167 A. 811 | Conn. | 1933
The plaintiff alleged and the defendant by answer admitted that on December 26th, 1930, Angelo Sissa had on deposit with the defendant $2221.64 and on that date executed an assignment in writing, upon sufficient consideration, to the plaintiff, a copy of which assignment was presented the same day to the treasurer of the defendant, who endorsed thereon the following: "Dec. 26, 1930. Received and filed copy of above. Riverside Trust Company, Hartford, Conn. W. O. Eitel, Treas." On December 19th, 1932, the plaintiff being still the holder of the assignment, made written demand upon the defendant for the amount of the deposit, but the defendant refused and still refuses payment. In defense of this refusal the defendant by further answer alleged that on December 23d, three days before the assignment, the state bank commissioner issued a temporary order under the provisions of General Statutes, § 3870, restraining the defendant from paying out any funds or receiving deposits; that on January 6th, 1931, the Superior Court appointed a temporary receiver for the defendant and on February 13th, 1931, the receivership was made permanent; that a reorganization of the *278 defendant having later been accomplished, the court, on September 18th, 1931, ordered the receiver to turn over all the assets in his hands to the defendant upon the filing of a certificate by the bank commissioner that the defendant was authorized to resume business, which certificate was filed about September 25th, 1931, and the defendant did resume business September 28th, 1931; that on the last-named date Angelo Sissa was indebted to the defendant for a balance due upon his note, of $7457.50 and that the defendant thereupon applied the deposit of $2221.64 as part payment of such balance. Upon a demurrer to this defense being sustained and judgment rendered, the present appeal was taken on the sole ground that the ruling was erroneous. The court held that the restraining order issued by the bank commissioner in no way affected the validity of the assignment of the deposit; that on the date of the assignment the note (which was made an exhibit) had not matured nor did the defendant on that date have any lien upon this deposit on account of it, and finally that at that time the deposit was and still is owned by the plaintiff assignee, and gave judgment accordingly.
The assignment was in proper form, supported by a valid consideration and due notice was acknowledged by the defendant in writing on a copy thereof, and it does not appear that there was fraud or that the assignor was then insolvent. The assignment was valid and conveyed good title to the plaintiff unless the existence of the restraining order at that time rendered it ineffective. We have heretofore had occasion to consider the effect of restraining orders issued under § 3870 of the General Statutes, and we pointed out that such an order merely restrains the bank from "paying out funds or receiving deposits." We held that "otherwise its rights to exercise its franchise remained *279
unaffected . . . until the inception of the receivership."Shippee v. Riverside Trust Co.,
The bank claims it had a right to set off the deposit against the unmatured note, on the date of the assignment. If this were true, it may well be that the acceptance *280
by the bank of the notice of assignment while under the restraining order was ineffective to bind it, since it would have had the effect of diminishing its assets; but that aside, the contention made cannot be maintained. At common law mutual debts were separately enforced, but to prevent circuity of action courts of equity established the practice of set-off and this State and many others now provide statutory authority for such action, General Statutes, § 5551, the procedure being prescribed in General Statutes, § 5511. But this statutory authority permits no greater range of equitable claims than that of established chancery practice. Harral v. Leverty,
The general rule requires that both debts must be due and payable, but courts, in order to do equity, have sometimes read into that rule an exception where one of the parties is insolvent and where, save for the exception, the other party would lose part or all of his claim while paying his own debt to the insolvent in full. Sullivan v. Merchants National Bank,
The question before us is not to be determined upon the situation as it would have been had the question arisen between the plaintiff and the receiver of the defendant. The defendant has resumed business, taken back its assets, including the note in question, and become again obligated upon the deposit. It is in the same position as regards the right of set-off it claims, as it would have been had no receivership intervened. Since the legal title to the deposit was vested in the plaintiff-assignee on the day of the assignment, that title remained and still is unaffected by the subsequent receivership and the maturing of the note. "The assignee is not affected by defenses arising after the assignment and notice and which had no existence at the time of the assignment." Mechanics Bank v. Johnson,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.