7 F.2d 685 | D. Mont. | 1925
This suit was brought under section 5242 of the Revised Statutes of the United States ('section 9834, Comp. St.), the effect of which is to declare null and void transfers made by a national bank “after the commission of an act of insolvency, or in contemplation thereof, made with a view to prevent the application of its assets in the manner prescribed by this chapter, or with a view to the preference of one creditor to another, except in payment of its circulating notes.” The language of this section discloses the intention of enforcing the principle of equality among the creditors of an insolvent bank.
The plaintiff, as receiver of the First Natiortal Bank of Chester, is seeking to set aside certain conveyances of real estate, the property of the hank, and executed by the bank to the defendant, and alleged to have been made in violation of the above statute. The bank was organized in 1917 with a capital stock of $25,000, and closed its doors July 18, 1923; otherwise stated, it failed to open for business July 19, 1923. The receiver was a])pointed July 30, 1923, and directly thereafter took charge of the bank. At the time the bank closed, J. O. Berglin was the president and principal owner, having 225 shares of the capital stock.
The' evidence shows that the receiver, at the time of taking possession of the bank, made an examination of its condition and prepared a report cohering the assets and liabilities as of the date of closing. He made an estimate of the value of the assets of the bank after personal investigation and inquiry, and found them, as disclosed by its books, the same in kind and value on July 3, 1923, as on July 19, 1923, with the exception of the real estate account. The bank officers placed a value of $6.35 per acre on the land conveyed to defendant; in his report the receiver used about the same basis for his valuation — that is to say, about $6 per acre for other real estate holdings. The land involved in this suit is of about the same value as the remaining lands and real, estate securities held by the bank. The customers of the bank were chiefly engaged in the farming and live - stock industry, and nearly all of the bank’s resources consisted of live stock and farm land securities. Prior to July 3, 1923, it appears to have been evident that there would be a crop failure for that season in that locality. Several crop failures had occurred there immediately preceding the year 1923.
The testimony of the president of the bank does not alter materially the estimate of values made by the receiver. According to the receiver’s report: The total liabilities of the bank at the time of closing, not including capital stock and surplus, were $230,000. The total assets, at the same time, had a face value of $266,000, which, according to the receiver, represented “a fair and reasonable actual value” of $66,117.36, leaving a deficit at the time of closing of $165,000. That there was practically no change in the condition of the bank between July 3 ^nd, July 19, 1923, except the change aforesaid. That at the time of closing only a small portion of the assets remained in possession of the bank; such remaining assets having'a book value of $25,082.23. The receiver stated that the' fair and reasonable value of such assets was $7,385.75; that all of the assets of the bank, except the foregoing, had been pledged to various creditors and according to the books the bank had an apparent equity of $60,000 in such pledged assets. It appears from the evidence that the assets will not pay the debts they were given to secure. On and prior to July 3, 1923, the bank owned real estate which it carried on its books as an asset of the bank at a valuation of $39,-665.25; included therein was the land involved in this suit, unincumbered, consisting of 2,680 acres, and 3,600 acres of other grazing and farm lands, all subject to liens and incumbrances, and also town lots valued at about $1,000. When the conveyances were made to defendant, the real estate account was reduced in the sum of $17,000, and thereafter carried on the books of the bank at $22,665.25. Aside from the amounts heretofore mentioned as due defendant and her daughter, aggregating the sum of $17,000, it appears that on July 12, 1923, the bank paid to Edith Stronach $500 from her savings account, and on July 18th, the last day the bank was open, she drew $49.50 from her cheeking account, and further the bank books show that defendant’s savings account was debited $981.83 and her checking account $640.19, on July 18, 1923; these sums being no part of the consideration for conveyance of the real estate. When the bank closed its doors, it owed nothing to the defendant or her daughter.
All of these erasures and irregularities had to do with an important transaction during a crisis in the bank’s affairs, and some of them occurred only a day or two before the bank closed its doors and ceased to function as a going concern, and, in view of the circumstances, it would he expected that the officials of the bank would bo able to give a better account of these occurrences than appears from the transcript. It seems quite certain that tho business transactions of this bank at this particular time were not so extensive or complicated as to cause the three persons there employed to forget almost entirely so many of the facts relating to the conveyance of all of the unincumbered real estate of the bank, comprising its only available assets — except the cash, which was almost entirely withdrawn by defendant and her daughter, and except the other assets heretofore mentioned and valued by the receiver at $7,385.75. The new certificates were dated the 12th of July, 1923, and therefore it seems probable that on that date, or subsequent thereto, the plan was adopted to transfer all the unincumbered real estate to defendant, and thereupon such new certificates were canceled and tho signatures tom out. The irregularities and erasures in the books of the bank which were exhibited for examination at the trial point to this conclusion.
