Beacon Trust Co. v. Dolan

27 F.2d 247, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3376
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJune 28, 1928
Docket2201
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 27 F.2d 247 (Beacon Trust Co. v. Dolan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beacon Trust Co. v. Dolan, 27 F.2d 247, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3376 (1st Cir. 1928).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Circuit Judge.

This is a petition to review the judgment of the District Court of the United States for the District of Massachusetts, affirming the ruling of the referee in bankruptcy, denying the claim of the petitioner to certain funds and property in the possession of the trustee of the bankrupt.

The facts as found by the referee, so far as material, are as follows:

The bankrupt, James Millar Company, had from time to time made loans at the Beacon Trust Company, the petitioner here, for which it gave its promissory notes, secured by an assignment of accounts reeeivable. When a loan was made, the bankrupt provided the bank with duplicate invoices or bills on which there was an assignment, and when these accounts were paid to the bankrupt it turned the money it received over to the bank.

On February 18, 1926, the bankrupt needed money to meet its pay roll. It had no actual accounts to be assigned, but did have orders which it was to fill. The bankrupt had in process of manufacture shoes to fill these orders, and applied to the bank for a loan, offering as security a list of these unfilled orders shown upon production sheets, containing, with other data, a list of the lots of shoes for which an order had been given. Each of these lots, as it was being made up in the process of manufacture, had attached a tag, or tags, with an identifying number, which number was entered on the production sheets, duplicates of which were assigned to the bank. By means of these tags and identification numbers), each lot of shoes and the materials needed to make them could at all times be traced and located in the bankrupt’s factory and connected up with its proper production sheets, and only by reference to the production sheets could the shoes manufactured to fill the order be identified. When the order had been completed and the • shoes shipped out and billed, the bankrupt assigned a duplicate of the bills rendered to the bank, which was intended as a substitution for the production sheets which had previously been assigned.

March 22,1926, the bank loaned the bankrupt $11,000; March 23, $6,000; and April 12, $6,COO — making a total of $23,000, and the method was followed which has been described. The price of the shoes shown on the production sheets delivered to the bank in connection with said loans aggregated $26,- *248 174.60. The shoes enumerated on said sheets were subsequently sold by the receiver in bankruptcy and the proceeds of said sale, amounting to $6,253.10, are held subject to the order of the court.

The bankrupt finding itself unable to go on further with the business without more money, and the bank evidently being unwilling to furnish the same, its counsel prepared a letter, signed by the bank and delivered to the superintendent of the bankrupt, directing him, to take possession, as agent of the bank, of shoes pledged to secure the bank loans, and which “had been already set aside and tagged.” This letter was delivered to the superintendent of the bankrupt at the bankrupt’s factory on the morning of April 15, 1926, and on the same afternoon an involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed by the bankrupt. Counsel for the bank acted also as counsel for the petitioning creditors.

The referee has found- that the statement in the letter of instructions to the superintendent to take possession of the shoes that “had already been set aside and tagged” was erroneous, and that the superintendent did not tag finished shoes, but had his subordinates mark with tags certain unfinished shoes with the initials of the bank; that the only thing the bank did to get possession of these disputed shoes was to direct the superintendent to take possession of them, and the tagging of the unfinished shoes was started about 5 hours before the petition in bankruptcy was filed.

The referee has further found that the bank made the loans to the bankrupt “in good faith and in the belief at the time that it was to secure some kind of a lien on these unfinished shoes,” that the bank acquired no lien by the original transaction and “was not benefitted by anything that happened on the day of bankruptcy,” and that no lien was created by the original transaction, which did not constitute a mortgage or a pledge.

The findings and ruling of the referee were affirmed by the District Court.

The errors assigned are, in substance, that the court erred in failing to find that the petitioner had an equitable lien on unfinished shoes, and that the court erred in failing to establish petitioner’s right to the sum of $6,253.10 realized from their sale, together with any interest that has accrued thereon.

The bank contends that it had an equitable lien upon the material to be used in manufacturing the shoes to fill the orders which were assigned to it. The record discloses, and the production sheets, which are exhibits in the ease, show that all of this material bore an identifying number, which connected it up with the particular lot of shoes in the manufacture of which it was to be used, and the referee has so found. The referee has also found that the loans in question were made by the bank in good faith and believing that it secured a lien upon the unfinished shoes.

Whether the bank secured any equitable lien by what was done is determined by the law of Massachusetts. See Thompson v. Fairbanks, 196 U. S. 516, 522, 25 S. Ct. 306, 49 L. Ed. 577; Hiscock v. Varick Bank of New York, 206 U. S. 28, 38, 27 S. Ct. 681, 51 L. Ed. 945; In re Robert Jenkins Corporation (C. C. A.) 17 F.(2d) 555.

An equitable lien is recognized under the decisions of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts. In Westall v. Wood, 212 Mass. 540, 99 N. E. 325, the defendant had executed to the plaintiff a mortgage upon real estate for money loaned by the plaintiff for the purchase of land and the erection of a building thereon, and obtained from the plaintiff an order to buy materials for the erection of the building. The plaintiff received an assurance from the defendant that the materials purchased should be used in the erection of a building on the mortgaged premises. It was agreed that the money loaned to purchase the materials should constitute a part of the consideration of the mortgage, but there was no specific agreement that a lien should attach to the materials. The material was delivered upon the land, but later the defendant removed a large part of it which he claimed to hold as his own. The court said, at page 544 (99 N. E. 325):

“But an equitable lien does not of necessity rest exclusively upon an express agreement. It may arise from circumstances of such nature as to require the presumption upon general considerations of justice as between those conducting commercial transactions according to a reasonable standard of integrity that an equitable lien was meant. Equity looks at the substance, and not at the form. If the arrangement between the parties, interpreted in the light of the conditions in which they were placed, indicates a contemporaneous intention to- adjust their rights upon a basis which can be established only by resórt to the equitable principle of lien or pledge, then, in the absence of an intervening adversary interest, such an intent will be executed in chancery.”

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Bluebook (online)
27 F.2d 247, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beacon-trust-co-v-dolan-ca1-1928.