. See Mandel, Current N.J. Appellate
    Practice § 22.1-2(e) (2021) (stating that the SICR is designed "[t]o ensure that
    the parties and the appellate court have a complete understanding of the record
    at the administrative level"). However, Siegel did not object to the SICR. So,
    we will confine ourselves to the documents identified therein, the decision letter,
    and the relevant correspondence from Siegel's counsel that the Administration
    evidently received.
    A-0408-17T4
    3
    January 1 and July 1. Neither party produced an exemplar of the full text of the
    bond.
    In a December 2014 response to Siegel's inquiry, US Bank — apparently
    the fiscal agent for the Highway Authority's bonds — informed Siegel that the
    bond funds were escheated to the State on March 15, 2000. 2 The bank referred
    Siegel to the Administration.        Siegel then sought payment from the
    Administration, which responded by asking him to submit various application
    forms along with "the original bond/coupon."          Siegel sent the required
    documents — except for the original bonds. The Administration then reiterated
    that it needed "the original bond/coupon." Through counsel, Siegel renewed his
    claim, arguing that had the bonds not escheated, he would have been able to
    replace the bonds through the issuer. During this period, Siegel provided no
    additional evidence of how he received and then lost the bonds, or of how he
    might have tried to find them.
    Ultimately, the Administrator wrote to Siegel's counsel stating that
    "possession of the original instrument is required" because a "[a] bearer bond is
    2
    We acknowledge that the Highway Authority was abolished and its functions
    absorbed by the New Jersey Turnpike Authority under L. 2003, c. 79. For
    convenience, we will continue to refer to the Highway Authority as the entity
    obliged to pay the bearer of the bonds.
    A-0408-17T4
    4
    payable to the bearer of the original instrument." Thus, if the Administration
    paid Siegel, it would still be liable to a subsequent claimant who possessed the
    bond. This appeal followed.
    II.
    The principal issue on appeal is whether the Administration erred in
    demanding that Siegel present the original bond. We conclude that it did.
    Because the Administration assumed the Highway Authority's payment
    obligation, see In re Nov. 8, 1996 Determination of the Unclaimed Prop. Off.,
    
    309 N.J. Super. 272
    , 278 (App. Div. 1998), aff'd o.b., 
    156 N.J. 599
     (1999), the
    Administration was obliged — as the Highway Authority would have been —
    to consider a claim for relief from the loss of the bearer bonds.
    Before addressing that conclusion, however, we dispatch Siegel's
    contentions that (1) the bank, as the Highway Authority's agent, prematurely
    transferred the bond funds to the Administration in 2000, eleven years before
    the bonds' maturity, and (2) the Administration failed to provide notice that it
    had received the property. We address these points in turn.
    When unclaimed property is deemed abandoned, New Jersey's version of
    the Uniform Unclaimed Property Act governs. N.J.S.A. 46:30B–1 to –109. A
    governmental obligation like a bond is "presumed abandoned" if it is "unclaimed
    A-0408-17T4
    5
    for more than one year after it became payable or distributable." N.J.S.A.
    46:30B–41.2. Such abandoned property escheats to the State. That is so even
    where a bank physically possesses the funds representing the public entity's
    indebtedness, if "the obligor is the . . . state . . . or any of [its] authorities." 
    Ibid.
    Cf. Clymer v. Summit Bancorp., 
    171 N.J. 57
    , 67–68 (2002) (holding that one-
    year dormancy period under prior version of N.J.S.A. 46:30B–41.2 governed
    registered and bearer bonds issued by governmental entities, even where the
    trustee bank possessed unclaimed funds).
    Siegel first sought payment from the bank in late 2014, almost four years
    after the January 2011 maturity date. Thus, even if the bank had waited for the
    bonds' maturity date before transferring the bond funds, Siegel would have been
    too late.3
    Siegel's notice claim also fails. Although the Act requires notice to
    owners of escheated property, Siegel has not established that the bank, or the
    State, knew that he ever owned the bonds.              The Act's notice requirement
    3
    The Administration also notes that the Authority may have called its bonds
    more than a year before March 15, 2000 — the date on which the bank
    transferred the bond funds to the State. Siegel provided no proof that the bonds
    remained outstanding until their original maturity date, or that they were not
    callable. See 64 Am. Jur. 2d Public Securities and Obligations §§ 300 to 308
    (2020) (discussing in general an issuer's right to "call" bonds, that is, to require
    holders to submit their bonds for payment before maturity).