It is not possible to look into the mind of the former president of the bank and determine with what intent he acted; he said that the transfers wore not made in contemplation of. insolvency, nor to prefer this creditor over others, but the circumstances do not seem to corroborate Ms statement. It probably cannot be said that the bank had committed an act of insolvency, but do not the surrounding circumstances, as appear from the testimony of the receiver and the exhibits in the case, furnish convincing proof of tho transaction, and show a purpose on the part of the witness Berglin to prefer tho defendant over other creditors at a time when he must have known the bank could not survive many more days? The evidence of the receiver is that the hank, at the time the transfers are shown to have been made, was actually insolvent, and there
Defendant contends that the statute under which this action is brought does not apply. The statute includes assignment of mortgage, judgment or decree of court. Nearly all of the land holdings of the bank seem to have been acquired under foreclosure proceedings. May it be said that a decree of court to this bank in such eases shall come within the purview of the statute, and that the land itself coming to the bank under such decree, sale, and deed from the sheriff is to be excluded from the intendment of the act. That is a narrow construction, and, if we adopt it, it would also follow that a bank officer in collusion with a customer could turn over to such customer all the realty holdings of the bank, no'matter how valuable or what proportion of the assets such holdings represented, without the power to preserve the principle of equality in the division of assets among the creditors.
Section 5242 reads as follows: “All transfers of the notes, bonds, bills of exchange, or other evidences of debt owing to any national banking association, or of deposits to its credit; all assignments of mortgages, sureties on real estate, or of judgments or decrees in its favor; all deposits of money, bullion, or other valuable thing for its use, or for the use of any of its shareholders or creditors; and all payments of money to either, made after the commission of an act of insolvency, or in contemplation thereof, made with a view to prevent the application of its assets in the manner prescribed by this chapter,.or with a view to the preference of one creditor to another, except in payment of its circulating notes, shall be utterly null and void.” Whatever the true intention of Congress may have been in enacting the foregoing statute should prevail over the literal sense of the terms used. “A thing within the intention of the Legislature in framing a statute is sometimes as much within the statute as if it were within the letter.” Interstate Drainage & Invest. Co. v. Board of Com’rs, 158 F. 270, 85 C. C. A. 532; Rigney v. Plaster (C. C.) 88 F. 686.
The real purpose of the act seems to have been to declare void any transfer of property or payment of money by a national bank “after the commission of an act of insolvency, or in contemplation thereof, made with a view to prevent the application of its assets in 'the manner prescribed by this chapter, or with the view to the preference of one creditor to another.” The following is in point: “The spirit or reason of the law will prevail over its letter * * * words may accordingly be rejected and others substituted.” 36 Cyc. 1108c, and eases cited. It was also held in Ozawa v. United States, 260 U. S. 178, 43 S. Ct. 65, 67 L. Ed. 199, that “it is the duty of this court to give effect to the intent of Congress. Primarily this intent is ascertained by giving the words their natural significance, but if this leads to an unreasonable result plainly at variance with the policy of the legislation as a whole, we must examine the matter further. We may then look to the reason of the enactment and inquire into its antecedent history and give it effect in accordance with its design and purpose, sacrificing, if necessary, the literal meaning in order that the purpose may not fail.” Transfer of real estate owned by a national bank was 'involved in Stapylton v. Stockton, 91 F. 326, 33 C. C. A. 542; such real property was conveyed by the bank to secure a loan of money at a time when the bank was alleged to have been insolvent, or in contemplation of insolvency. This case would serve the purpose here of showing that no question was raised as to the applicability of section 5242 to transfers of real estate, and it will be noted that the court in that case held that such transfer of real estate under said section, to secure a loan then obtained, and of which all creditors presumptively received the benefit, was not invalid.
Complainant does not raise an issue over the cash withdrawals made by defendant and her daughter shortly before the bank closed, taking the position that they occurred in the ordinary and usual course of banking business; defendant’s counsel hold that, if such is the ease, “then no question could have arisen regarding the transfers if defendant had withdrawn the full $17,000' and paid it
The circumstances relating to the cancellation of the new certificates of deposit and the transfer of all of the unincumbered real estate of the bank to defendant were unusual, to say nothing of the irregularities attending the transaction.
I have examined, in vain, the authorities cited by defendant to find justification for such a disposition of tho assets of a bank, on the brink of ruin, as is afforded by a consideration of the transcript and exhibits— books and papers of the bank — in this case. Transactions actually occurring in “due course of business,” in “the ordinary way,” and while “meeting all demands in the; regular course,” do not require such alterations of the hooks and records of a hank to give them the semblance of “due course” and “regularity.” If this transfer of real estate was not made in contemplation of insolvency and to prefer defendant over other creditors, and to prevent the application of the principle of equality among its creditors, then what I feel obliged to accept as strong circumstantial' evidence must be treated as mere suspicion. In my opinion the real estate should be reconveyed to the bank and the amount of the purchase price restored as a credit in defendant’s account on the books of the bank.
Entertaining these views, I am obliged to order a decree for complainant, sotting aside the conveyances of real estate belonging to this hank.