Bassett, Bank Comm. v. City Bank Trust

5 Conn. Super. Ct. 450, 5 Conn. Supp. 450, 1938 Conn. Super. LEXIS 8
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1938
DocketFile #42658
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 Conn. Super. Ct. 450 (Bassett, Bank Comm. v. City Bank Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bassett, Bank Comm. v. City Bank Trust, 5 Conn. Super. Ct. 450, 5 Conn. Supp. 450, 1938 Conn. Super. LEXIS 8 (Colo. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

CORNELL, J.

The application is occasioned by an order of this court made August 16, 1932. The operative effect of this was to segregate certain assets of the receivership estate of an ascertained value of $14,018,209.42, “to be held for liquidation or other disposition by the Receiver for the sole and exclusive benefit” of the depositors in the Savings Department of defendant bank, “free from and discharged from any; and all claims, rights or equities of all depositors in the Commercial Department” and creditors of defendant corporation and “from any and all rights i and equities of redemption of defendant corporation or its stockholders.” The order, also,, provided: “that the depositors in the Savings Department . . .. *453 have no further claim against and no further right or interest in any other assets of defendant corporation in the custody of this court or against the defendant corporation”. Other provisions were included, the effect of which was to relieve the Savings Department of any interest in a claim arising from the loan of funds of that department to other banks as to which such banks claimed a set-off; to cancel certain interdepartmental accounts between the Savings and the Commercial departments, and to relieve the Savings Department funds from appropriation for payment of any part of the receivership expenses incurred to July 30, 1932, which latter was fixed as the effective date of operation of the order. Other provisions of the order consistent with the dominant purpose of the latter need not be referred to here.

It is alleged that since that time the liquidation of the defendant’s estate has proceeded in accordance therewith, the proceeds from that of the Savings Department being paid from time to time to the depositors therein and those of the Commercial Department to the depositors of the latter, with the result that the total dividends thus far distributed to the Savings Department depositors is 66% of the total of such deposits and that paid to the Commercial Department depositors aggregates 80% of the total of the latter.

It is further averred that there is a likelihood that if such method of distribution be adhered to, to the completion of liquidation of all of the defendant’s assets, “there will result a situation in which the depositors of the Savings Department will receive a smaller percentage of their claims than will the depositors of the Commercial Department which your applicant believes was not contemplated at the time of the passage of the . . . order”.

Aside from this general allegation that the effect of the order, viewed from experience in its actual operation is inequitable to the depositors of the Savings Department and results in a distribution contrary to statute, it is alleged that the order was the product of certain mistakes of fact which may be summarized as follows: (1) that it was predicated on an assumption “of the feasibility” of effecting a sale to or combination with some other bank or banks of the assets of the Commercial Department and (2) a transfer of the Savings Department assets to a liquidating corporation or a trust department of another bank corporation for liquidation — neither of which events were practicable and (3) the estimation of *454 the value of the contingent claim of savings department depos' itors against the general assets of the defendant corporation was erroneously computed upon an appraisal made at the out' set of the receivership, whereas had it been predicated upon market values as of July 30, 1932, the estimated value of said claim would have been $236,127.79 in excess of that.

In view of the premise upon which the conclusions reached here, proceed, it will be unnecessary to discuss the subject matter of the third basis for a finding of mistake. In short, the determination, too, is that no such character of mistake as is required in equity to justify revocation or modification oc' curred. The testimony taken at the hearing following which the order was made, furnishes a definite portrayal of an un' usually difficult situation with which the court was faced and a studied and radical effort to cope with it. In brief, and to generalise, it was evident that the liquidation of the assets of the defendant corporation under the financial and economic conditions which prevailed at the time, was prophetic, not only of delay in distribution of dividends to depositors in the Savings Department, particularly, but, while hazarding fair realisation upon the assets, also threatened a demoralisation of realty values beyond that already existing and the imperilment of the fortunes of thousands of property owners — to say noth' ing of other reasonably apprehensible distressful results.

It fully appears that this threatened crisis impelled leading members of the Bar and of finance as well as the then present, and a former State Bank Commissioner, to join with the re' ceiver and his counsel in an endeavor to find a solution which would, to the greatest possible extent, tend to accomplish the dual purpose of (1) obviating, or at least, mitigating, the consequences adverted to supra and (2) assure to the depositors of both departments of the bank an ultimately greater security than would, otherwise, be the case. The plan, or hope (which' ever it was) conceived (a) the sale, or more probably, the combining, of the Commercial Department with some other bank or banks and (b) the liquidation, over a period of years, of the assets of the Savings Department through the instru' mentality of a corporation organised for that purpose or by the trust department of one of the local banks, but under con' ditions which would assure the income ad interim in such assets for the benefit of the savings depositors and a reasonable cost of administration.

The sine qua non of the success of such a plan, was, of *455 course, the complete separation of the two departments in such manner, in effect, that each would become a distinct entity with a definite identity of its own. This, in turn, meant the cutting off of the contingent right which the depositors in the Savings Department possessed, to share in a distribution of the proceeds of liquidation of the general corporate funds in event that the assets of the Savings Department proved insufficient to pay their claims in full. General Statutes (1930) §§3908, 3935; Lippitt vs. Thames Loan & Trust Co., 88 Conn. 185, 190, 192, 193; Bassett vs. City Bank & Trust Company, 115 Conn. 1, 28; Perry vs. Commercial Bank & Trust Company, 119 Conn. 115, 124, 126. The order makes such a segregation, and after providing for the adjustment of certain items not important to the present inquiry, provides, in effect that the depositors of neither department shall henceforth have any “right or interest in any other assets of defendant corporation in the custody of this court or against defendant corporation”.

The terminology of this portion of the order which expresses the ultimate purpose, is, it is quite true, absolute and unconditional.

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Related

Stempel v. Middletown Trust Co.
7 Conn. Super. Ct. 205 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Conn. Super. Ct. 450, 5 Conn. Supp. 450, 1938 Conn. Super. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bassett-bank-comm-v-city-bank-trust-connsuperct-1938.