35 F. 567 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1888
(orally.) The hill sets forth, in substance, that on the 1st of March, 1886, the complainant made a contract which, although not stated in the bill to be, in terms, was, in effect, a lease of the premises occupied by the Fidelity National Bank, in the St. Paul building, Fourth street, Cincinnati, for 20 years, at an annual rental of $5,600, payable
The grounds of the damages claimed, I have already stated. The first ground, “ by reason of the insolvency of the Fidelity Bank, ” seems to me to have nothing whatever in it. . Suppose this lease had been for one month, or for three months, and the bank, having paid the rent in advance, had become insolvent just before the expiration of the term, and thereby the rental value of the premises had been diminished, could it be maintained that the lessor would be entitled to claim damages against the lessee? It seems to me, certainly not.
Now, the sécand claim, “by reason of the dissolution of the corporation,” that is not anything for which the receiver can be held liable; nor can he be held liable for the forfeiture' of the charter of the Fidelity
As to the claim for damages by reason of the receiver—of the defendant—refusing to take under the contract and pay the rent, it is settled by all the authorities that the receiver was not bound to take possession. He had his election to take or not to take. If satisfied that the lease was valuable as an asset of the bank, ho might take possession, and, having taken possession, would be liable for the payment of the rent; but if satisfied that the lease was of no value, and that it would be of no interest to the trust—to the creditors,—he might refuse to take possession.
The claim of the complainant, however, was argued upon the hypothesis that the case was to be regarded as a breach of the contract by the Fidelity National Bank to pay rent for which a claim might be proven against the receiver. The difficulty is that during the existence of the bank, and up to the time when the receiver took possession, there was no breach. The rent was payable at the end of each month; and it was paid for the entire time that the bank was actually in occupation of the premises. The bank ceased to occupy the premises on the 20th day of June, 1887; the defendant was appointed receiver on the 27th day of June, 1887, and entered into and took possession of all its property. The default occurred later. On the 12th of July, 1887, the charter of the Fidelity Bank was forfeited, and the bank thereby passed out of existence, and this complainant ceased to have any party with whom to deal in reference to that contract; and the lease was necessarily terminated, because the lessee had ceased to exist, and had no successors who, in the eye of the law, stood in its place. Now, if there had been a default at the time of the appointment of the receiver, and of his taking possession of the premises, that claim might have been proven against the receiver. But there was no such claim. The claim is subsequent; and it was held in Deane v. Caldwell, 127 Mass. 242, decided by Chief Justice Gray, now of the supreme court, that “before the date at which rent is covenanted to bo paid it is in no sense a debt; it is neither debitwn nor sohendum, for if the lessee is evicted before that day it never becomes payable. It is not within the provision of a bankrupt act, allowing ‘ uncertain or contingent demands’to be proved against the estate of a bankrupt, because it is not an existing demand, the cause of action on which depends upon a contingency, but the very existence of the demand depends upon a contingency.” But it was contended by the complainant that as in that case the claim might be set up against the bankrupt himself, notwithstanding his discharge in bankruptcy, and as in this case the Fidelity National Bank was—to use the expression of counsel—“cremated,” or rather, stricken out of existence, by the forfeiture of its charter, and the receiver has taken possession of all the assets and property, and has instituted a suit against the directors to enforce their liability, or al