201 F. 609 | 6th Cir. | 1913
John Brennan, the complainant below, filed a bill in the Circuit Court, sitting in equity, against the First National Bank of Ironwood, Mich., an insolvent banking association, and Philip Tillinghast, receiver of said bank, the defendants below, seeking to recover as preferred claims against the bank the value of certain stock deposited by Brennan with the bank as collateral and sold by the bank, and the sum of $1,000 deposited by Brennan with the bank a short time before it was placed in the hands of the receiver. The court, on final hearing, allowed the first of these items as a preferred claim, and disallowed the second. Brennan and the receiver have each appealed from this decree; and the two appeals have been heard together.
The material facts are these:
The First National Bank of Ironwood, Mich., hereinafter called the Ironwood Bank, yfas organized as a national banking association in 1888, and conducted a banking business in Ironwood until June 21, 1909, when it closed its doors, and Tillinghast was appointed as its receiver by the Comptroller of the Currency.
On February 1, 1909, Brennan borrowed from the Ironwood Bank the sum of $1,000, for which he executed his promissory note, due in four months, with interest, and deposited with the bank as collateral security certificates for certain shares of mining stock, including 200 shares of the capital stock of the Shattuck-Arizona Copper Company.
On April 8th Brennan deposited with the Ironwlood Bank the sum of $1,000, for which he received a certificate of deposit. This deposit was received by the cashier of the bank, with the understanding at the time that it was to be used in paying Brennan’s note at its maturity.
The receiver admitted in his answer that the bank was insolvent from February 1st, when the note was given, to June 21st, when the receiver was appointed, including the date, April 8th, on which the deposit was received; and the cashier who received the deposit testified that he had known for about ten years before that the bank was insolvent.
On May 1st the Ironwood Bank, through its cashier, without the knowledge or consent of Brennan, sold 195 of the shares of the stock of the Shattuck-Arizona Copper Company which it held as collateral to his note, the proceeds of which, $3,558.75, were on that day deposited in the City National Bank of Duluth, Minn., hereinafter called the Duluth Bank, to the credit of the Ironwood Bank, in a pre-existing open account.
Against'this open account in the Duluth Bank, in which other deposits were made from time to time, the Ironwood Bank drew from day to day various drafts to meet its daily clearing house balances.
On June 14th, after Brennan’s note had fallen due and when he did not know that any part of his stock had been sold by the Ironwood Bank, he, after a conversation with its cashier, who advised him to let the note run, gave up his original intention of paying his note with his certificate of deposit, and, instead, paid) the Ironwood Bank the interest due on his note, and gave the bank a renewal note for the principal.
In addition to these transactions, Brennan also had a checking account with the Ironwood Bank, and, when its doors closed, owed it for an overdraft on this account the sum of $216.07.
The books of the Ironwood Bank furthermore show that at all times from February 1st until it closed on June 21st there was $8,000 or more of cash on hand in its vaults, and $15,652.23 in cash came into the hands of the receiver. And, while it appears that the bank books contained many false cash entries, the evidence fully sustains the finding of the court below that from and after April 8th until the closing of the bank it had continually on hand in cash in its own vaults more than $3,500.
The remainder of the stock held by the bank as collateral on Brennan’s note has been returned by the receiver to Brennan.
The evidence further showed that claims had been filed against the Ironwood Bank aggregating $603,000; that the Comptroller of the Currency had levied an assessment of 100 per cent, on its stockholders; that 30 per cent, dividends had already been paid to creditors; that not exceeding 10 per cent, more could he paid; and that the other claims for preferences which had been filed and which were still pending aggregated between $3,500 and $4,000.
