Bank of America National Trust & Savings Ass'n v. California Savings & Commercial Bank

22 P.2d 704, 218 Cal. 261, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 489
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1933
DocketDocket No. L.A. 13645.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 22 P.2d 704 (Bank of America National Trust & Savings Ass'n v. California Savings & Commercial Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of America National Trust & Savings Ass'n v. California Savings & Commercial Bank, 22 P.2d 704, 218 Cal. 261, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 489 (Cal. 1933).

Opinion

THE COURT.

The question presented by this appeal is whether the Bank of America National Trust & Savings Association, a national banking association, and Jose Figueroa and Edward G. Brittingham, to. whom the defendant California Savings & Commercial Bank is admittedly indebted in the sum of $27,674.44, are general depositors and creditors of defendant bank or are entitled to receive payment in full as preferred creditors, or special depositors, from the cash in its vaults on July 23, 1930, when it was taken over as an insolvent institution by Will C. Wood, Superintendent of Banks of the state of California. Edward Rainey, successor to Will C. Wood as Superintendent of Banks, has been substituted as a defendant herein in place of Wood. The Superior Court of San Diego County, by the judgment appealed from, has decreed that the sum of $16,000 was deposited for a special purpose, and that Figueroa and Brittingham, and Bank of America are preferred creditors as to said sum, but general creditors for the balance of their claim in the amount of $11,674.44. The Bank of America and- Figueroa and Brittingham have appealed from said judgment in so far as it denies them a preference for the sum of $11,674.44. The defendant Superintendent of Banks concedes that the Bank of America and Figueroa and Brittingham are entitled in the aggregate to a general claim for $27,674.44, but appeals from that portion of the judgment which allows said creditors a preferred claim for $16,000.

By the complaint as originally filed, the Bank of America sought to have its status as a preferred creditor of the California Savings & Commercial Bank established, or, failing such relief, to obtain a personal judgment against Figueroa and Brittingham for the sum of $15,075.62, later reduced to $9,226.73. Figueroa and Brittingham denied personal liability to the Bank of America for any sum whatsoever, and by cross-complaint asserted a preferred claim for $27,674.44 *267 against the California Savings & Commercial Bank, and further claimed, as against the Bank of America, that by reason of its participation in the three-party transaction which will he fully related hereafter said bank had rendered itself personally liable to them for said sum. By stipulation the plaintiff Bank of America dismissed as to defendants Figueroa and Brittingham, and Figueroa and Brittingham as cross-complainants dismissed as to Bank of America as cross-defendant. It was agreed that the case should go to trial on the sole issue of whether said Bank of America and Figueroa and Brittingham were entitled to recover $27,-674.44 from the California Savings & Commercial Bank as general creditors or on a trust or preferential basis, and that any judgment entered in their favor should be a joint judgment. The rights of Figueroa and Brittingham and the Bank of America inter se were made the subject of a separate suit filed in Los Angeles County. We are this day affirming the judgment in favor of Bank of America in said Los Angeles County action, L. A. No. 13611 in this court.

The case herein was tried on a stipulation of facts from which it appears that the rights of the parties are based on a tri-party contract executed by them on April 24, 1930, and herein denominated the exhibit A contract. Figueroa and Brittingham, dealers in cotton, are referred to as the “Shippers”. They needed credit to finance their operations in the buying and selling of cotton on a large scale, which the Bank of America of California, to which plaintiff Bank of America National Trust & Savings Association is successor, was able to extend to them. Said Bank of America of California, with its principal office in the city of Los Angeles, is referred to in said contract as the “Bank”, and the defendant California Savings & Commercial Bank, with its place of business in the city of San Diego, is referred to throughout said contract as the “Trustee”. The Bank of America therein agreed to extend to Figueroa and Brittingham, who appear to have been copartners, “acceptance credits” not to exceed $160,000 during the six months’ period from April 21, 1930, to October 15, 1930. This figure was later reduced to $90,000 by consent. The acceptance credit was to be made available to Figueroa and Brittingham in the following manner: As they needed funds they were to deliver to the California Savings & Commercial *268 Bank at San Diego sixty-day drafts drawn on the Bank of America by themselves,. Figueroa and Brittingham, payable to their own order and by them indorsed in blank. The San Diego bank was to transmit said drafts to the Los Angeles office of the Bank of America, for acceptance and discount and sale by said Bank of America as prime banker’s acceptances. The agreement provided that the proceeds of the acceptances should be “deposited with the Bank [Bank of America] to the credit of the Trustee [San Diego bank] for the account of the Shippers [Figueroa and Brittingham]

By accepting said drafts prior to sale by it, the Bank of America rendered itself liable to the persons who became the holders thereof. Figueroa and Brittingham agreed to pay all drafts punctually at maturity, and for this purpose to deposit with the Bank of America at least twenty-four hours before noon of the day of payment Los Angeles funds equal to the amount of maturing drafts. To secure performance of this obligation of Figueroa and Brittingham to the Bank of America, the exhibit A contract contains provision for security to be delivered to the California Savings & Commercial Bank as “Trustee”. It is" therein provided that the Shippers should deliver to the California Savings & Commercial Bank “$24,000 in lawful money of the United States”, and also negotiable warehouse receipts and bills of lading evidencing cotton owned by them in such quantities that the value of said cotton, plus the $24,000, should at all times equal Í15 per cent of the amount of outstanding drafts drawn by the Shippers and accepted by the Bank of America. The value of said cotton was to be determined from the price on the New York Cotton Exchange.

The $24,000 represents 15 per cent of the total acceptance credit of $160,000, and the sum of $16,000, to which the deposit was later reduced, is approximately 18 per cent of $90,000, the amount to which the total acceptance credit was reduced by consent.

The agreement further provided that if at any time the value of the “cotton pledged”, plus the deposit in lawful money, fell below 115 per cent of the amount of drafts outstanding, the Bank of America was authorized to direct the California Savings & Commercial Bank, as Trustee, to sell a sufficient quantity to restore the required margin in *269 the event that the Shippers failed to deliver additional security in the form, of cash and warehouse receipts or bills of lading for cotton. If the Shippers failed to pay, at maturity, any draft accepted for their benefit, defaulted in respect of any of their undertakings in the agreement contained, made an assignment for the benefit of creditors or went into bankruptcy or receivership, the Bank of America was authorized to sell the “collateral pledged” by itself or by the Trustee, acting under the bank’s direction, at public or private sale. Any surplus realized from the sale over and above the amount due the bank on acceptances was to be paid to the Shippers.

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Bluebook (online)
22 P.2d 704, 218 Cal. 261, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-america-national-trust-savings-assn-v-california-savings-cal-1933.