In re Pacat Finance Corp.

27 F.2d 810 | 2d Cir. | 1928

SWAN, Circuit Judge.

The claimant, hereinafter referred to as Berardini, contends that the trustee in bankruptcy of Pacat Finance Corporation hereinafter referred to as Pacat, came into possession of 750,000 lire, which belonged to Berardini. He seeks to establish his right upon the theory of (1) an express trust in specific lire, by reason of an appropriation of them for him by Pacat prior to bankruptcy; or (2) a constructive trust by reason of tracing his own dollars into lire, and thence back into dollars held by the trustee. The trustee contends that the evidence is insufficient to prove claimant’s right under either theory, and in addition asserts that the first theory is not before us on this appeal, because of a prior order from which no appeal was taken.

Prior to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy on December 30,1920, Pacat had conducted a business of buying and selling foreign exchange. During several weeks just prior to said date, Berardini on 13 separate occasions had paid money to Pacat in New York, with directions to pay an equivalent sum in lire to Berardini’s branch office in Naples. Pacat would thereupon cable its Italian correspondent, Crédito Italiano, to make such payment. The aggregate of the exchange so purchased was 4,000,000 lire, and 3,250,000 lire had been paid to Berardini in Naples prior to Pacat’s bankruptcy, 750,000 lire remaining unpaid. On the date of the bankruptcy petition, Pacat had a credit of more than this sum on the books of Crédito Italiano, which the trustee subsequently reduced to possession. On April 15, 1921, Berardini filed his reclamation petition, seeking to impress a trust upon 750,000 lire of the sum standing to Paeat’s credit on the books of Crédito. Other creditors also filed reclamation elaims, and all such proceedings were referred to a special master, who reported in favor of certain claimants, but adversely to Berardini. The District Court modified the master’s report with respect to Berardini’s claim, stating in his opinion (In re Pacat Finance Corporation, 295 F. 394, 414) as follows:

“My conclusion is: I agree with the master in holding that none of the funds in Crédito Italiano were appropriated in a legal sense to Berardini. The direction that such appropriation be made was dishonored, due to the overdrafts of Pacat. Upon such theory of appropriation, the claim must be disallowed. Since, however, the principle of concurrent condition should be applied to the Berardini-Pacat contracts, and as Pacat defaulted in performance, it should be said that the moneys obtained from Berardini were held in trust by Pacat. The claim accordingly will be allowed for tracing and marshaling.”

Accordingly, the order of October 10, 1923, entered in conformity with said opinion, allowed Berardini to proceed upon the theory of tracing dollars into Paeat’s credit with Crédito Italiano, and referred the matter to Special Master Olney to hear and report. By amendment of his petition Berardini specified that the contracts not performed by Pacat were three purchases of cable transfers, of 250,000 lire each, made on December 9, 10, and 13, 1920, for which he had paid, including cable charges, an aggregate of $26,330. The master (reported against the claim in toto, but the District Court modified the report, allowing a recovery of the dollar value of 92,352.10 lire. The recovery was limited to this amount because of the subsequent depletion to that sum of the lire found .to have been purchased with claimant’s money. This is the decree from which both parties have appealed.

*812 It is true that the theory of an express trust by reason of appropriation of lire for Berardini’s account was found against him by the first master, and his report was confirmed in this respect by the order of October 10,1923, which allowed Berardini to proceed further on the theory of tracing money. This order, however, expressly stated that its provisions were interlocutory only, and that jurisdiction was retained until the coming in of the second report and-action thereon by the court. Consequently it was not a final and appealable order, and we do not see how it can bar Berardini from urging that on the record before us he has proved an express appropriation of lijre for his account. See Buckingham v. McLean, 13 How. (U. S.) 150, 14 L. Ed. 91; Buster v. Wright, 135 F. 947, 959 (C. C. A. 8). We may deal with the record as we find it, irrespective of the limitations of the theory upon which the trial judge rendered decision.

