GEORGE J. BASSETT, BANK COMMISSIONER, vs. THE CITY BANK AND TRUST COMPANY.
Supreme Court of Errors of Connecticut
Argued March 22d—decided April 27th, 1932.
MALTBIE, C. J., HAINES, HINMAN, BANKS and AVERY, Js.
Phillips Ketchum, of Boston, Massachusetts, with whom, on the brief, was Noel Morss, for the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.
Arthur L. Shipman, with whom, on the brief, was Arthur L. Shipman, Jr., for depositors.
Benedict M. Holden, for depositors.
Harry L. Nair, with whom, on the brief, were Solomon Elsner and Lewis Fox, for a depositor.
Ernest L. Averill, Deputy Attorney-General, with whom were Warren B. Burrows, Attorney-General, and H. Roger Jones, Assistant Attorney-General, for the Bank Commissioner.
Arthur E. Howard, Jr., for The Travelers Bank and Trust Company, receiver of The Unionville Bank and Trust Company.
Stuart N. Dunning, for David Carlson, beneficiary under a trust.
Isador E. Finkelstein, for The Foley Steamship and Travel Agency.
A
One group of questions concerns the right of the makers of certain notes held in the savings department and carried on its books as assets of that department to set off against their indebtedness upon them deposits they had in the bank. The specific question we are asked is this: “Are the makers of any of such notes entitled to set off their deposits in either the commercial department or the savings department of the defendant corporation against their indebtedness to the defendant corporation on said notes?” The facts stipulated present three different situations with reference to these notes. In the first situation the loans for which the notes were given were in fact made out of thе funds of the savings department and the notes have always been carried on the books of the bank as assets of that department, both facts being without the actual knowledge of the makers of them. The right of the makers of these notes to set off against them their deposits in either the commercial or the savings department is effectively answered by our ruling in Lippitt v. Thames Loan & Trust Co., 88 Conn. 185, 90 Atl. 369, where we held that, in the case of a bank having similar departments, commercial and sav-
The second situation presented by the stipulation concerns notes representing loans originally made from the funds of the commercial department where the notes were thereafter but before maturity transferred to the savings department for cash or other assets of equivalent value. We cannot regard the commercial and savings departments as separate institutions or corporations; we said of a similar situation in the Lippitt case (p. 197): “If these departments constituted separate institutions, the savings depositors would be confined to the assets of their own department. We do not think the charter creates, or the law providing for the setting apart of savings funds and investing them in savings bank investments intended to make of these departments, independent institutions.” The question cannot be approached from the standpoint of an indorsement or assignment of the notes from one party to another, and the statutes governing the right of set-off in such situations are not applicable. The notes were merely shifted from the commercial department to the savings department in return for assets of the latter. That the bank having a note in its commercial department representing a loan made from its funds had the right to transfer it, for an equivalent
A claim by the borrower to a right of set-off cannot rest upon the fact that the savings department took the note subject to an independent equity in his favor. The situation is not like that which might occur where funds of the department were invested in a security which was subject to a lien, so that it took the investment, not free and unincumbered, but only in subordination to the rights of the lienor. In the first place, such a right, if it existed, as to any of these notes, would extend only to a deposit the borrower might have in the commercial department and could not be enlarged to include any deposit in the savings department. But that aside, the right to a set-off is not an incident to a debt but to the remedy to secure payment of it. “The right of set-off, in short, does not depend upon the mutuality of debts in their origin, as an inherent quality attaching itself to such debts, but upon the situation and rights of the parties, between whom it is sought to be enforced; and whether the suit be at law or in equity, there must be personal debts existing between them, and not merely betwеen either of them, and third persons. As has been very properly remarked at the bar, it is a privilege or right attaching to the remedy only; which in some States may be allowed by their laws, and in others, denied. But it touches not any obligation of contract or vested right.” Story, J., in Greene v. Darling, 5 Mason (U. S. C. C.) 201, 215; Wolcott v. Sullivan, 1 Edw. Ch. (N. Y.) 399, 403. There must be, at the time an action by one party or the other is brought, or when a settlement is made in lieu of an action, mutual debts which can then be set off one against the other. There are circumstances where rights in third parties will arise and prevail over a set-off which might otherwise exist. The most usual example is that of the negotiation of a negotiable instrument representing the debt before maturity to a bona fide purchaser for value. A similar situation exists where a bank transfers a note from its commercial to its savings department in return for funds of that department and by virtue of the statute the rights of the other depositors in that department to share equally in its investment has attached. The makers of the notes which, before maturity, were transferred to the savings department in return for cash or assets of that department, of equivalent valuе, cannot set off against the debt represented by the note any deposit they may have in the savings department. Nor can they, under the decision in the Lippitt case, set off against them any deposit they may have in the commercial department. See Cosmopolitan Trust Co. v. Rosenbush, 239 Mass. 305, 131 N. E. 858; Bieringer-Hanauer Co. v. Cosmopolitan Trust Co., 247 Mass. 73, 141 N. E. 566; Dole v. Chattabriga, 82 N. H. 396, 134 Atl. 347; Cosmopolitan Trust Co. v. Leonard Watch Co., 249 Mass. 14, 143 N. E. 827.
