Development Bank v. Reed

5 Am. Samoa 2d 135
CourtHigh Court of American Samoa
DecidedAugust 17, 1987
DocketCA No. 110-85
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Am. Samoa 2d 135 (Development Bank v. Reed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering High Court of American Samoa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Development Bank v. Reed, 5 Am. Samoa 2d 135 (amsamoa 1987).

Opinion

On Motion for Judgment against Garnishees:

Plaintiff, the Development Bank, had judgment in the amount of $85,995.73 against defendants Frank and Leleaga Reed. On May 1, 1987, plaintiff served a notice of garnishment on the Credit Union, forbidding it to pay any debt it might owe to the Reeds and requiring it to retain any of. the Reeds’ property that might be in its possession. The notice also required the Credit Union either to answer a set of interrogatories propounded by the Development Bank or to appear in court to answer [137]*137questions about any property and debts of the Reeds.

The Credit Union eventually appeared in court and admitted that both of the Reeds had savings accounts in the Credit Union, but asserted that the bulk of the funds in these accounts were pledged to secure loans to the Reeds from the Credit Union itself. The Credit Union maintains that the pledge gives it a lien prior to that of the Development Bank.

The Development Bank maintains that no law of American Samoa provides for a such lien; that the Credit Union did not comply with A.S.C.A. § 27.1510(2), providing that certain security interests are ineffective unless recorded in the office of the Territorial Registrar; and that the Credit Union lost any lien it might have had by giving Mr. Reed "constructive possession" of the funds and letting him "exercise dominion" over them by using them to pay off the Credit Union loan on May 18.

No territorial statute provides for the security device known as pledge. Indeed, there are hardly any statutes in American Samoa dealing with secured transactions. This does not mean, however, that it is impossible to have any such transactions. Rather, they are governed by common law principles except where those principles have been modified by statute or are otherwise inappropriate to local conditions. See A.S.C.A. § 1.0201 (reception of the common law in American Samoa); Tung v. Ah Sam, 4 A.S.R. 764 (1971) (in construing the common law, the High Court should ordinarily follow the Restatement of the Law).

Pledge was an institution firmly established in the common law. The first section of the Restatement of Security (1941) provides:

A pledge is a security interest in a chattel or in an intangible represented by a bailment for the purpose of securing the payment of a debt or the performance of some other duty.

As long as the pledgee retains possession of the thing pledged, he has a lien on it superior to those of judgment creditors. See Restatement of Security § 28 (1941). The essence of pledge is that the pledgor retains title to the property while transferring possession to the pledgee in order to [138]*138secure a debt. Intangibles (such as the funds in the Reeds’ savings accounts) can be the subject of a pledge, but it is harder in such cases to determine who has "possession" of them. Courts have generally found sufficient possession of an intangible if the pledgor effects the transfer of an "indispensable instrument" that stands for the right to the intangible. If there is no such instrument, the pledgee must establish that he had actual control over the funds to the exclusion of the pledgor.

In this case the Credit Union has established that it had control over the pledged funds. According to the terms of its loan contracts with the Reeds and other borrowers, the borrower must deposit money into his savings account every two weeks by automatic payroll deduction. These deposits continue until the amount in the savings account is equal to half of the amount borrowed. During this time and thereafter the borrower must also make automatic payroll deposits to pay off the loan itself. All funds in the savings account are frozen --- that is, no withdrawals are allowed--until the amount due on the loan has been reduced to an amount lower than the amount in the savings account. At that point the borrower may withdraw only the excess; funds must be left in the account that are sufficient to secure the entire remaining balance on the loan.

This procedure establishes the pledgor’s dominion to our satisfaction. It is quite similar to other arrangements that have been held to create liens superior to those of judgment creditors. In Duncan Box & Lumber Co. v. Applied Energies, 270 S.E.2d 140 (W. Va. 1980), a bank made a business loan to the defendant for the purchase of a tract of land for subdivision and resale. A deed of trust served as security. When the defendant sought further financing to bankroll the actual resale, the bank required additional security in the form of a "reserve account." Defendant would maintain a balance of at least 25% of the unpaid debt and the bank would retain exclusive control of the account. The bank filed no financing statement to memorialize this security interest. After the defendant obtained the loans and incurred debts to third parties, it went out of business. A third party judgment creditor sought to satisfy its judgment by attaching the funds in the reserve account. After finding that ”[t]he agreement creating the reserve account was essentially a common law pledge," the court held the bank’s [139]*139interest in the reserve account superior to that of the judgment creditors. 270 S.E.2d at 142.

The Duncan Box court noted that the pledge of a bank account is assessed under common law principles rather than the provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code or other statutes. Even though there was no "indispensable instrument," the agreement was "unmistakably intended to give the bank collateral security." Id. at 145. The defendant was required to make periodic payments into the account and had no access to deposited funds; only the bank could reach them.

The court further observed that it would be difficult if not impossible for a bank to prove a pledge interest in a bank account to which the depositor had withdrawal rights. 270 S.E.2d at 146 n. 11. Cissell v. First National Bank of Cincinnati, 476 F. Supp. 474 (S.D. Ohio 1978), also suggests this distinction. In discussing a statutory "security by possession" mechanism "akin to the common law ’pledge’," the court found no security interest in a bank account from which the debtor freely withdrew. Id. at 490-91. The court stated two important caveats. It stressed that its holding applied only to the facts as they existed before the parties had established a "collateral" account, more like that involved in the present case, which might have fit the requirements of a common law pledge. Id. at 491 n.9. Furthermore, the court declined to discuss the possibility of a security interest in an account containing funds alleged to be security commingled with other funds.

Duncan Box and Cissell indicate that funds held in the exclusive control of the creditor as security for a debt establish a common-law pledge even in jurisdictions in which the law of secured transactions is mostly statutory. This is part of the answer to the Bank’s contention that the Credit Union’s- lien is ineffective for failure to comply with the recordation statute. The rest of the answer is suggested by a perusal of the language and structure of the statute itself. A.S.C.A. § 27.1510 provides that no "mortgage, bill of sale, conditional sales contract, deed of trust or conveyance of personal property which is not accompanied bv a permanent delivery thereof to the vendee" is valid “as to persons who do not have actual notice" unless certain conditions are met.

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Related

Duncan Box & Lumber Co. v. Applied Energies, Inc.
270 S.E.2d 140 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1980)
Cissell v. First Nat. Bank of Cincinnati
476 F. Supp. 474 (S.D. Ohio, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Am. Samoa 2d 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/development-bank-v-reed-amsamoa-1987.