29 F. 881 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts | 1887
This is a bill in equity brought by the receivers of the Reading Savings Bank against the defendant, to obtain the reconveyance of a number of mortgages claimed to belong to them as receivers of the bank. On March 22, 1879, the bank failed. It was discovered about this time that N. P. Pratt, the secretary and treasurer of the bank, had fraudulently disposed of a large part of the assets. By a vote of the trustees, passed in 1876, the treasurer was authorized to discharge and release all mortgages belonging to the bank. This record was altered by Pratt so as to read “discharge, assign, and release.” By means of this fraudulent interpolation Pratt succeeded in disposing of a large number of mortgages. The rights of purchasers of these securities have several times been before the courts for adjudication. In Whiting v. Wellington, 10 Fed. Rep. 810, Judge Lowell held that a purchaser in good faith without notice obtained a title by estoppel against the savings bank by virtue of the certificate of its recording officer that a certain vote was found upon its record. This decision was followed in Com. v. Reading Sav. Bank, 137 Mass. 431, and in Holden v. Phelps, 141 Mass. 456, 5 N. E. Rep. 815.
The defendant derived title to the notes a.nd mortgages in controversy through John F. Kimball, president of the Appleton National Bank, and those for whom Kimball acted, and it is admitted that if Kimball, and those for whom he acted, had no title, the defense fails.
The position is taken by the plaintiffs that Kimball had notice that these securities u ere taken contrary to law, and that he is guilty of fraud. Assuming that notice and fraud on the part of Kimball are charged in the bill, which the defendant denies, I can find no sufficient proof to. sustain these ¿¡legations. It is in evidence that during the years 1878.
Another ground relied upon in this case is that the certificate received by Kimball was not a copy of the record of the bank with its fraudulent interpolation, but was a forgery of such record. The copy received by Kimball has the word “assign” placed before “discharge,” while the fraudulent record places it after. The copy Kimball produces is the same as the copy found in Thompson’s diary, (see Holden v. Phelps, 141 Mass. 456, 5 N. E. Rep. 815,) which was made by Thompson at least several months before the first purchase by Kimball. It also appears that the body of Kimball’s copy is probably not in the handwriting of N. P. Pratt, but of his son, Sidney. As to the signature of this certificate, another son of Pratt testifies that he does not think his father wrote it; and Solon Bancroft, one of the receivers of the bank, testifies that he is familiar with Pratt’s writing, and that he is quite confident it was not written by him.
By this means the plaintiffs undertake to establish that Kimball’s certificate was not sent to him by N. P. Pratt, the treasurer and secretary, but that it came from Thompson, and was a forgery. Kimball swears that he asked Pratt if he had authority to assign mortgages; that he said he had, and would furnish a copy of the vote; and that, immediately after, he sent him the certificate, which he produces, by mail. This evidence stands uncontradicted. I think the defendant has fairly made out that the certificate, which is, in substance, a copy of the record of the bank, was received by Kimball from N. P. Pratt, secretary and treasurer, in the course of negotiating the sale of the first mortgages purchased, and it follows that, whether forged or net, it binds the bank as against an innocent party acting in good faith and without notice.
I find nothing to take this case out from the decisions in Whiting v. Wellington, Com. v. Reading Sav. Bank, and Holden v. Phelps, and therefore the bill should bo dismissed, with costs.