240 Mass. 478 | Mass. | 1922
This is a petition by the commissioner of banks in possession of the property and business of the Prudential Trust Company. That company was opened for business in 1915 with both a commercial and a savings department, and continued its operations until closed by the commissioner under the authority of the statutes on September 10,1920. The purpose of this petition is to secure permission to pay to the savings department of the trust company from funds of the commercial department the unpaid balance of moneys turned over to the commercial department from the savings department in a series of transactions alleged to have been illegal. It is not necessary to pursue the details of these transactions. The separation of the activities of the savings department and of the commercial department of the trust company was never very clearly marked as its business was actually carried on. Separate sets of books were kept. But the business of both departments was carried on in the same banking rooms and the executive officials of both were the same. When the president and treasurer decided for any reason to transfer funds or securities from one department to the other, they could do so immediately without consulting any one. From the beginning of the transactions here in question, on substantially every day the cash and actual reserve in the commercial department was below the amount required by law to be maintained. The commercial department needed money in order to replenish an insufficient reserve of cash which ought to be kept on hand for the purpose of meeting clearing house and counter demands. It was impossible to determine whether this need would be met by increased deposits. Cash and securities were at hand in the savings department, to which recourse was simple. The savings department had cash, notes about to fall due, railroad and government bonds, and railroad and government bonds owned or held as collateral, which could be turned into cash immediately. From time to time notes held in the commercial department were exchanged for cash or securities of the savings department. All these notes were unlawful investments because none of them were approved by the investment committee of the savings department as required by law. Most, if not all of them, also were unlawful because of the nature of the securities or because of an excessive amount loaned to individuals. In some
It has been the policy of the Commonwealth from the beginning to establish and maintain savings banks surrounded by all the practical safeguards for the security of their investments and the wise administration of their affairs which could be devised by thoughtful legislation. These have been made more and more stringent from time to time as experience and changes in methods of financial affairs have shown to be desirable. The settled course of legislation has been to invite the scanty savings of the poor, the wages of the laborer and the earnings of the thrifty for deposit in savings banks. They have been under governmental observation and inspection. They have been regarded as proper objects for vigilant watchfulness in order that public confidence might be won and kept unimpaired and the highest practicable degree of security attained. The possible risks of too close relations between savings banks and banks of discount led to the enactment of statutes requiring physical separation between the business rooms of the two classes of institutions and the prohibition of identity of certain executive officers. See G. L. c. 168, §§ 4, 5, and marginal references. When trust companies first were empowered to establish savings departments, attempt was made by legislation to maintain as great security for depositors in such departments as was thought practicable notwithstanding' the circumstance that they were conducted by the same corporation
The result seems to us to follow from these considerations that, in the administration of the estate of the trust company by the commissioner, all the losses suffered by the savings department by reason of these transactions of the officers of the trust company in transfer of assets of the savings department to the commercial department must be made good out of the commercial department. This decision rests upon the true construction of the statutes. Commissioner of Banks v. Cosmopolitan Trust Co. ante, 254. Somewhat kindred principles are illustrated by Peoples National Bank v. Mulholland, 228 Mass. 152, 158, and Hittinger Fruit Co. v. Cambridge, 218 Mass. 220, 226.
This is not a case where interest should be allowed or charged. There was no agreement concerning the matter. It is the adjustment of conflicting rights between two sets of depositors in an insolvent trust company.
It follows that the notes and other securities handed over from the commercial department to the savings department should be returned by the latter and that the sum of $285,410.86 should be transferred from the commercial department to the savings department.
It was stated at the bar in substance that counsel had been requested to prepare a brief and present arguments in behalf of the savings depositors because their individual interests were so small as to render it impracticable for any of them to retain counsel in their own behalf. This presents a proper case under general equity jurisdiction for the allowance of costs as between
Decree accordingly.