248 P. 1086 | Ariz. | 1926
The Farmers' Merchants' Bank of Tempe, Arizona, was a depositary of the public moneys of Maricopa county and also of the state of Arizona. As such it executed to the county and state each the regular statutory bond, signed by the United States Fidelity Guaranty Company as surety. The bank becoming insolvent, on July 22, 1923, its doors were closed, and it was taken possession of by A.T. Hammons, superintendent of banks. Thereafter the Guaranty Company, as the condition of its bond required, paid to the county the sum of $10,000 and to the state $9,867.03, and took an assignment from such depositaries of their claims against the bank.
The Guaranty Company had also signed a fidelity bond of one Thornton Jones, cashier of the Farmers' Merchants' Bank, for the sum of $7,500, conditioned to make good and reimburse the bank for any *482 pecuniary loss it might sustain by reason of the fraud or dishonesty of said Jones as such cashier. In April, 1924, Hammons, superintendent of banks, and by virtue thereof the receiver of the said Farmers' Merchants' Bank, instituted this suit against the Guaranty Company, alleging that Jones had breached the fidelity bond by the embezzling of the bank's moneys in the sum of $23,545, and asked for judgment for the full penalty of the fidelity bond.
The Guaranty Company seeks to offset its claims of $19,867.03, assigned by the county and state, against its liability on the fidelity bond. The lower court gave the plaintiff judgment for $7,500, penalty of the bond, but allowed the offset. The plaintiff has appealed from the latter part of the judgment contending that the Guaranty Company had no right to have its liability on the fidelity bond canceled with the assigned claims from the county and state against the bank.
The facts are as stated, and the only question to be decided is one of law. There was some evidence taken, but it only confirmed the facts in the pleadings of the respective parties.
The plaintiff questioned the sufficiency of the Guaranty Company's answer by motion to strike and by demurrer. The court's order overruling these and the judgment allowing set-off, are assigned as error.
Section 44 of the Banking Code (chapter 31, Sess. Laws 1922) in terms vests the superintendent of banks with the title of all property of an insolvent bank from the time he takes charge thereof, free and unaffected by any equity of any third persons acquired thereafter, but subject to any equity of third persons existing against the property or assets prior to his taking charge. We have held that the superintendent of banks simply steps into the shoes of the *483
insolvent bank, and has no better or different right or title to the property of the insolvent than the latter had. Hammons v.Grant,
The Guaranty Company's assignors, the county and state, under the laws of Arizona, were not preferred creditors of the insolvent bank, but occupied the same position with regard to its assets as individual parties or creditors (In re Central Bank ofWillcox,
By this process of reasoning the conclusion is reached that its claim of $19,867.03 against the bank existed before the receivership, and that the bank's claim for $7,500 against it likewise was fixed before that time; and, synchronizing thus as to time and parties, the right to offset the one against the other, it is asserted, is clear.
If this course of reasoning is correct, the debts were mutual, and their mutuality preceded the receivership, and the right of offset, one against the other, is settled by all the authorities. Some of the courts hold that, where a surety has become liable for the payment of a debt prior to the insolvency of the principal, its right to set-off dates by relation to the time it assumed the obligation of suretyship, and not from the time of paying such obligation. *484 Northside State Bank v. United States Fidelity GuarantyCo.,
However, "the doctrine of relation `is a legal fiction, invented to promote the ends of justice. . . . It is never allowed to defeat the collateral rights of third persons, lawfully acquired.'" U.S. Fidelity Guaranty Co. v.Wooldridge,
"The Guaranty Company could not acquire from the railway company a right not possessed by the latter. The Guaranty Company's liability on its bond to the bank was an asset of the estate, which the receiver held in trust for all the creditors of the bank. Upon the bank's insolvency being established, the railway company's claim, so far as the bank's assets are concerned, gave it no more than the right to file its claim seasonably and share ratably in the disposition of those assets; and the Guaranty Company, by its transaction with the railway company after the bank's insolvency was established, acquired no other or higher right than the railway company had when it so parted with its claim. Oates v. Smith,
The case was affirmed upon practically the same reasoning; Justice HOLMES, who wrote the opinion, disposing of the doctrine of relation in the language we have quoted above. United StatesFidelity Guaranty Co. v. Wooldridge, supra.
We conclude the Guaranty Company did not become the creditor of the insolvent bank until it had paid its principals, the county and state, and, since that happened after the superintendent of banks had taken charge of the insolvent, the Guaranty Company was not entitled either as subrogee or assignee, to offset its claim against its liability on the fidelity bond.
The judgment allowing the offset is reversed and the cause remanded, with directions that judgment be entered in favor of plaintiff against the Guaranty Company on the fidelity bond for the sum of $7,500, the penalty of such bond, and that the claim of offset be disallowed.
McALISTER, C.J., and LOCKWOOD, J., concur.