27 F. 344 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1886
The petition of the joint receivers in this case sets forth that the court in this ease made an order naming and constituting certain banks in the city of Houston depositaries, and requiring petitioners to deposit in said banks, for safe-keeping, the moneys which might come to their hands as receivers of the defendant corporation, the same to be kept solely for safe-keeping, and to bo subject to the order of petitioners; that the City Bank of Houston, a banking corporation under the laws of Texas, was one of the banks constituted a depository aforesaid; that said bank accepted the trust, and received deposits from petitioners almost daily from said appointment up to and inclusive of the nineteenth of December, 1885; that William R. Baker is, and has been for months past, tho president of said bank; that Benjamin 3?. Weems is, and has been for years, cashier of said bank, and a director thereof; that S. K. Mcllhenny and Robert Brewster are, and have been for several years, directors of said bank; that while occupying said positions of trust in connection with said bank said Baker, Weems, Brewster, and Mcllhenny did fraudulently combine and conspire together, and with other members of the board of directors, to obtain possession of all such deposits as might be made by the receivers, for their own use and for the use of the bank and its creditors, and to oust the jurisdiction of this court, and to put the said receivers’ funds beyond the control of the court; that the appointment of said Weems as receiver of said bank was procured by the respondents to be made by the judge of the Eleventh district court of the state of Texas; and that the said Weems, aeting under color of such appointment, has taken possession of the greater part of the assets of said bank, including the funds belonging to said receivers. They further aver, in support of these charges, in substance, that the said bank was, and had been for some months previous to its failure, in an involved and insolvent condition, to the
The respondents have' united in a demurrer, raising the question as to whether they were officials of this court, or had disobeyed or resisted any lawful order of the c.ourt; and have separately answered to the-same pux-port as the demurrer; axid, further, denying notice of the bank’s designation as a depository by the court; denying conspiracy or fraud; and averring, in substance, that while they knew of the involved condition of the bank they believed it solvent until the time of closing the doors; that the deeds of trust were made to secure valid indebtedness; and that in all things they acted as they believed for the best interest of the bank axid its creditors; that the deposits by the receivers of the Houston & Central Railway were received in the regular course of business of the bank, and treated the same as deposits by other patrons of the bank; and they deny any intention to disobey, or evade any orders of this court; axrd they aver many other things not necessary to recapitulate, as tending to justify their conduct in managing the affairs of said bank.
From the answers of the respondents, and the evidence produced on the hearing, the facts of the case appear to be, substantially, as follows:
In the above-entitled suit, pending on the equity docket of this court, an order was entered on the twentieth day of February, 1885, appointing Benjamin G-. Clarke and Charles Dillingham joint re
Thereafter the receivers made demand on the officials of said bank — to-wit, W. R. Baker, president; B. F. Weems, cashier; Robert Brewster, director; and S. K. McIlhenny, director—for the return and payment of the said sums belonging to the said receivers as aforesaid, but the same was refused.
It further appears that the charges of the receivers with regard to the execution of two deeds of trust to secure the president and directors in preference to the general creditors of the bank, and the withholding of said deeds from record until just before the bank was closed, are substantially correct, although it appears that the indebtedness secured to President Baker was mostly of long standing, and the other indebtedness secured was for accommodation paper given by the directors to aid the bank in keeping its business going, by what President Baker in his petition to the state court termed “kite flying.” There is no doubt that the bank has been long insolvent, and would long since have closed its doors but for the credit it received on account of its large holding of real estate; that the deecls of trust, and the preferences therein given, were bound to be fatal to any further credit, as soon as publicly known; and it seems conclusive that the respondents knew of his condition, and of the certainty of failure,—certainly from the time they protected themselves at the expense of the people who had trusted in their honesty and financial management.
