84 F. 34 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois | 1897
On June 28, 1894, John A. Mc-Sbane, of Omaha, Neb., borrowed from tbe defendant, a banking corporation doing business at Chicago, $30,000. A printed blank, used by defendant in such cases, was thereupon filled out by one of its officers, and MeShane. subscribed tbe same with bis name. Tbe document, barring tbe date and signature, reads as follows:
“On demand after date, for value received, I promise to pay the Illinois Trust and Savings Bank, or order, thirty thousand dollars in gold coin, or U. S. notes, or treasury notes, which are a legal tender, at its office in Chicago, with interest at the rate of four per cent, per annum, having deposited with it as collateral security for the payment thereof, and also of all other present or future demands of any kind of the said bank against the undersigned, due or not due, 300 shares Cmaha Union Stock-Yards Co. stock, the market value of which is now $ —. Said bank has the right to call for any additional*35 security satisfactory to it, and, if the same is not furnished on demand, may, at its option, declare this note immediately due and payable, without notice to me; and I hereby give the said Illinois Trust and Savings Bank, or its assigns, full power and authority, on the maturity of Ikis note, or at any time thereafter or before, at discretion, to collect or otherwise convert said securities, or either or any part of them, or any substitute therefor, or any additions thereto, and to sell said collateral securities, or any portion thereof, at public or private sale, at the discretion of said bank, without advertising the same, or otherwise giving notice to me (and the said bank may become I lie purchaser at any public sale), and said bank shall apply the proceeds, after the payment of all expenses and attorney’s foes attending said collection, conversion, or sale of the said collateral securities, to the payment of this note, with all interest due thereon, and return the overplus, if any, to me; and, in case the proceeds of said collection, conversion or sale of said collateral securities shall not cover the principle, interest, and expenses, I promise to pay the deficiency forthwith. And I hereby agree that said bank shall have the right, at its option, to change the rate of interest to be paid upon this note, or upon any unpaid portion thereof, upon notice in writing, which changed rate I hereby agree to pay unless the amount of principal and interest then due is paid forthwith. A notice mailed to my address shall be deemed a sufficient notice of the change of rate.”
The par value of the shares mentioned was $100 per share. The market value on June 28, 1894, was $120 per share. It is the practice with Chicago banks to insist that the value of the collateral deposited with a given note shall exceed the sum borrowed by some 20 or 25 per cent., and if, owing to fluctuations in the market, the value of the collateral declines, the banker will usually demand additional collateral. On January 8, 1895, defendant bank mailed to McShane the following letter:
“Chicago, January 8, 1895.
“J. A. McShane, Esq., Omaha, Neb. — Dear Sir; Flense add to your margin on demand loan, and oblige, W. H. Ueia. 3rd Y. P.
“30,000. 27,000.
“300 Omaha Sk. Yds.
“3,000 short.”
On January 1G, 1895, defendant bank sent to McShane a second letter, as follows:
“Chicago, Jan. 1(5. 1895.
“Mr. John A. McShane, Omaha, Nob. — Dear Sir: Referring to our letter of the 8th inst., would say that we are slill without reply to same. Our last quotation on Omaha Stock Yards was 95. At this price you are short about .$11,000. Picase forward additional collateral at once, and oblige,
“Very truly yours, Jas. S. Gibbs, Cash.”
On January 21,1895, defendant bank sent to McShane a third letter, as follows:
“Chicago, Jan’y 21, 1893.
“J. A. McShane, Esq., Omaha, Neb. — -Dear Sir: Please add to collateral on your demand loan, Stock Yds. quoted to-day 111. Your attention will oblige,
“Very respectfully, W. XI. Reid, 3rd V. P.”
On January 28, 1895, McShane replied as follows:
“Omaha, Jan’y 28th, 1895.
“Mr. W. H. Reid, 3rd V. Pt. Ill. T. & S. Bank Ciiieago, Chicago, Ill. Dear Sir: I am in receipt of your favor of the 21st inst., in regard to additional collateral, and, replying thereto, I will say that I expect to be in Chicago within a day or two, and will arrange the matter satisfactory.
“Yours, very truly, [Signed] John A. McShane.”
“Chicago, Jan. 8, 1896.
“John A. McShane, Esq., Omaha, Neb — Dear Sir: Please add to the collateral on your loans with us, and oblige,
“Yours, truly, Jas. S. Gibbs, Cash.
“580 Sh. Omaha S. T’ds.
“Loans, $55,000.”
On January 16, 1896, McShane responded with the following letter, inclosing therein certificates for 50 additional shares of said stock:
“Omaha, Neb. Jan’y 16/96.
“III. T. & S. Bank, Chicago, III. — Dear Sir: In compliance with your letter of the 8th inst., I inclose you herewith 50 shares of Union Stock-Yards stock as additional collateral with my loan, making 630 shares held by you. Trusting this will be satisfactory, I am
“Yours, very truly, [Signed] John A. McShane.”
