delivered the opinion of the Court.
Jаnuary 28, 1922, the superintendent of the Klamath Indian Reservation had on deposit with the First State and Savings Bank of Klamath Falls, Oregon, $96,000, Indian moneys, individual and tribal. The bank had given a bond to the United States, with appellee as surety, to secure the pаyment of the deposit. It was insolvent
*486
and, on that day, suspended payment. Because of its condition, the board of directors passed a resolution giving full control of its affairs.to appellant. Pursuant to the-laws of. the State, he toоk possession and control of its property and business for the purpose of liquidation. Appellee paid the amount of the deposit to the superintendent of the reservation, and received from the United States an assignmеnt of its claim against the bank; and appellee has the priority, if any, that belonged to the United Statés. R. S. § 3468. It claimed that, under R. S. § 3466, it- should' be paid in full out of the bank’s assets prior to any payment on account of unsecured or unpreferred сlaims. Appellant denied priority, but allowed the claim as one not preferred. Appellee brought this suit in the District Court -of Oregon to enforce priority. The decree went in its favor (
Section 3466 provides: “Whenever any person indebted to the United States is insolvent, or whenever the estate of any deceased debtor, in. the hands of the executors or administrators, is insufficient to pay all the debts due from the deceased, the debts due to the United States shall be first satisfied; and the priority hereby established shall extend as well to cases in which a debtor, not having. sufficient'property to pay all his debts, makes a voluntary assignment thereof, or in which the estate and effects of an absconding, conсealed, or absent debtor are attached by process of law, as to cases in which an act of bankruptcy is committed.”
Section 3467 provides: “Every executor, administrator, or assignee, .or other person, who pays any debt due by the person or estate from whom or for which he acts, before he satisfies and pays the debts due to the United States from such person or estate, shall become answer-' able ih his own person and estate for the debts so due to *487 the United States, or for so much thereof as may remain due and unpaid.”
It was admitted that the total value of the bank’s assets w.as less, than its debts, and that it was insolvent. § 6221, Oregon Laws. National Bankruptcy Act of July 1, 1898, c. 541, § 1, 30 Stat. 544. The lower courts rightly held that the amount owed by the bank on account of the deposit in question was a debt due to the United States.
Appellee is entitled to priority if, within the meaning of § 3466, the bank made a voluntary assignment of its property or committed an act of bankruptcy.
That section is to be liberally construed. In
Beaston
v.
Farmers’ Bank,
The Act applies to all debts diie from deceased debtors whenever their estates are' insufficient, to pay-all cred
*488
itors, and extends to all debts due from insolvent living debtors when their insolvency is shown in any of the ways stated in § 3466. The dеcisions of this court show that no lien is created by the statute; that priority does not attach while the debtor continues the owner and in possession of the property; that no evidence can be received of the insolvency of the debtor until he has been divested of his property in one of the modes stated; and that, “ whenever he is thus divested of his property, the person who becomes invested with the title, is thereby made a trustee for the United States, and is bound to pay their debt first out of the proceeds of the debtor’s property.”
Beaston
v.
Farmers’ Bank, supra,
133, and eases cited;
United States
v.
Oklahoma,
Appellant, emphasizing the view that the priority act does not apply ^unless insolvency is manifested in one of the modes there indicated, contends that thе resolution of the board of directors was not a voluntary assignment and did not divest the bank of the title; that, as the Bankruptcy Act does not apply to banks,- there was no act of bankruptcy committed; that, under.the state law, title' remains in thе bank after the superintendent takes ppssession and until he disposes of the property in the course of liquidation. And to support the last contention, he cites
United States F. & G. Co.
v.
Bramwell,
The specified ways in which insolvency may be manifested include all cases in which an insolvent debtor makes
*489
an assignment of his рroperty; there is no exception, and no regard is had to the purpose or manner of the assignment; and they include all cases in which an act of bankruptcy is committed under the laws of a State or under a national bankruptсy law.
Conard
v.