On the hearing, the argument took a wide range; but the real inquiry in this proceeding may well be restricted to the simple question of the relations of the respondents to the court. Counsel for the receivers contend that the effect of the order of court designating the bank as one of the depositories of the receivers, and the acceptance by the bank of the receivers’ deposits, was to make the bank, and its
The adjudged cases on this point brought to the attention of the court are unsatisfactory. The statement in Eapalje on Contempts (section 15) that “a private corporation, made the depository of the funds of the court, is an officer of the court, within the power of the court to punish by contempt process for misconduct, is supported by a dictum of the supreme court of Illinois in the case of In re Western Marine & Fire Ins. Co., 38 Ill. 289, in which case it is said:
““When a court makes an order appointing a particular person a depositary of tiie court funds, and such person, knowing of sucli order, accepts the deposit, he unquestionably becomes pro hac vice an oilicer of the court. The court may order him to refund the money, and if he fails to do so, without showing some valid reason, may proceed against him as for a contempt. The same rule would apply to a corporation, and if its officers, having control of its funds, and having the means of payment belonging to the corporation in their hands, should refuse to pay, they too might be proceeded against as for a contempt.” '•
It will be noticed by the foregoing that officials of a corporation delinquent as a depository are to be held as in case of contempt, when they have control of its funds, and have the means of payment belonging to the corporation in their hands.
Counsel for receivers have also cited Cartwright’s Case, 114 Mass. 230, which was a case where a receiver had appropriated the funds conlidpd to him to liis own use, and where there was no doubt about the official relation.
In the present case I think that it is somewhat doubtful whether the funds, deposited by the complaining receivers with the City Bank of Houston under the aforesaid order of court, were strictly court funds, or could be considered as moneys paid into court. By the orders appointing them, the complainants, as joint, receivers, were authorized and directed to carry on and operate the railways and property of the Houston & Texas Central Hail way Company; and such carrying on and operating contemplated and required the handling, receiving, and paying out of money, the payment and collection of bills, and the transaction‘of such financial business as would require the medium of and accommodation of hanks. In the transaction of this business, moneys wore not deposited as special funds to bo drawn out on order of the court, but were deposited, generally, to the credit of the receivers, and to be handled and used by the bank, like the deposits of its other patrons, in a banking, loan, and discount business. And it may be further noticed that the respondents have not trio possession of the funds of the bank, nor means in their hands belonging to the bank, the possession of respondent Weems, as receiver, being that of the district court of Harris county. So that if we take the law to be as broad as declared by the supreme court of Illinois, in the Western Marine & Fire Ins. Case, it is not broad enough
The conduct of the respondents, as officials of the Houston City Bank, and as trustees of the property and funds of the said bank, in securing themselves at the expense of the creditors and patrons of the bank with deeds of trust on the property which really gave credit tq the bank, and in holding the bank out as solvent so as to draw in confiding depositors to furnish the means for the bank to continue “kite flying,” was reprehensible; and no doubt, when ¡moved in a proper case, will fix the personal liability of these respondents for all the losses resulting from their faithless management of the said bank; and the conduct of the respondents in taking the moneys of the receivers of the Houston & Texas Central Railway Company after the papers were made out to throw the bank in liquidation, and in turning the said moneys into the assets of an insolvent bank, (already destituted by them, to save themselves,) was still more reprehensible.
This conduct, although reprehensible, and not at all in keeping with the good character of respondents as attempted to be shqwn in the evidence of this case, I am not prepared to hold can be treated as in contempt of this court.
The rule for contempt herein is discharged; but an order is laid upon the receivers of the Houston & Texas Central Railway Company to institute such legal proceedings as may be necessary to make said respondents individually and collectively liable for all the funds wrongfully obtained from and withheld from said receivers. The costs of these proceedings for contempt will be taxed and paid in the main suit.
NOTE.
Cash deposited with a hank as a general dejMsit ceases to be the property of the depositor, and becomes the property of the bank, creating at once the relationship of debtor and creditor. Balbach v. Frelinghuysen, 15 Fed. Rep. 675.
And so, where one leaves money with another for safe-keeping, with the understanding, not that the identical money shall be returned to him, but a like sum, it is not a bailment or special deposit, but a general deposit in the nature of a loan. Shoemaker v. Hinze, (Wis.) 10 N. W. Rep. 86.
Upon a special deposit a bank is merely a bailee, and is bound according to the terms of the special deposit; but on a general deposit by a clerk of the court, without special agreement, the money becomes the property of the bank, and the depositor has no longer any claim on that money; .his claim is on the bank for a like amount of money. McLain v. Wallace, (Ind.) 5 N. E. Rep. 911.