74 F. 395 | 7th Cir. | 1896
(after stating the facts). At the argument the question was urged to our attention whether, and under what circumstances, a court of equity would relieve from mistake of law, or from pure ignorance of tlie law. This vexed question has frequently been considered by the various courts, and it cannot he said that (hey are by any means at agreement upon the subject. The matter has been somewhat considered by the supreme court in Elliott v. Sackett, 108 U. S. 132, 142, 2 Sup. Ct. 375; Thompson v. Insurance Co., 186 U. S. 287, 296, 30 Sup. Ct. 1019; Gris-
We are of opinion that the facts charged in the bill to be relied upon by the receiver io create an estoppel are not such as work .a legal detriment to the rights of the creditors. So far as respects the mere matter of change in the books which would be necessitated, that is not a matter of moment, in this connection. If some labor will thereby be Imposed, in the correction of the accounts, it is inconsequential and ought not (o be permitted to prevent the equitable relief sought, if the appellant be otherwise entitled.
The fund for the creditors was increased by the amount of the proceeds of the securities tortiously obtained from the appellant. This fund was distributed in dividends to the creditors, and, it would seem, about the time the appellant was advised of its rigid to pursue the proceeds of the securities, and declined to accept its proportionate share. The fact of such distribution is urged as a sufficient reason to deny the relief sought. It doubtless would have that effect if no assets yet remained. The bill, however, charges that the receiver has in possession assets of the bank from which he will realize moneys largely in excess of the proceeds of (he paper wrongfully obtained by the bank from the appellant, and which went io swell the fund distributed among the creditors. In such case equity should compel restitution of that which has been diverted, and, being unable to lay hold of the specific moneys improperly received, will seek to make restitution out of the assets which remain. The receiver is a trustee holding these funds for distribution among the creditors of the bank according to their. respective rights. He is an officer of the law. Equity will not permit a trustee to avail himself, as against, a cestui que trust, of a mistake of law on the part of the latter, when it is possible to correct the error without injury to the trust estate. Here, it is true, the specific money of the appellant is no longer in the hands of the receiver. It has been distributed by Mm, in the proper discharge of his duty, among the creditors; but as the property of the appellant was erroneously, although through no fault of the receiver, appropriated to the benefit of the general creditors, there is no
“That a trustee in bankruptcy is an officer of the court. He has inquisitorial powers given him by the court, and the court regards him as its officer, and he is to hold money in his hands upon trust for its equitable distribution among creditors. The court, then, finding that he has money in his hands which, in equity, belongs to some one else, ought to set an example to the world, by paying it to the person really entitled to it. In my opinion, a court of bankruptcy ought to be as honest as other people.”
It is true that in this case the moneys still remained in the hands of the trustee, but in the subsequent case of Ex parte Simmonds, 16 Q. B. Div. 308, a case was presented where the moneys received by a trustee through a mistake" of law had been actually distributed among the creditors. The court approved of the decision referred to, Lord Esher, M. R., observing:
“If money has, by mistake of law, come into the hands of the officer of a court of common law, the court will order him to repay it as soon as the mistake is discovered. Of course, as between litigant parties, even a court of equity would not prevent a litigant from doing a shabby thing. But I cannot help thinking that if money had come into the hands of a receiver appointed by a court of equity, through a mistake of law, the court would, when the mistake was discovered, order him to repay it.”
And with respect to the fact that the money had been distributed he remarked:
“Though the money has been divided among the creditors, the court sees that other moneys which would be applicable to the payment of dividends to the creditors are now to come into the hands of the trustee, and it has been*401 shown that no injury will he done to any one by ordering the trustee to apply this money which is coming to him to replace the other money which was paid by him in error. 1 think it is right that it should be so applied.”
And Cotton, J., said upon the same point:
“But in my opinion we must regard the funds available for distribution among the creditors under a bankruptcy or liquidation as one entire fund; and, if that fund has been erroneously increased, 1 think it is a just extension of Ex parte James to say that out of any moneys which may hereafter be in the hands of the trustee., and applicable to the payment of dividends to the creditors, ihe amount which has come into his hands by mistake ought to lie repaid.”
And Bindley, J., observes:
“What is there unjust in saying that no money shall go to them (the general creditors) until the same has been repaid to the original owner?”