The third situation presented by the stipulation involves notes which represent loans made from the funds of the commercial department but which were transferred before maturity to the savings department while the defendant was entirely solvent, as an addition to the investments in that department, in order to compensate for depreciation in the market value
B
HINMAN, J. The Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, herein referred to as the claimant, makes claim to priority in payment over the claims of depositors and general creditors, on behalf of the owners of certain checks and other items sent by it for collection, under the agreement hereinafter mentioned, to the defendant bank, also as to certain other items sent to the Unionville Bank and Trust Company which attempted to remit to the claimant through the defendant. These items were forwarded under letters of transmittаl designated in this proceeding as letters X, Y, and Z.
For some years an agreement has been in force between the claimant and the defendant by which the claimant agreed that all items drawn on the defendant which the claimant received should be forwarded to the defendant for collection. The defendant agreed to collect and remit for cash letters on the same day when received, returning dishonored items, and to remit for non-cash items on the day they were collected. The defendant had the option of remitting by a shipment of money, or by acceptable bank drafts drawn on Boston or New York, New York drafts being sent to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York for the claimant‘s account.
The items transmitted in letter “X” consisted of checks drawn on the defendant which had been sent
In all three cases the remittance drafts were dishonored on presentation, although drawn against sufficient funds, because the drawee had received notice of the prior suspension of the defendant‘s business.
The claimant asserts a right to priority in payment over claims of depositors and general creditors, and the questions reserved upon the stipulated facts are: (1) Should the charges made against the deposit accounts of the drawers of the items contained in letters “X,” “Y,” and “Z” be cancelled? (2) If the answer to the first question is in the negative, has the claimant, to the extent to which it is authorized to prosecute claims by the owners of the items, a claim or claims against the defendant on account thereof, and if so, what is the status of such claim or claims as to classification or priority?
It appears to be conceded by all parties in interest, as to all of the items involved, that the owners by forwarding them to the bank at which they were payable authorized that bank to accept payment in their behalf, and that when the maker‘s account was charged, by his express or implied authority, with the amount, he paid the check or other item and is no longer liable thereon. Federal Reserve Bank v. Malloy, 264 U. S. 160, 166, 44 Sup. Ct. 296, 31 A. L. R. 1261; Nineteenth Ward Bank v. First National Bank, 184 Mass. 49, 67 N. E. 670; Baldwin‘s Bank v. Smith, 215 N. Y. 76, 109 N. E. 138; note, 52 A. L. R. 995. It follows that the charges made against the deposit accounts of the drawers of the items mentioned in the first question reserved should not be cancelled.
It is undisputed that the sending of the items by the claimant to the City Bank under the arrangement between them created the relation of principal and agent. “So long as the items remained uncollected, the principal could control their disposition. The agent received the items for a specific purpose, and stood toward the principal as a trustee charged with an active duty toward the purpose of the agency, which was
The gist of the claim to a preference is that, since the agreement was that the proceeds were to be remitted on the same business day that the items were received for collection, the trust relation continued together with a right to the fund collected in lieu of the paper which produced it. As between the tests resorted to by the courts to determine the general question whether the trust continues after collection, (1) ability to trace the fund or (2) ascertainment as to whether the relation of principal and agent has ceased and that of debtor and creditor begun, we adopted, in the Lippitt case, supra (following Commercial Bank v. Armstrong, supra), the latter as the more satisfactory, ability to trace the fund being held merely evidential of the existence or nonexistence of this relation (p. 202). Although much litigation upon this subject has since intervened, we find in the decisions no reason for a material departure from that view. The examples cited (p. 202) also seem to us to narrow our necessary inquiry and to point somewhat significantly to the conclusion required upon the facts presented. “The agent would change the relation to that of debtor and creditor were it to mingle the funds collected with its own funds, and credit the collections to the sending bank under its arrangement with it to make remittances at specified times. If, on the other hand, it held
In that case the record was held insufficient to disclose that immediate remittance, to which the second example pertained, was agreed upon or intended, but it is indicated (p. 204) that in such a situation the mingling of collected funds with the bank‘s own funds, as distinguished from segregation as by special deposit, would affect adversely the continuance of a trust relation, as “the forwarding bank will get a like sum of money, but not the specific fund collected.”
