108 F. 212 | D. Mass. | 1901
Le Roy was indebted to Swift, and, as security for the debt, pledged a certificate of stock, indorsing the same in blank. Swift repledged the stock, together with stock of his own, to the Beacon Trust Company, as security for his own indebtedness, which greatly exceeded that of Le Roy to him. On De
After the pledge by Le Roy to Swift, the general property in the stock remained in Le Soy, Swift having merely the rights of a pledgee. St. Mass. 1884, c. 229, does not affect the matter, even if applicable io a New Jersey corporation. The delivery of a certificate indorsed in blank to a pledgee transfers to him only the title of a pledgee, not the general property in the stock. This was not the case of a purchase of stock on a margin (see In re Swift [D. C.] 106 Fed 65), but an ordinary pledge of property to secure the pledgor’s debt. It follows, therefore, that Swift had no right to repledge the stock to the trust company; that his action was wholly unauthorized, and, under the laws' of Massachusetts, seems to have been criminal. Pub. St. c. 203, § 72. It is not necessary to determine if Le Roy could have brought an action of trover against Swift without a tender of some sort. Apparently, he could not. See Talty v. Trust Co., 93 U. S. 321, 23 L. Ed. 886; Cumnock v. Savings Inst., 142 Mass. 342, 7 N. E. 342. It seems, however, that the offer by Le Roy to pay Swift was, under the circumstances of Swift’s reply, the equivalent of a tender, at least as against Swift. Cumnock v. Savings Inst. An action of trover then lay by Le Roy against Swift. Except as the result of estoppel, the trust company took no more title to the stock than did Swift. Save in so far as lie was estopped, Le Roy could, immediately after the tender to the trust company of the amount of his debt to Swift, and a demand upon the trust company, have sued that company in trover, or, if the stock had then been sold, could have waived the tort and sued for money had and received to his use. Except for an estoppel, the proceeds of the stock in the hands of the trust company, or at any rate the surplus over Le Roy’s debt, belonged to Le Roy. The facts shown in evidence do not establish an estoppel in favor of the trust company as against Le Roy, but this matter was not gone into, and counsel on both sides assumed that the estoppel existed. But the
‘•Wherever a spediie chattel is intrusted by one man to another, either for the purposes of safe custody or for the purpose of being disposed oí for the benefit of the person intrusting the chattel, then either the chattel itself, or the proceeds of the chattel, whether the chattel lias been rightfully or wrongfully disposed of, may be followed at any time, although either tlie chattel itself, or file money constituting the proceeds of that chattel, may have lieon mixed and confounded in a mass of the like material.”
See, also, Birt v. Burt, 11 Ch. Div. 773, note. See 13 Ch. Div. 721. The cases in this country and in England, decided since In re Hal-leti’s Estate, so far from calling in question tliat decision and the opinions rendered therein, have approved them repeatedly. In England it seems to have been held, indeed, that where, in a ease like this, the second pledgee laid sold the property of the x>ledgor, and paid his debt from the proceeds, retaining in specie some properly of the original pledgee, yet the pledgor had a lien for the value of his property upon (lie properly of the original pledgee still remaining in the second pledgee’s hands. Ex parte Alliton, 1 Glyn & J. 160; Ex parte Salting, 23 Ch. Div. 148. So, in Harris v. Truman, 7 Q. B. Div. 340, the principal was allowed to retain goods purchased, not with (he principal's money, but, as was said by Mr. Justice Bowen, "fraudulently substituted by the bankrupt in the place of the barley tliat should have been so purchased.” These cases go further than does the case at bar. In Oils country, again, a special deposii made in a bank has been followed into tlie bank’s general cash balance, in case's where that balance had never been reduced below the amount of the special deposit. See Moreland v. Brown, 30 C. C. A., 23, 86 Fed. 257; Merchants’ Nat. Bank v. School Dist. Mo. 8, 36 C. C. A. 432, 94 Fed. 705; Spokane Co. v. First Mat. Bank, 16 C. C. A. 81, 68 Fed. 979. It is not necessary to discuss these last-mentioned cases, and others like them. The case of a special deposit mingled in one bank account with funds belonging to the depositor is not. precisely the same as that of a special deposit mingled with tlie general cash balance of a bank. In Pennell v. Deffell, 4 De Gex. M. & G. 372, if was decided that checks drawn on a bank account composed of mingled moneys should be first applied to the withdrawal of the money first deposited. How that rule would work in the case at bar does not appear, but it seems to have been definitely overruled in England by In re Hallett’s Estate, in spite of the dissenting opinion of Lord Justice Thesiger. Apparently, the rule of Pennell v. Deffell has not found much favor in this country. It is. indeed, highly artificial, and is applicable only where other tests have failed, — where there is no oilier reason to apply checks to one class of moneys rather than to another.
Counsel for the trustee urged that Le Roy ought not to recover, because, by reason of the use of Le Roy’s stock Swift was enabled to borrow more money from the trust company, and so his debts were increased. Ilence counsel urged that it would be inequitable