220 F. 805 | 6th Cir. | 1915
This is an appeal from a decree setting aside an alleged preferential transfer under section 60b of the Bankruptcy Act. The transfer in question is a real estate mortgage for $12,000, given to appellant within four months of bankruptcy by L. F. Zimmerman, one of the'bankrupts (his wife joining in the mortgage), upon certain of the mortgagor’s real estate. The partnership at the time owed the First National Bank of Van Wert, Ohio, upwards of $19,000; the bank holding in pledge as security certain bonds worth about $6,000. The partnership had at the time a checking account at the bank, on which there was a balance to the firm’s credit. The bill alleges an indebtedness from the bankrupts to the bank, the making of the mortgage “for the benefit of” the bank, al
While, so far as form goes, the evidence, as already said, negatives the theory of the bill that the mortgage was given merely as security for a pre-existing debt, and (by implication) that appellant was merely the bank’s agent in taking and holding the mortgage, yet it appears, according to the record here, that the mortgage was taken at the instance of and for the benefit of the bank, and was so taken, not because the loan was an attractive one in itself, but solely to enable the bank to obtain payment; for we have no difficulty in concluding, on the record before us, that the mortgage was the result of a three-cornered arrangement between the cashier, appellant, and Zimmerman, one of the debtors, by which the proceeds of the mortgage loan should be, as part of one and the same transaction, directly and immediately applied in payment of the bank debt. This conviction results from the testimony of the three parties most directly concerned, in connection with the fact that the amount of the mortgage loan, plus what was available on the sale of the pledged' bonds, added to the amount of the bankrupt’s deposit, was but $2 more than the bank debt, the entire of which was immediately paid according to previous understanding.
In these circumstances, we cannot think that the mere fact that the bank’s president used his own money as a means of effecting a preferential transfer relieved his security from the ban of section 60b, so far as it may stand-in the way of full relief to creditors. The case is within the reasoning of the Beerman Case (D. C.) 112 Fed. 662, and of Dean v. Davis, 212 Fed. 88, 128 C. C. A. 658. True, there was here no indemnity bond, as in the Beerman Case; but the element of personal interest, which in the latter case was represented by the indemnity bond, is here represented by appellant’s personal and official interest in the bank and in the preferential payment of its debt. The case is therefore, we think, readily distinguished from the Van Iderstine Case, 227 U. S. 575, 33 Sup. Ct. 343, 57 L. Ed. 652, where (a) the Discount Company had no knowledge that a preferential payment was intended, and (b) had no notice whatever of the intended application of the mqney loaned, while here appellant not only knew of the intended preference, but was directly interested in the payment, not only in his official capacity, but individually as a stockholder. The case here also differs from the Baar Case, 213 Fed. 628, 130 C. C. A. 292, for there the uncle who made the loan was interested in but $500 out of $2,500 advanced, and so could not be said to have received a preference as to more than the $500.
Moreover, the case seems to have turned upon the question of fraudulent conveyance, and there was in fact there no fraud. While, therefore, it would have been proper to sue the bank to recover its preference, the mortgage is not necessarily relieved from attack.
What we have said concerning the effect of the transfer in question is, of course, based upon the record before us. We do not attempt to pass upon the bank’s rights in its absence, nor finally to decide the rights of appellant as they may appear under issue joined on prop
The decree will be reversed, and the cause remanded to the District Court, with directions to permit amendment of the bill so as to allege the actual transaction, and with leave to make the bank a defendant, and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. The costs of this appeal will be equally divided between appellant and complainant trustee.