206 F. 260 | 6th Cir. | 1913
The question for decision here is whether the payments which Constam received and indorsed on his note against the bankrupt within four months before the bankruptcy were received with such reasonable cause to believe that they would effect a preference that they must be repaid to the trustee before Constam can prove his claim. Sections 57g, 60b, Bankr. Act (Act July 1, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat. 560, 562 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, pp. 3443, 3445]). Such payment was required by the referee, and on petition for review the district judge affirmed the referee. Constam appeals. We find only two distinct questions presented: (1) Did Constam, through his agent, and before receiving the first of the payments in question, have reasonable cause to believe that the debtor was insolvent and that payments would effect a preference; and, if so, (2) what was the effect of that notice upon later payments not coming directly through this agency ?
However, if we may assume, for the purposes of this opinion, ¡the accuracy of these claims by Constam, we reach the same result. The theory which his counsel urges us to apply, viz.,'that constructive notice to the principal, resulting from actual notice to the agent, will not be imputed to the principal afterwards acting for himself, is thought to be based upon Blackburn v. Vigors, L. R., 12 App. Cas. 531. Although there is analogy between the relation to each other of .the earlier and later transactions there had and the relation to each other of the earlier and later payments here involved, yet wefthink that case finally depends upon its finding that the agency was peculiarly limited in character. As was there said, the agent was employed to effect insurance, not to “get information.” " In the instant case Caston’s employment and duty were relatively general in scope. It was his duty to- do whatever was for Constam’s interest, and to acquire and communicate to Constam all he could learn about the debtor’s pecuniary condition. It must be presumed that he performed that duty, and hence comes the necessary imputation that his principal then had knowledge of the insolvency. Thomson-Houston Co. v. Capitol Co. (C. C. A. 6) 65 Fed. 341, 343, 12 C. C. A. 643; American Nat’l Bk. v. Miller (C. C. A. 6) 185 Fed. 338, 343, 107 C. C. A. 456. It seems of necessity to follow that the notice which the law declares Constam then received must have remained with him and continued to operate upon him with full force in his further conduct of the .same subject-matter, even after the termination of the agency through which the notice was derived. It was not merely that knowledge of an agent which burdens a benefit received through the agent and goes no farther, as was the case with reference to the earlier one of the two insurance policies mentioned in Blackburn v. Vigors, and a recovery upon which was denied in Blackburn v. Haslam, L. R., 21 Q. B. 144. Reading these Blackburn cases together, their net result was not made to turn so much upon the duty of the agent to inform his principal, thus imputing notice, as upon the agent’s duty to disclose all the facts which he knew to the third party whom he approached; and they are not inconsistent with the continued operation and effect of that notice which the law has once imputed to the principal.