On this state of facts we have reached the following conclusions:
Applying these general principles, we are of opinion that the court below correctly held that the proceeds of the sale of Brennan’s stock constituted a trust fund held by the Ironwood Bank for his benefit; that the transactions in connection with the four cash drafts drawn in favor of the express company constituted, in effect, a transfer of $2,807.32 of this trust fund in cash to the vaults of the Ironwood Bank; that this portion of the trust fund must be deemed to have remained in the vaults of the Ironwoodl Bank as part of the trust fund, in cash, until it came into the possession of the receiver; and that as the amount thus remaining in the trust fund was more than sufficient to cover the balance to which Brennan was entitled from the proceeds of the sale of his stock, after deducting the amount due from him to the bank on his note and overdrafts, he had successfully traced the balance of the trust fund thus due to him into the cash assets that came into the hands of the receiver, and was hence entitled to be paidl the same as a preferential claim.
It is urged, however, in behalf of the receiver that the cash draft transactions should not be regarded as a transfer of $2,807.32 of this trust fund to the vaults of the Ironwood Bank, for the reason that, after the last of these cash drafts was drawn on May 8th, there remained to the credit of the Ironwood Bank at the Duluth Bank until May 10th a balance of $4,273.39, or more than the amount of the trust fund, which was not dissipated until this balance was changed into an overdraft of $1,068.75 on May 11th; the argument being that under this state of facts it should! be presumed that the Ironwood Bank first drew on its open account in the Duluth Bank for its own purposes, intending to leave the trust fund unimpaired; that the $4,-
“If money held by any person in a fiduciary capacity .be paid into Ms own banking account, it may be followed by the equitable owner, who, as against the trustee, will have a charge for what belongs to him upon the balance to the credit of the account. If, then, the trustee pays in further sums, and from time to time draws out moneys by checks, but leaves a balance to the credit of the account, it is settled that he is not entitled to * * * maintain that the sums which have been drawn out and paid away so as to be incapable of being recovered represented pro tanto the trust money, and that the balance remaining is not trust money, but represents only his own money paid into the account. * * * It is, in my opinion, equally clear that when any of the money drawn out has been invested, and the investment remains in the name or under the control of the trustee, the rest of the balance having been afterwards dissipated by him, he cannot maintain that the investment which remains represents his own money alone, and that what has been spent and can no longer be traced and recovered was the money belonging to the trust.*615 * * * The order of priority in which the various withdrawals and investments may have been respectively made is wholly immaterial. * * * In the present case there is no balance left. The only investment or property remaining which represents any part of the mixed money paid into the banking account is the Oceana shares purchased for £2,137. Upon these, therefore, the trust had a charge for the £3,000 trust money paid into the account. That is to say, those shares and the proceeds thereof belong to the trust. The investment by Oatway, in his own name, of the £2,137 in Oceana shares no more got rid of the claim or charge of the trust upon the money so invested^ than would have been the case if he had drawn a check for £2,137 and simply placed and retained the amount in a drawer without further disposing of the money in any way. The proceeds of the Oceana shares must be held to belong to the trust funds under the will of which Oatway and Maxwell Skipper were the trustees.”
In like manner w.e are of opinion that in the present case it must be held that the transfer by the Ironwoodl Bank to its own vaults, through the cash draft transactions, of $2,807.32, of the balance standing to its credit in the Duluth Bank in which the trust fund had been mingled, did not divest the money thus transferred of its character as a trust fund, but as this money remained thereafter in its own vaults and in its own custody, and subsequently passed into the hands of the receiver as part of the cash assets of the bank, it remained subject in all respects to the trust originally impressed upon the proceeds of the sale of Brennan’s stock.
2. The court below correctly held that the amount of the $1,000 deposit was not a preferred claim, but that as to this sum Brennan was a general creditor of the Ironwood Bank, to be paid by the receiver the same percentage of dividends that had been and should be paid to other general creditors.
“There is no reason, to think in this ease that the suspension of the bank was any more imminent on April 8th than it had been for a long time, or that the cashier or bank officers anticipated the closing of the bank or had any expectation that complainant would not receive his money when he should ask for it — except their general and vague fear that they might fail to tide over their difficulties. This does not seem to me to raise the necessary trust. Complainant’s own showing is that for more than 60 days the deposit would have been repaid on demand, and that it was practically offered to complainant when the note was renewed. For these reasons, I think complainant is not entitled to any preference upon his certificate of deposit, but should prove the same as a general creditor.”