The cases involving the relations between the owner of paper sent to a bank for collection and the collecting bank, after the collection has been made, followed by insolvency of the bank, are extremely numerous and varied as to facts, reasoning, and results. Of the multitude it is practicable to mention only a few which we regard as specially persuasive. In People v. Merchants & Mechanics Bank, 78 N. Y. 269, most of the facts were quite analogous to those in the present case. The Chemical Bank of New York sent a check, deposited in it and drawn on the defendant bank, to that bank, in accordance with the custom of the Chemical Bank to mail such checks to the Merchants & Mechanics Bank on Saturdays, the latter receiving them on Mondays, and on Tuesdays remitting by drafts on the Metropolitan Bank of New York. The draft remitted covering this check was not paid, a receiver of the Merchants and Mechanics Bank being appointed. It was there held (p. 274) “impossible out of these facts
To the same effect, and largely following the reasoning in the Massachusetts case just mentioned, is Citizens Bank v. Bradley (1926) 136 S. C. 511, 134 S. E. 510, in which a draft sent to the Pinewood Bank was paid by a check charged to drawee‘s deposit and on the same day a cashier‘s check was remitted to the drawer or the forwarding bank, but before it was returned and presented, the bank examiner took charge of the Pinewood Bank. In addition to holding, as in the Massachusetts case, that after the Pinewood Bank accepted the check in payment of the draft the relation between the claimant and the bank was that of creditor and debtor, and that the claimant was put upon the same plane as other creditors and not entitled to a preference, the court said, further (p. 522): “I think, too, thаt even if the relation [could] be considered a
Here, equally, it seems, the agreement permitting remittance by draft—which it is obvious and admitted is the usual and only commercially practicable general course—instead of shipment of currency, contemplated and authorized the mingling of the proceeds of collection in the general funds of the bank; it was equivalent to authority to the bank to use for its own general purposes the money collected and to pay the forwarder by draft on its funds on deposit in another bank. An agreement or understanding whereby the collecting bank is to use the money collected, and substitute therefor its own obligation is inconsistent with the idea of a trust and creates the relation of debtor and creditor instead of trustee and beneficiary. California Packing Corporation v. McClintock, 75 Mont. 72, 241 Pac. 1077.
The decisions of courts of other States disclose diversified attitudes as to the nature and effect of relations such as are here in question and as to the elements and considerations determinative as to whether the relation is one of trust or of debtor and creditor, amounting to a direct and irreconcilable conflict of authorities as to the resulting conclusions. Those cases which adhere to a holding of debtor and creditor ap-
The owner or forwarder and the collector may so agree as to require collection in currency and remittance thereof, but manifestly such a course would be commercially impracticable as of general application; they might agree that the proceeds be held in strict trust and remitted to the forwarder, but such intent is not manifested by the arrangement here presented. Also, many cases have held that even if it were found that the parties intended a trust, preference could not be allowed if the strict principles of tracing were followed. A trust requires a definite subject-matter, which is lacking in the absence of an expressed intent that the collector shall satisfy his duty to the for-
Under the Negotiable Instruments Law, a draft or check does not operate as an assignment of the fund on which it is drawn.
If modern developments of the operations of forwarding and collection warrant extending additional protection to the owner or forwarder by way of preference in case of insolvency of the collecting bank, it would seem that it can best be afforded by statute, rather than through illogical use of trust terminology or doubtful application of trust princiрles. This appears to be recognized by the adoption, during the past three years, by eighteen States, of a provision in a Uniform Bank Collection Code which allows a preference when an item is sent to a bank which charges it to the maker‘s account and fails without having paid or settled for the item. The New York statute to this effect is quoted in In re Jayne & Mason, 251 N. Y. Supp. 768, 770. See, “Failed Banks Collection Items, and Trust Preferences,” Bogert, 29 Michigan Law Review (1931) 545; “Constructive Trusts and Bank Collections,” Townsend, 39 Yale Law Journal (1930) p. 980.