But the evidence, in our opinion, fails to prove any express appropriation of lire for Berardini. The contention is that Berardini had contracted with Pacat for the cable transfer of three sums of 250,000 lire each, and that in attempted performance thereof Pacat sent the following cablegram to Crédito Italiano:

“December 13thi, 1920.
“Credit Genoa 355 Dec. 13th you will receive for our account from Banca D’ltalia Dec. 17th one million lire stop' Pay one hundred thousand to Banca Commereiale Italiana Borne for account of Lahan Baltimore stop Pay to M. Berardini Naples seven hundred fifty thousand.
“Paeatfin.”

It is argued that this cablegram constituted an express designation and appropriation for Berardini of 750,000 lire out of the 1,000,000 lire which it says will be received from Banca D’ltalia on December 17th; that Crédito Italiano did receive the promised deposit (though on December 18th, instead of the 17th), and thereby became bound to hold 750,000 lire thereof in trust for Berardini; that because of some misunderstanding of the cablegram Crédito Italiano never performed the trust by payment to Berardini, and therefore the trust continued to be impressed upon the litre which stood to Pacat’s credit on Credito’s books, and which the trustee in bankruptcy subsequently exchanged into dollars. If it were true that the cable of December 13th should be construed as a direction to pay Berardini out of a specific fund, we might agree (assuming the other necessary facts to have been proved) that a

trust was established within the rule of Farley v. Turner, 26 L. J. Ch. 710. But we cannot agree to the construction contended for.

With equal reason the cablegram may be read as conveying, first, a notification that Crédito Italiano will receive from Banca D’ltalia. on December 17th a deposit of 1,000,000 lire for the account of Pacat; and, second, a direction to pay at once out of any funds to the credit of Pacat the sums specified for Berardini and Banca Commereiale Italiana. It is by no means clear that Pacat intended these payments to be made only out of the specific credit referred to in the cablegram. As appears by Claimant’s Exhibit 7, Paeat’s account with Crédito Italiano sometimes shows overdrafts. Other cablegrams (e. g., No. 1385, of November 29,1920, and No. 1524, of December 10,1920; — Claimant’s Exhibit 3 of December 3, 1924) show that Pacat sometimes sent a single message, notifying of a deposit and directing payment or credit to customers of more than the amount of the deposit. Lindau testified that sometimes directions to pay were cabled abroad before payment had been received here, if the purchaser's credit was satisfactory. Such practices are inconsistent with the contention that the direction to pay must be construed as limited to a payment out of the deposit mentioned in the same message.-

Moreover, we see nothing in the cablegram of December 13th to require payment to be deferred until December 17th. Two of Berardini’s three contracts for the purchase of cable transfers were “payable here and there December 13th,” and the third provided for payment on December 15th. Berardini had made his payments to Pacat in New York on December 13th, 14th, and 15th, and was entitled to receive payment in Naples contemporaneously, subject only to delays necessarily incident to transoceanic communication. If the cable to Crédito Italiano was sent in order to effectuate performance of these three contracts, as claimant maintains, we should expect it to direct immediate payment upon receipt of the cable, rather than on December 17th, or such later date as the deposit from Banca D’ltalia might actually be received. Apparently the directed payment for account of Lanahan was made December 14th (Exhibit 7). The claimant had the burden of establishing an express appropriation of specific lire and his proof does not meet it. Merely directing Credito Italiano to pay out of Pacat’s general funds is, of course, not sufficient. See Equitable Trust Co. v. First Nat. Bank, 275 U. S. 359, 48 S. Ct. 167, 72 L. Ed. -.

*813On the theory of a constructive trust, Paeat is assumed to hold the dollars received from Berardini in trust for the latter until payment of lire, agreed to be paid eontempo(raneously, should be made, and Berardini seeks to trace his dollars, or their proceeds, into the hands of the trustee in bankruptcy. See In re Pacat Finance Corp. (D. C.) supra at page 398. Under this theory Berar•dini must prove the specific dollars he is seeking to trace. Therefore he must show, first of all, which of his several contracts of purchase remained unperformed by Paeat. The trustee denies that this has been proven. The dispute revolves about five transactions which appear in Paeat’s Purchase and Sales Ledger (Claimant’s Exhibit 10 of February 2, 1925) as follows:

Berardini contends that the first three were not performed, and the last two were. Proof as to performance of the last two consists of a cable of December 17, 1920, from Paeat to Crédito Italiano, and the latter’s letter of advice of December 30th. The cable of December 17th repeated the directions of the cable of December 13th, already quoted, and, after giving notification of deposits to be received, directed: “Pay to M. Berardini Naples for account of New York office seven hundred fifty thousand value December twentieth.” The letter of advice reported that under value date of December 23d 750,000 lire had been paid Berardini, Naples, “for a/c their New York (your cable 17/12).” No report of performance of the payment directed in the cable of December 13th was ever received from Crédito Italiano. On this evidence the District Court inferred that the payment reported by Crédito Italiano related to the last two contracts, and that the first three remained unperformed.

With this conclusion we agree. The trustee’s argument contra is based altogether upon the “value date,” which is explained in the testimony as meaning that interest adjustments (presumably between Paeat and Crédito Italiano) were to be made abroad as of the date stated. There appears to be no correspondence between the value date and the date when payment of lire was due to Berardini in any of the five contracts above tabulated. We regard the entries in the value date column as of little significance for purposes of identification. In several instances the original entries have been obliterated and other figures inserted in lead pencil. The trustee’s contention that the cable of December 17th must have related to the contracts of December 9th and 10th, because it mentions a value date of December 20th, cannot be maintained.

Berardini paid Paeat for the three unperformed contracts by checks dated, respectively, December 13th, 14th, and 15th, and for the respective amounts of $8,802.50, $8,777.-50, and $8,750. Each of these cheeks was deposited by Paeat in its general account in the National Park Bank on the day it bears date. At the time of bankruptcy a considerable balance remained in this account, but Berardini has expressly disclaimed any interest in this balance, all of which has been reclaimed by others. See In re Paeat Finance Corp., supra. His contention is that his dollars are traceable into the lire credit which Paeat had with Crédito Italiano at the date of the bankruptcy. On December 14th, Paeat drew its cheek on its account in the National Park Bank to pay for 1,000,000 lire to be sent to Crédito Italiano through the Banca D’ltalia. This sum was received by Crédito Italiano and credited to Paeat. On December 15th and 16th Paeat again drew cheeks which purchased 2,000,000 lire that were deposited to its credit with Crédito Italiano. While Berardini’s dollars cannot literally be traced into any of these lire credits, the applicable principle is that stated by Joyce, J., in In re Oatway, L. R. [1893] 2 Ch. 356, 359:

“ * * * It is, in my opinion, equally clear that when any of the money drawn'out has been invested, and the investment remains in the name or under the control of the trustee, the rest of the balance having been afterwards dissipated by him, he cannot maintain that the investment which remains represents his own money alone, and that what has been spent and can no longer be *814traced and recovered was the money belonging to the trust.”

Accord: Brennan v. Tillinghast, 201 F. 609, 614 (C. C. A. 6); Primeau v. Granfield, 184 F. 480, 484 (C. C. S. D. N. Y.); In re A. O. Brown & Co., 189 F. 432, 439 (D. C. S. D. N. Y.); City of Lincoln v. Morrison, 64 Neb. 822, 90 N. W. 905, 57 L. R. A. 885.

Consequently the lire credits created by withdrawals from the National Park Bank, when Paeat’s account therein was composed in part of Berardini’s checks received and held by Pacat on constructive trust, were in equity subject to a lien or charge in favor of Berardini. But his lien or charge would be pro tanto destroyed by depletion of the fund, and sueh depletion occurred when Paeat’s balance with Crédito Italiano was reduced to 92,352.10 lire on December 19, 1920. Subsequent deposits of lire, not shown to have been the proceeds of Berardini’s money, would not restore the trust fund. Schuyler v. Littlefield, 232 U. S. 707, 34 S. Ct. 466, 58 L. Ed. 806; In re A. D. Matthews’ Sons, Inc., 238 F. 785 (C. C. A. 2). And there is no sueh- showing. The claimant argues that the doctrine of Gorman v. Littlefield, 229 U. S. 19, 33 S. Ct. 690, 57 L. Ed. 1047, should control, but this doctrine does not apply to cash in bank, and lire credits we regard as of that class.

The order of the District Court is accordingly affirmed.

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