Nicoll,
Section 3a (4) of the Bankruptcy Act, аs amended February 5¡ 1903, c. 487, 32 Stat.'797, provides: “Acts of bankruptcy by a person shall consist of his having . . . (4) made a general assignment for the benefit of his creditors; or, being insolvent, applied for a receiver or trustee for his property or because of insolvency a receiver or trustee has been put in charge of his property under the laws of a State, of a Territory, or of the United States.” The fact that banks are not subject to that Act *490 is of no moment. The refеrence to an act of bankruptcy in §' 3466 is general, and is for the purpose of defining one of the ways in which the debtor’s insolvency may be manifested.. The priority given does not depend on any proceeding under the bankruptcy laws оf state or nation. There is nothing in the language of the section, and no reason has been suggested, to indicate a purpose to give priority in the case of a debt due the United States from a debtor subject to the-Bankruptcy Aсt and to deny priority, under like circumstances, when the debt is due from- an insolvent bank or other debtor to whom the Act does not apply. The specification in § 3466 of the ways insolvency may be manifested is aided by the designation in § 3467 of the pеrsons made answerable for failure to pay the United States first from the inadequate estates of deceased debtors or from the insolvent estates of living debtors. The persons held are “.every executor, administrator, or assignee, or other person.” The generality of the language is significant. Taken together, these sections mean that a deot due the United States is required first to be satisfied when the possession and control of the estate of the insolvent is given to- any pеrson charged with the duty of applying it to the payment of the debts of - the insolvent, as the rights and priorities of. creditors may be made'to appear. *
The statutes of the State.(§§ 6220-6223) provide for the handing over of the property of insоlvent banks to the state superintendent of banks to be by him administered and disposed of for the benefit of creditors. By the resolution of the directors in this case, the bank was wholly divested of the possession and control of its property аnd
*491
business; and the exclusive possession and control of them passed to appellant for the purpose of liquidating the debts of the bank. And, under the state law, when he took possession of its assets, liens thereon, , amounting in all to morе than the value of the property, attached in favor of the depositors. § 6220(h).
Upham
v.
Bramwell,
105 Ore, 597, 606-609, 613. He was empowered, and it became his duty, to collect all debts and claims belonging 4o the bank, to sell its property under the direction of the сourt, and to execute and deliver to purchasers deeds and other instruments to' evidence the passing of title to them; and, if necessary to pay the bank’s debts, he was authorized to enforce the individual liability, if any, of the stockholdеrs.- And it was his duty, out of the estate, to pay expenses, and from time to time, as directed by the court, to apply the funds remaining in his hands to the payment of the bank’s creditors according to their rights and priorities.
United States F. & G. Co.
v.
Bramwell, supra,
288. After 60 days had elapsed the bаnk could not regain the property.. § 6223(c). The state law excludes all other methods for the liquidation of the debts of insolvent banks. Appellant’s duties were in substance the same as those of a trustee having the legal title of propеrty for the purpose of convérting it into money to be paid over to specified persons. The state law required him to perform the functions of an assignee, receiver or trustee for the liquidation of the debts of an insolvent. See
Sargent
v.
American Bank and Trust Co.,
The effect of the resolution of the bank directors is the same as if it expressly granted and imposed upon appellant all the powers and duties in respect of the bank’s property and the liquidation of its debts that are specified in the state law. The resolution authorized and was followed by the handing over of the possession and control *492 of all the bank’s property to be converted into money to pay the bank’s debts. The act of the directors made the bank’s insolvency notorious. The established rule of liberal construction requires that the priority act be applied having regard to the public good it was intended to advance. Its application is not to be narrowly restricted to the cases within the literal and technical meaning of the words used. The things done in this case are not different in thеir substance from the. things specified as the ways in which insolvency is required to be made manifest. It must be held that, within the meaning of the priority act, the bank made a voluntary assignment of its property; and that, because of the bank’s insolvency, a trustee was put in charge of its property under a state law within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Act,
Decree affirmed.
Notes
Cf.
Davis
v.
Pullen,