We find nothing in the facts relating to the item
AVERY, J. (dissenting). I cannot concur in this opinion. I think the Federal Reserve Bank should be paid in full. A check had been mailed to it drawn against a good account in a New York bank. The New York exchange should be regarded as cash.
C
HAINES, J. The third of the four questions propounded to us upon this reservation is denominated “C” and is stated as follows: “The defendant corporation acting as executor, as administrator, as guardian, as conservator or as trustee of particular estates or trust funds had prior to the closing of the defendant corporation deposited cash funds of such estates or trusts in the savings department of the de-
The bank was authorized by its charter and by statute to act as fiduciary in the various capacities indicated in the stipulation. Special Laws, 1889, p. 842, § 9; Special Laws, 1917, p. 1127, § 2;
A preliminary question relates to the right of the bank-fiduciary to deposit its trust funds in its own savings department. Our statute law prescribes how funds shall be invested by a fiduciary, “unless otherwise provided in the instrument creating the trust.”
The stipulated facts present a second question, viz.: whether we must differentiate those deposits which were already in the savings department when the bank became fiduciary and which it allowed to remain there, from those funds which it deposited there afterward. The funds already deposited were within the provisions of our statute which permits a fiduciary to continue the investment as it came to him unless otherwise ordered by the Court of Probate or by the instrument creating the trust.
In considering whether these deposits of trust funds are entitled to a preference over other deposits in the savings department, we should note the change of ownership which took place when these moneys were deposited. The money became at once the property of the savings department and was thereafter held by it not as the money of the bank-fiduciary but as its own. The funds, after deposit, did not remain impressed with the same trust which attached to them while in the hands of the bank-fiduciary, since it does
The defendant bank is a unit and all departments thereof are operated by it for its own profit, and all profits from all departments go to swell its general assets. The purpose of the law requiring the segregated investments in the savings department “was to
Save by some special arrangement, not present in the instant case, or because wrongfully made, deposits such as those which are the subject of the present reference, are on an equal footing in their relation to the savings department, and the depositors are entitled to have the segregated funds in that department applied ratably in proportion to the deposits. This right is founded upon the statute and is prior to “any other obligation or liability” whatever. Being statutory and in terms for the benefit of all the depositors without distinction, the rights of no one depositor can be discriminated against by giving a particular deposit a preference over the others. Tucker v. New Hampshire Trust Co., supra; Bank Commissioners v. Security Trust Co., 70 N. H. 536, 544, 49 Atl. 113; 3 Michie, Banks & Banking (Ed. 1931) pp. 272, 275; 1 Morse, Banks & Banking (6th Ed.) p. 508-510, § 186; 56 A. L. R. p. 807. After this fund is exhausted, any balаnce of such deposits which has not been paid, becomes a general claim on all the assets of the bank and payable as the third item in the statute,
It is in this sense that effect is given to the charter amendment which provides that “all the capital stock, property, and estate of every kind belonging to said corporation shall constitute the security hereinbefore referred to, and shall be and stand charged with the fulfilment of any trusts, duties, and agreements authorized by this act of incorporation and the payment of deposits and trust funds as the first and prior lien thereon in case of any default by or the failure of said corporation, and they shall be taken and considered as sufficient and the only security to be required for
D
BANKS, J. The Foley Steamship & Travel Agency applied to the Superior Court for an order directing the temporary receiver to return to it the sum of $635 deposited by it with the Trust Company on December 31st, 1931, after the close of regular banking hours.