In the case of Dixon v. Brown, 32 Ch. Div. 597, a testator devised real estate to his nine children, as tenants in common, with power to three of them to sell the whole, to avoid the difficulties of partition. W., one of the three, effected sales under the power, retaining more than his share of the purchase money, and went into liquidation. Further sales were effected, and out of the proceeds a further sum was paid to W.’s trustee in liquidation, in respect of, and in excess of, his share. It was held that all of the purchase moneys received by the trustee were impressed with a trust, under the law, and that W.’s equitable interest therein was liable to recoup the other benelieiaries, and, this being so, that the payment to his trustee in liquidation was made in mistake of law, and must be refunded by the trustee. The court referred to the cases of Ex parte James, In re Condon, and Ex parte Simmonds, and by .Kay, J., says:
“Tlic judges in those cases treat the assignee or trustee in bankruptcy as being an officer of the court, and lay down the rale that money paid to him in mistake of law must be repaid by him; and even if lie lias spent tiie actual money he will be ordered, according to tiie latter of those decisions, to recoup the parties entitled to tlmt money our of other of the bankrupt's assets coming into Ms hands afterward. That, as Lord Justice James said in the earlier of those cases, is because llie» court of bankruptcy, in dealing with its own officers, thinks it right to be perfectly fair, and not to regard the technical rule, which is scarcely honest in some cases. 1 am not exercising the jurisdiction of the court of bankruptcy, but the question is submitted to this court, and I have no doubt or hesitation in saying that a court of the chancery division does not consider itself bound to act upon principles less honest than the court of bankruptcy.”
The principles upon which courts of equity act with reference to following property is well stated by Mr. Justice Bradley in Frelinghuysen v. Nugent, 36 Fed. 229, 239, and his language is quoted with approval in Peters v. Bain, 133 U. S. 670, 693, 10 Sup. Ct. 354:
“Formerly,” says Mr. Justice Bradley, “the equitable right of following misapplied money or other property into the hands of parties receiving it depended upon the ability of identifying it; the equity attaching only to tiie very property misapplied. This right, was first extended to the proceeds of the property, namely, to that which was procured in place of it, by exchange, purchase, or sale; but if it became confused with other property of tiie same kind, so as not to be distinguishable., without any fault on the part of the possessor, the equity was hist. Finally, however, it Iras been held as the better*402 doctrine that confusion does not destroy the equity entirely, but converts it into a charge upon the entire mass, giving to the party injured by the unlawful diversion a priority of right over the other creditors of the possessor.”
. The like doctrine is held in National Bank v. Insurance Co., 104 U. S. 54, 68, and Peters v. Bain, 138 U. S. 670, 10 Sup. Ct. 354.
We have examined numerous cases in which the doctrine has been considered and applied, notably Thompson’s Appeal, 22 Pa. St. 16; Columbian Bank’s Estate, 147 Pa. St. 440, 23 Atl. 625, 626, 628; Freiberg v. Stoddard, 161 Pa. St. 259, 28 Atl. 1111; Neely v. Rood, 54 Mich. 134, 19 N. W. 920; Sherwood v. Bank, 94 Mich. 78, 53 N. W. 923; In re Waterbury’s Petition, Id.; Englar v. Offutt, 70 Md. 78, 16 Atl. 497; Little v. Chadwick, 151 Mass. 109, 23 N. E. 1005; Silk Co. v. Flanders, 87 Wis. 237, 58 N. W. 383; Ford v. Bank, 87 Wis. 363, 58 N. W. 766;, and Burnham v. Barth, 89 Wis. 362, 62 N. W. 96. In all these eases the trust fund did not come into the possession of the trustee, or the party from whom it was sought to be recovered. They were therefore rightly decided. But the argument of the opinions in some of them fails to recognize the modern doctrine as stated by Mr. Justice Bradley. The case of Englar v. Offutt contains a well-reasoned discussion of the question, and in line with the conclusion reached by Mr. Justice Bradley. The supreme court of Bhode Island, in Slater v. Oriental Mills (decided in 1893) 27 Atl. 443, sustains the position here asserted, and concedes the right to relief where funds remain in the estate which go to swell the. assets. The court observed :
“The rule is clear that one has an equitable right to follow and reclaim his property which has been wrongfully appropriated by another, so long as he can lind the property, or its substantial equivalent, if its form has been changed, upon the ground that such property in different form is impressed with a. trust in favor of the owner. If the trustee has mingled it with his own, he will be deemed to have used his own, rather than other’s, and so to leave the remainder under the trust, and that is a sufficient identification for the 'owner.”
Here the receiver is an officer of the law, having the assets m custodia legis. He has no interest in the fund, save to see that it shall be distributed among those entitled to it according to the highest principles of honesty and of equity. The assets of the bank received by him are, with respect to the question in hand, to b„e treated as an entirety. Those assets have been swelled by the property of the appellant wrongfully obtained by the bank, and which went into the possession .of the receivers. That in the payment of dividends he has disbursed the actual money so received can make no difference, so long as assets remain out of which restitution can be made. The creditors have received that to which they were not entitled, and that which belonged to the appellant. If restitution be made out of the assets still remaining, the creditors will receive no less than that to which they were originally entitled,, and the appellant will only receive that which was its due.- To compass such a result is the highest equity, since otherwise the appellant will be deprived of its own, and the general creditors will receive that to which they have no right. The de