Shortly before January 20, 1896, the bank demanded a still further security, and on the day last mentioned McShane delivered to the bank 50 more shares. On May 12, 1896, defendant sent to McShane another letter, as follows:
“Chicago, May 12, 1896. *
“J. A. McShane, Esq., Omaha, Neb. — Dear Sir: 85 is highest for StockYards stock. Please give us additional margin, and oblige,
“680 x 85=58,800 W. H. Keid, 3rd Y. P.
20% 11,360
$47,440
‘‘Need $10,000 more. Loan, 55,000.”
Responding to this, McShane delivered to the bank certificates for 100 more shares of the said stock-yards stock. The bank now held the two demand notes, together with 780 shares of the stock as collateral thereto. Three hundred and thirty shares had been deposited as collateral to the first note, 250 shares as collateral to the second note, and 200 shares had been sent in response to the demands here- ' tofore referred to, which concerned both notes. On the 16th of October, 1896, McShane, being liable to the complainant the First National Bank of Omaha on demands aggregating some $75,000, and desiring further advances, by an instrument in writing sold, assigned, and transferred to complainant Herbert E. Gates, as trustee, all of the shares of stock already mentioned herein, subject to the lien of this defendant. He had represented to the complainant bank and to Mr. Gates that the defendant held said shares of stock as • collateral
A simple lien — that is to say, a right to detain chattel property until a given debt be paid, but without any right to sell and apply the proceeds in payment — is one thing; a pledge, since it implies the right in the depositary to sell the deposit, and apply the proceeds to the debt it was given to secure, is another. Shares of stock put up as collateral security constitute a pledge. The two demand notes in the case at bar are the same in form. For convenience, I refer to that, of June 28,1894. This instrument does not create a mere lien, as distinguished from a pledge. The stock deposited was to be “collateral security.” The language of the instrument not only does not express the intent that the stock, or any part of it, was to be simply detained without power to sell, but it affirmatively declares the right to sell. McShane is made to say: “I hereby give the Illinois Trust andv Savings Bank * * * full power and authority * to sell said collateral securities * * * at public * | * * sale.” Then follow the words: “And said bank shall apply the proceeds, after payment of all expenses, * * * to the payment of this note, with all interest due thereon, and return the overplus, if any, to me.” The terms of the instrument cover any and every sale of any and every share of stock deposited which the status of that property as a pledge would have authorized. It is then declared that the proceeds of any sale must be applied on the one specific demand, and the overplus, if any, returned to McShane. That the property deposited may be sold by the pledgee to pay the debt which such property was intended to secure is part of the definition of a pledge. Without such right of sale, there can be no pledge; nor can a given chattel have the status of a pledge as to any debt for the payment of which the pledgee is not authorized to sell; nor, as between parties not under disability, could there be a decree ordering sale of property as a pledge in any case where the pledgee did not himself have the right to sell. A court of chancery does not create rights. It can only decree and enforce a right already vested in the! complainant. An agreement between parties that a specific chattel held by one should not be sold tp pay a designated debt otherwise than by decree of court, is conceivable. What such an agreement would amount to, and how it should be classified, need not be discussed. The sense that, as concerns the note of 1892 for $100,000, the defendant bank had the right to detain the stock, but no right, in any event, to sell the whole or any part of it, is not, as I conceive, to be extracted from the agreement which the defendant bank made with McShane. The argument that, as concerns the note of 1892 for $100,000, the stock is subject at least .to a right of detention, or that as to said note there
It is urged that the words, “and also of all other present or future demands of any kind of the said bank against the undersigned, due or not due,” in each of the contracts, must have a meaning, and that, as applied to the facts, the meaning is that the overplus, in the event of sale, should he returned to McHhane only in case the note of 1892 be paid, otherwise to be applied on said note. The context does not warrant this construction. The words in question were merely part of the printed formula used by the hank as applicable to many varying transactions. In the light of the subsequent writings passing between the defendant hank and McShane, it is obvious that he and the hank officer, in failing to erase the words mentioned, did not think of the note of 1892 as being a demand within the meaning of said words. They evidently thought of these words as including any and all such demands as might arise in the course of commercial banking. At that time there was not, nor might there ever be, any such demand against McShane, other than the specific note for $30,000. . On this view, the words quoted were innocuous; it could make no sort of difference whether they were erased or left standing.
It is urged that the words, “and return the overplus, if any, to me,” are answered if the defendant hank, after selling the 780 shares, and paying the §55,000 with part of the proceeds, shall apply the remainder to the note of 1892 for $100,000. I think not. McShane did not part with his liberty to dispose of the overplus as he saw fit. The defendant hank contracted to return the overplus. This means that, in case of sale, the overplus ceased to be within the dominion of the hank for any purpose of its own; that such overplus must go hack to McShane, or to his assignee.
The counsel for the defendant suggests the theory of a banker’s lien as applicable to the case. Assuming that there could he such a lien for a demand like ihat of 1892, how could such lien be asserted in the face of an express contract by the hank to the contrary? It occurs to me that possibly the present controversy might have been determined in an action of replevin, but counsel have agreed to test the rights of the parcos by this bill. I assume, therefore, that the case has a footing on the equity side of the court. The demurrer to the hill is overruled.