170 S.E. 474 | S.C. | 1933
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
On the day the money was received by them, Messrs. Hart & Moss deposited the amount to their account in the Loan & Savings Bank of York. On that day, the attorneys issued their check on the Loan & Savings Bank, payable to the order of that bank, for $3,000.00, for which the cashier of the bank issued the bank’s check on the Chase National Bank of New York City for the sum of $3,000.00, which check was payable to the order of D. C. Durham, Clerk of the United States Court for the Western District of South Carolina. The amount of their check was charged to the account of Messrs. Hart & Moss. The cashier’s check was delivered to Messrs. Hart & Moss, who forwarded it to Mr. Durham.
The Loan & Savings Bank, on account of insolvency, closed its doors on September 18, 1931. .
The clerk, Mr. Durham, retained the check in his possession, pending action on the offer of composition made by the bankrupt, and the check was not presented to the Chase National Bank for payment. After the Loan & Savings Bank closed, Mr. Durham assigned the check to H. E. DePass, Esquire, referee in bankruptcy.
At the time of the closing of the Loan & Savings Bank, that bank had on deposit to its credit in the Chase National Bank of New York, $9,249.59, which amount the Chase National Bank applied to the partial payment of a note made to it by the Loan & Savings Bank. The Loan & Savings Bank, before its closing, had charged on its books the check
Messrs. Hart & Moss, as petitioners, presumably representing not only themselves, but the referee in bankruptcy and the bankrupt, filed with the receiver a claim for preference as to the mentioned $3,000.00 check, which claim the receiver refused.
Upon the petition of Messrs. Hart & Moss in the Court of Common Pleas of York County, setting forth the facts above stated, and the return of the receiver of the bank, admitting the essential facts, the matter was heard by his Honor, Circuit Judge Grimball.
It appears from the arguments of counsel that the claim for preference was based on three grounds: Hirst, that it was preferred under the provisions of Act No. 822, approved March 28, 1930 (36 St. at Rarge, page 1368), now set out as Sections 6948-6963, both inclusive, of the Code; second, that, independently of that Act, under the decisions of this Court prior to the passage of the Act, the claimants were entitled to a preference; third, that the debt of the insolvent bank, on account of the check in question, was a debt due to the United States government.
The Circuit Judge, in his order holding that the claim was preferred, did not state his reasons therefor, and did not expressly pass upon any of the mentioned grounds upon which the preference was claimed.
The claim was not entitled to preference on the two first grounds. Two recent cases of this Court are conclusive of the questions. See Ex parte Sanders (In re: South Carolina Savings Bank, In re: Bamberg Banking Co.), 168 S. C., 323, 167 S. E., 154, and Ex parte Town of Darlington (Coker et al. v. Bank of Darlington, Inc., et al.), 168 S. C., 242, 167 S. E., 412.
Neither is the claim preferred on the third ground. The debt due by the insolvent bank is not a debt to the United States government. See American Surety
The judgment of this Court is that the.order appealed from be, and the same is hereby, reversed.