    A-0408-17T4
    6
    specifies that, by November 30 of the year after the year when the
    Administration received escheated funds, the Administrator must publish a
    newspaper notice, two weeks in a row, in the county of a property owner's last-
    known address. N.J.S.A. 46:30B–51. The notice must contain the names and
    last-known addresses of "each person appearing . . . from the records of the
    holder to be the owner of property of the value of $50 or more presumed
    abandoned." N.J.S.A. 46:30B–52(a); N.J.S.A. 46:30B–47 (emphasis added).
    The State could not have included Siegel's name and address if the bank — the
    holder of the bond funds — did not supply them; and Siegel has failed to
    demonstrate that the bank had any record of his ownership.
    Furthermore, we discern no merit to Siegel's contention that lack of notice
    deprived him of due process. "Notice by mail or other means as certain to ensure
    actual notice is a minimum constitutional precondition to a proceeding which
    will adversely affect the liberty or property interests of any party . . . if its name
    and address are reasonably ascertainable."         Mennonite Bd. of Missions v.
    Adams, 
    462 U.S. 791
    , 800 (1983).              Siegel seems to recognize that the
    Administration could have sent him a mailed notice only if his "name and
    address [were] reasonably ascertainable" — and they were not. Instead, he
    A-0408-17T4
    7
    argues that the Administration was obliged to publish a general notice stating
    that it had received funds from bearer bonds, and listing the bond numbers.
    Providing such notice may be good policy. But we are not persuaded that
    due process required it; escheating the bond funds did not "adversely affect"
    Siegel's "liberty or property interests." See 
    ibid.
     Escheat under the current Act,
    as opposed to pre-1989 versions of the Act, did not deprive Siegel of his
    ownership rights. 4 See Clymer, 
    171 N.J. at 63
    . And, because we hold that the
    Administration should offer Siegel the same relief that the Highway Authority
    would have had to offer, Siegel suffered no adverse consequence from
    transferring the bond funds to the Administration's custody.
    We turn now to the heart of this appeal: whether the Administration may
    insist that a claimant present the original bearer bond to secure payment. As
    with review of agency action generally, we shall not sustain an Administration
    decision that is "arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable; unsupported by
    substantial credible evidence in the record; or contrary to express or implied
    legislative policies." BBB Value Servs., Inc. v. Treasurer, 
    451 N.J. Super. 483
    ,
    489 (App. Div. 2017) (reviewing Administration decision under the Act). In
    4
    We do not address whether escheat of intangible property may adversely affect
    an owner's property interests in other ways — for example, if the receiving
    government liquidates abandoned securities.
    A-0408-17T4
    8
    exercising our review, we are not bound by the Administration's statutory
    interpretation, although we may give it some deference. 
    Ibid.
    The Administration submits that its "obligation to pay is the same
    obligation to pay vested in the fiscal agent of the Highway Authority, subject to
    the same prerequisites to and limitations on payment." We agree. As we stated
    in In re Nov. 8, 1996 Determination, 309 N.J. Super. at 278, "the Act cannot,
    and therefore presumably was not intended to, impose an obligation different
    from the obligation undertaken to the original owner of the intangible property
    which it covers." However, the Administration errs in contending that Siegel's
    failure to produce the original bonds would have doomed his claim for payment
    from the Highway Authority or its agent.
    Generally speaking, a bearer bond is payable only to the person who
    possesses it. "Ownership of a bearer bond . . . is presumed from possession and
    is transferred by physically handing over the bond. The bondowner obtains
    interest payments by presenting bond coupons to a bank that in turn presents the
    coupons to the issuer's paying agent." South Carolina v. Baker, 
    485 U.S. 505
    ,
    508 (1988).5 Because the Administration states, and Siegel does not deny, that
    5
    By contrast, "[o]wnership of a registered bond is recorded on a central list,
    and a transfer of record ownership requires entering the change on that list. The
    A-0408-17T4
    9
    the 1971 Highway Authority revenue bond was a bearer bond, we assume that it
    was negotiable by delivery. "[A]n instrument . . . payable to bearer . . . may be
    negotiated by transfer of possession alone," N.J.S.A. 12A:3–201(b), and "[a]n
    instrument is transferred when it is delivered by a person other than its issuer
    for the purpose of giving to the person receiving delivery the right to enforce
    the instrument," N.J.S.A. 12A:3–203(a).6
    But the UCC provides a remedy for the owner of a lost negotiable
    instrument. A person may be entitled to enforce an instrument even if the person
    is "not in possession of the instrument." N.J.S.A. 12A:3–301. A person who
    satisfies N.J.S.A. 12A:3–309 is so entitled. 
