196 F. 292 | 9th Cir. | 1912
The appeal in this case is taken from an order of the District Court affirming an order of the referee disallowing a claim presented by the appellant against the bankrupt’s estate, which claim had been liquidated by an order of the referee in the sum of $75,460.25, and which was disallowed on the ground that the appellant had, within four months of the adjudication of bankruptcy, been paid and had accepted from the bankrupt the sum of $40,000, the payment constituting a preference over other creditors of the bankrupt. The bankrupt was a broker, and the claim arose out of purchases of corn in the year 1908 for July and September delivery by the appellant through the bankrupt oil the Exchange of the Chicago Board! of Trade. The July corn, consisting of 535,000 bushels, was puxxhased in February, 1908, at a price between 59 cents and 60 cents a bushel. At the time of the beginning of proceedings in bankruptcy, on August 12th of that year, the corn had increased in value to something over 76 cents a bushel. The most of the September corn was purchased in March of that year at about 62 cents a bushel, and had increased in value at the time of the bankruptcy to about 75 cents a bushel. A few days prior to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, the bankrupt was suspended from the Chicago Board of Trade,
It is urged that the evidence falls short of proving that the bankrupt intended to give a preference, or that the appellant had reasonable ground to believe that he had such intention. It is true that the fact
The intent of the debtor, in the absence of other proof, may be shown by its equivalent in law, proof óf the inevitable result of the transaction which in the case at bar was to give a preference and create an unequal distribution of the bankrupt’s estate. The bankrupt not only knew that he was insolvent, but he knew that he was so irretrievably so that he could not hope to continue his business, and he knew that he could not make the payment which he did make with
“Tlie position of the broker is twofold. Upon tlie order of the customer, he purchases shares of stock desired by him. This is a clear act of agency. To complete the purchase he advances from his own funds, for the benefit of the purchaser, 90 per cent, of the purchase money. Quite as clearly he does not in this act as an agent, but assumes a new position. He also holds or carries the stock for the benefit of tlie purchaser until a sale Is made by the order of the purchaser or upon his own action. In Urns holding or carrying he stands also upon a different ground from that of a broker or agent whose office is simply to buy and sell. To advance money for the purchase, and to hold and carry stocks, is not the act of the broker as such. In so doing he enters upon a new duty, obtains other rights, and is subject to additional responsibilities. * * * In my judgment the contract between the parties to this action was in spirit and effect, if not technically and in form, a contract of pledge.”
In brief, the decision in the Shaw Case holds that a broker in purchasing stock for a customer is an agent; that in advancing money for the purchase he is a creditor; that in holding the stock to secure the advance he made he is a pledgee; and that the customer is not a
“The mere misapplication of trust funds does not create in favor of the defrauded beneficiary a claim upon the general estate of the defrauding trustee superior to that of his general creditors. * * * The burden of tracing the trust fund into the property claimed rests upon the beneficiary who claims it. He may be assisted in bearing this burden by the legal presumption above mentioned concerning the application of checks drawn against a bank account; but the burden of proof is upon him. The priority already referred to which has sometimes been given to the cestui in the application of the cash assets of a bank which has mingled the trust fund with its own funds, whether defensible or not, is limited to the ease of the cash assets of a bank, and is not extended to other kinds of defaulting trustees or to other assets of the bank.”
In Re Miller and Brown (D. C.) 135 Fed. 868, it was held that where the claimant sold certain goods to a bankrupt firm who were entitled to sell the goods at their discretion, their only obligation being to pay the price on sales made or peturn the goods, the transaction amounted to nothing more than a contract of sale and return, and that the claimant was not entitled to recover the goods unsold as against the firm’s trustee in bankruptcy. In Deere Plow Company v. McDavid, 137 Fed. 802, 70 C. C. A. 422, it was held that, where a bankrupt improperly mingled funds belonging to its principal with its own funds, and it was not shown that the trust funds, either in their original or substituted form, came into the hands of the bankrupt’s trustee the principal was not entitled to a preference therefor.
The judgment is affirmed.