77 F.2d 806 | 5th Cir. | 1935
Jones county, a political entity of Mississippi, on August 21, 1933, brought its bill in a federal court in Louisiana against Interstate Trust & Banking Company, a corporation of Louisiana, to declare an equitable lien on the assets of the latter for $4,135.94 of commingled funds belonging to the former, and in the alternative a lien under Act No. 63 of the Louisiana Legislature of 1926. The bank answered, admitting allegations that on February 20, 1933, Jones county had sent a check drawn on another bank for $4,135.94 with a letter stating that the sum was to be used in the payment of described bonds and coupons due by Jones county on March 2. 1933,
The facts thus admitted in the pleadings might have warranted a decree that the funds remitted the bank were not a deposit but a trust, with an equitable lien on the bank’s assets resulting from their commingling. We understand the decree, however, to be planted on a privilege created by Act No. 63 of the Legislature of 1926. That act declares that when a bank receives any check, as agent, for collection and remittance or delivery to its principal and not for deposit, and collects it, and has not deposited it to the credit of the principal, the principal shall have a privilege for the amount collected against all the bank’s property and assets. The Supreme Court of Louisiana in Re Liquidation of Hibernia Bank & Trust Company, Intervention of Jones County, 181 La. 335, 159 So. 576, held that the deposit which defeats the privilege is one with the consent and approval of the principal, and the privilege was there upheld on a case precisely like this. The decision is binding on the federal courts and establishes the right of Jones county to the preference here decreed it.
But the liquidators contend that the court was without jurisdiclion so to decree, or at least abused discretion in doing so, after the institution of the liquidation proceedings, and should in any event have gone no farther than to establish the claim of Jones county and to remit the matter thereafter to the usual course of liquidation. The Louisiana bank liquidation law is found in Act No. 300 of 1910, as amended in 1920 and 1921. It provides that when a state bank or trust company has repeatedly violated its charter, or its officers habitually violate the state banking laws, or the corporation is in an unsound or unsafe condition, the state bank commissioner with the approval of the Governor may take possession of its books, property, and affairs for liquidation or until the unsound condition is relieved. The board of directors have the right to appoint a coliquidator to assist. If liquidation is determined on,
Judgment affirmed.