    Ibid.
     Section 309 imposes three
    requirements for "[a] person not in possession of an instrument . . . to enforce
    the instrument": (1) "the person was in possession of the instrument and entitled
    record owner automatically receives interest payments by check or electronic
    transfer of funds from the issuer's paying agent." 
    Ibid.
     (footnote omitted).
    6
    Unless the 1971 revenue bond contained a term expressly stating that it was
    not negotiable, the bond evidently was a "negotiable instrument," if it contained
    "an unconditional promise . . . to pay a fixed amount of money, with . . . interest
    . . . described in the promise" and if it met additional three requirements: it was
    "payable to bearer"; it was "payable . . . at a definite time"; and it did "not state
    any other undertaking or instruction by the person promising . . . payment to do
    any act in addition to the payment of money." N.J.S.A. 12A:3–104(a); see 28
    Egon Guttman, Modern Securities Transfers § 1.7 (4th ed. 2018) (stating that a
    bearer bond "might fit" the UCC definition of a negotiable instrument).
    A-0408-17T4
    10
    to enforce it when loss of possession occurred"; (2) "the loss of possession was
    not the result of a transfer by the person or a lawful seizure"; and (3) "the person
    cannot reasonably obtain possession of the instrument because the inst rument
    was destroyed, its whereabouts cannot be determined, or it is in the wrongful
    possession of an unknown person or a person that cannot be found or is not
    amenable to service of process." N.J.S.A. 12A:3–309(a); see Invs. Bank v.
    Torres, 
    243 N.J. 25
    , 42 (2020) (discussing sections 301 and 309). The owner of
    the lost instrument must also "prove the terms of the instrument." N.J.S.A.
    12A:3–309(b).
    If the owner of the lost instrument satisfies that burden, the owner must
    also protect the obligor against loss if the original turns up in the hands of a
    person entitled to enforce it. A "court may not enter judgment in favor of the
    person seeking enforcement unless it finds that the person required to pay the
    instrument is adequately protected against loss that might occur by reason of a
    claim by another person to enforce the instrument." 
    Ibid.
     The code does not
    specify the form of protection, stating only that "[a]dequate protection may be
    provided by any reasonable means." 
    Ibid.
    Even without a statutory remedy, "[c]ourts of equity had jurisdiction to
    grant relief in cases involving the loss or theft of various instruments." Santos
    A-0408-17T4
    11
    v. First Nat'l State Bank, 
    186 N.J. Super. 52
    , 63 n.9 (App. Div. 1982); see also
    Karafa v. N.J. State Lottery Comm'n, 
    129 N.J. Super. 499
    , 505 (Ch. Div. 1974).
    In Karafa, the court noted that "the accidental or unintentional loss . . . of a
    written instrument does not, as a general rule, change or impair the obligation
    of the parties thereto." Karafa, 
    129 N.J. Super. at 505
     (quoting 52 Am. Jur. 2d
    Lost and Destroyed Instruments § 2, at 116). Although losing an instrument
    "may impair the owner's evidence of the right he claims thereunder, he may still
    enforce the right and . . . may maintain an appropriate action to recover on the
    obligation." Ibid. The instrument may be "re-executed or restored . . . by the
    voluntary act of the party, [or] resort may be had to a court empowered to grant
    such relief." Ibid.
    However, the equity court's intervention was based on its "power to order
    indemnity against loss," and "requiring indemnification was the rule in cases
    where bills of exchange . . . or promissory notes were alleged to have been lost
    or destroyed." Santos, 
    186 N.J. Super. at
    63 n.9; see also 2 Peter W. Salsich, Jr.
    et al., State & Local Government Debt Financing § 12.49 (James A. Coniglio
    ed., 2d ed. 2020) (stating that publicly issued "[b]onds that have been lost, stolen
    or destroyed may be replaced if the owner supplies satisfactory evidence of
    A-0408-17T4
    12
    ownership and that the bonds . . . have been lost, stolen or destroyed" and noting
    that the issuing entity may require "provisions for indemnification").
    Therefore, Siegel was, and is, entitled to seek reissuance of the bearer
    bonds by the Highway Authority or its agent bank as a remedy in equity or under
    the code. Because the Administration bears the same obligation as did the
    Highway Authority, we conclude that the Administration must grant Siegel an
    opportunity to make that same showing. We express no opinion regarding
    whether Siegel can meet his burden.
    Reversed and remanded. We do not retain jurisdiction.
    A-0408-17T4
    13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-0408-17T4

Filed Date: 12/22/2020

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/22/2020