248 F. 272 | 5th Cir. | 1918
This is a creditors’ bill by áppellee, in its own behalf and in behalf of other creditors of the Asa W. Allen Company, a mercantile corporation, and its president and manager, Asa W. Allen, against its debtors and about 25 other creditors, including appellee. All matters charged against the defendants, except appellant, have been disposed of and are not before the court. The cause resulted in a decree against appellant, from which it took an appeal. The case will not be stated, as the facts necessary to elucidate the points made in the appeal will appear from discussion of the assignment of errors.
In his review of the facts the trial court found that one Palmer, the accredited agent of appellant, was made a member of that committee. Prior to his appointment, Palmer, for the benefit of his principal, had secured a deed of trust from Allen and the Allen Company to secure the payment of a debt due to appellant by the Allen Company and a sum of money which appellant had theretofore advanced for the purpose of securing an assignment to it of a deed of trust held by the Bank of Brooksville on certain land belonging to Allen. After Palmer became a member of the creditors’ committee, and entered upon his duties as a trustee of the properties and assets of the.Allen Company and of Allen for the benefit of the unsecured creditors of both, with the knowledge of his cotrustees and in breach of his duty as trustee, and in fraud of the rights of the unsecured creditors, Palmer procured the assignment to his principal, appellant, of certain notes amounting to $2,100, which were a part of the assets of Allen and the Allen Company in the hands of the creditors’ committee as trust‘funds for the benefit of the unsecured creditors of the Allen Company and Alien. Likewise Palmer procured the erection of certain houses on land to which his principal held a deed of trust, for the purpose of enhancing the security of his principal, and paid for these improvements out of the funds in the hands of the creditors’ committee, held in trust for the unsecured creditors. The court decreed that appellant should account for this diversion of assets. The evidence is sufficient to support the court’s finding, and its decree, that appellant should account for the collateral received and money used in enhancing its value, results from the application of familiar principles of equitable jurisprudence, which will compel the restoration of a trust fund by one who has unlawfully diverted it to his own use.