128 Ind. 320 | Ind. | 1891
The appellee’s complaint is founded upon a note and mortgage executed by Alexander Brighton and Catherine Brighton to the Commercial Bank of Brazil, Indiana, and by the bank assigned to the appellee. The appellants, Croasdale, Jones and Sowers, were made defendants to answer as to their interest in the mortgaged premises.
The answers of the appellants are substantially the same upon the material point involved, although they severed in their defences so that a synopsis of one answer will sufficiently exhibit the question which controls this phase of the case. The answers allege that the note and mortgage were executed to the Commercial Bank of Brazil, Indiana; that it was a bank “ of deposit and discount, organized under the laws of the State of Indiana; ” that the note and mortgage were assigned to the plaintiff after it was known that the bank was insolvent; that the insolvency of the bank was known to its officers and to the plaintiff; that the plaintiff was a creditor of the bank, and the note and mortgage were assigned to him as collateral security and for the purpose of giving him a fraudulent and secret preference over other creditors.
The right of the appellee to maintain the suit depends upon his title to the instruments upon which his cause of
Our statute declares that assignments or transfers of evidences of indebtedness by an insolvent bank “ with a view to the preference of one creditor to another — shall be utterly null and void.” Section 2697, E. S. 1881. The statute is-strong and its object plain. It means that there shall be no preference of creditors, and that all transfers for the purpose of creating a preference shall be absolutely ineffective. No title can pass. A creditor taking an assignment in violation of the terms of the statute gets no shadow of title. The statute operates upon the creditor as well as upon the bank; it fetters both, the one can not transfer nor the other accept.
If the bank through which the appellee claims as an assignee is within the statute, there was no valid assignment, for it is inconceivable that the appellee could obtain what his assignor could riot transfer. If he could not obtain title, he can not maintain an action, so that the inquiry is narrowed to this: Do the answers show that the bank is one upon which the statute operates? In our opinion the answers show, prima facie, at least, that it is such a bank, for they aver that it is a bank “ of discount and deposit,” organized under the laws of Indiana.
As we have only one general statute providing for the organization of banks of discount and deposit, the presumption is that the bank, as it was one of discount and deposit,.
The trial court erred in sustaining the demurrers to the answers.
The case of Blair v. Hanna, 87 Ind. 298, is not in point. In that case a creditor was seeking to set aside a fraudulent conveyance, and it was held that he could not maintain the suit, because the right to sue was in the assignee in bankruptcy, while here the plaintiff is attempting to recover upon evidences of indebtedness, which a positive statute forbade the assignor from transferring. Here the question is as to the title to the instruments upon which the cause of action rests, and if the plaintiff has no title to the cause of action he can not invoke judicial assistance.
The trial court did not err in refusing the demand of the appellants for a jury trial. It is settled that where a lien upon real estate is to be foreclosed, the equity power of the court is called into exercise, and the entire issue is for trial by the court. Carmichael v. Adams, 91 Ind. 526 ; Kimble Seal, 92 Ind. 276; Rogers v. Union, etc., Co., 111 Ind. 343 (346); Field v. Holzman, 93 Ind. 205; Quarl v. Abbett, 102 Ind. 233 (239); Brown v. Russell & Co., 105 Ind. 46, and cases cited, p. 55; Albrecht v. C. C. Foster Lumber Co., 126 Ind. 318; Ex parte Sweeney, 126 Ind. 583.
It is not meant, of course, that the necessity for applying general principles of equity requires that the case be treated
Judgment reversed.
Coffey, J., did not take part in the decision of this case.