The following facts are stipulated: The hour for closing the commercial department of the Trust Company under the rules of the Hartford Clearing House Association was 3 p. m., but it was its custom to receive funds for deposit and to pay out cash between the hours of 3 and 4 p. m., the funds so received not being credited to the customer‘s deposit account until the next business day. Cash received by the Trust Company was entered by its tellers on cash “proof sheets” with the name of the customer making the deposit opposite the amount of the deposit. Each day at 3 p. m. the tellers checked their proof sheets with the cash in their cash drawers, and started new proof sheets for the cash received after 3 p. m. of that day and prior to 3 p. m. of the following business day. The cash received after 3 p. m. was placed in the cash drawer without separation from the cash that was in the drawer at 3 p. m., and cash was paid out from the drawer upon customers’ checks after 3 p. m. The cash drawer with the cash therein at 4 p. m. was removed to the Trust Company‘s vault, and at the opening of business on the next business day was returned to the teller‘s desk. The Foley Agency, knowing of the practiсe of the Trust Company to receive deposits after 3 p. m. to be credited on the depositor‘s account on the next business day, deposited $635 in cash with the customary deposit slip between the hours of three and
The Foley Agency claims that this deposit was in the nature of a special deposit, title to which did not pass to the Trust Company, and that it is therefore entitled to be paid the full amount of its deposit from the funds in the hands of the receiver. It does not appear from the facts stipulated that, when this deposit was made, the Trust Company was hopelessly insolvent to the knowledge of its officers, and there is no claim, such as might be made under those circumstances, that the receipt of the deposit was a fraud upon the depositor. The sole question is whether, upon the facts stipulated, the Trust Company became the debtor of the Foley Agency for the amount of its deposit, or held it as bailee or agent.
Deposits in a commercial bank ordinarily create the relation of debtor and creditor between the bank and the depositor. The money becomes the property of the bank, and if repaid it is done with the bank‘s funds and not those of the depositor. Alexiou v. Bridgeport-Peoples’ Savings Bank, 110 Conn. 397, 399, 148 Atl. 374. “The title passes to the bank unless there is fraud, or the deposit is kept separate, with intent that the title shall not pass.” 2 Morse, Banks & Banking (6th Ed.) § 629. A bank deposit is presumed to be a general deposit, creating this relationship of debtor and creditor, in the absence of an agreement to the contrary. 3 R. C. L. 517. Where it appears that the mutual intention and understanding of the parties was that title to the fund deposited should not pass to the
This was an ordinary commercial deposit of funds to the general account of the depositor. It was not treated as a special deposit for it was immediately
This precise question was passed upon in a well-considered opinion of the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Second Circuit in the case of In re Ruskay (1925) 5 Fed. (2d) 143. In that case a broker deposited checks in the Old Colony Trust Company after banking hours on February 21st. They were not credited to his account until the next banking day, February 23d. A petition in bankruptcy was filed against the broker оn February 22d. The ultimate question in the case was one of preference, but its decision rested upon whether the deposit made after banking hours on February 21st, but not entered on the books of the bank until the next business day, immediately created between the bank and the broker the relationship of debtor and creditor. The court held that it did, and said (pp. 148, 150): “If it [the bank] does so receive a deposit the amount so received creates the relation of creditor and debtor as effectively as though the deposit was actually received before three o‘clock whether the entry actually appears on the books of the bank on the day when it was received or whether the actual entry is postponed until the next day. . . . If the deposit was actually made on February 21st, the fact that it was accepted a few minutes after banking hours does not alter the obligation the bank assumed to the depositors. That obligation is no different from what it would have been if the deposit had been made
The Foley Agency cites Sadler v. Belcher (1843) 2 Moody & Robinson, 489, and Philadelphia v. Eckels, 98 Fed. 485. In the former case the bankers had, before the deposit was made, determined not to open for business the next day, and dealt with the deposit as property of the depositor, placing it in a separate place where it could not become mixed with the receipts of the day. In the latter the deposit was not mingled with other funds of the bank; the officers of the bank knew when the deposit was received that it was insolvent, and the court held that it would have been a fraud upon the depositor to accept the deposit. The amount deposited by the Foley Agency should be treated as a general deposit, and a part of the assets of the defendant in the hands of the receiver.
PER CURIAM. All the judges having concurred in the foregoing opinions except as noted, the question asked in division A of the stipulation is answered as follows: The makers of notes which represent loans made out of the funds of the savings department and the makers of notes which represent loans originally made out of the funds of the commercial department but which were thereafter transferred before maturity to the savings department for cash or other assets of equivalent value are not entitled to set off their deposits in either commercial or savings department; the makers of notes which represent loans made from funds of the commercial department but which were transferred before maturity to the savings department in order to compensate for depreciation in the market value of the investments held by that department are
SUSAN MCCLEAVE vs. THE JOHN J. FLANAGAN COMPANY.
MALTBIE, C. J., HAINES, BANKS, AVERY and JENNINGS, J.
