Dodson v. Lumpkin

205 F. Supp. 352, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4278
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedMay 15, 1962
DocketCiv. A. No. 510
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 205 F. Supp. 352 (Dodson v. Lumpkin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dodson v. Lumpkin, 205 F. Supp. 352, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4278 (W.D. Va. 1962).

Opinion

MICHIE, District Judge.

This suit was instituted by T. Ryland Dodson (hereinafter called the Trustee), Trustee in Bankruptcy of Temple Men’s Shop, Inc. (hereinafter called the Bankrupt), against J. C. Lumpkin (hereinafter called Lumpkin) and Security Bank and Trust Company, a Danville, Virginia, bank (hereinafter called the Creditor Bank), to recover a preference alleged to have been given by the Bankrupt to Lumpkin and by Lumpkin turned over [353]*353(“converted”) to the Creditor Bank under circumstances which, it is alleged, did not constitute the Creditor Bank a bona fide purchaser from Lumpkin for a present fair equivalent value.

The facts are not in dispute and the only issue is whether the facts do show that Lumpkin “converted” the preference in a transaction with the Creditor Bank in which it was not a bona fide purchaser for a present fair equivalent value.

Lumpkin was an officer, director and majority stockholder of the Bankrupt. On September 26 1960 he obtained from the Creditor Bank a personal loan in the amount of $6,000.00 on his own note endorsed by his father and secured by his father’s savings account in the Creditor Bank. The sum so secured by Lumpkin was turned over by him to the Bankrupt in return for its unsecured demand note.

The affairs of the bankrupt evidently went from bad to worse and on May 19, 1961 it filed its petition in bankruptcy and was adjudicated a bankrupt. But on May 11, 1961, eight days before it filed in bankruptcy, the Bankrupt gave Lumpkin its check in the sum of $6,045.00 in full payment of its note held by Lumpkin. On the following day Lumpkin deposited this check of the Bankrupt in his personal checking account in the American National Bank and Trust Company at Dan-ville (hereinafter called Lumpkin’s Bank) and on the same day he drew his check on Lumpkin’s Bank in the sum of $5,-990.00 payable to the Creditor Bank in payment of his note held by the Creditor Bank as above mentioned and his note was thereupon marked paid and delivered to him and his father’s savings account was released as security for the note.

Prior to the deposit by Lumpkin in Lumpkin's Bank of the sum of $6,045.00 received from the Bankrupt his balance in that bank was only $216.31 so that after the deposit it was $6,261.31 which was reduced to $271.31 when Lumpkin’s check of $5,990.00 to the Creditor Bank cleared, there having been no other deposits made or checks cleared in the meantime. It is obvious therefore that the source of the money paid by Lumpkin to the Creditor Bank was, except as to $216.-31 thereof, the money received by Lump-kin from the Bankrupt the day before.

Soon after his appointment the Trustee instituted this suit against Lumpkin and the Creditor Bank, joining the latter on the theory that the subject matter of the preference given Lumpkin had been “converted” by him to the Creditor Bank under circumstances that did not make the Creditor Bank a bona fide purchaser for a present fair equivalent value.

Lumpkin in his answer denied that the payment to him was a voidable preference but at the hearing he admitted that it was. However there seems to be no controversy as to the fact that the Creditor Bank had no knowledge with respect to the affairs of the Bankrupt or of Lumpkin at the time it received payment from Lumpkin of the note he had given the Creditor Bank.

Clearly the Trustee has a right to recover from Lumpkin. However, though there is nothing in the record as to Lump-kin’s financial condition, the Trustee continues to press his claim against the Creditor Bank from which it may be assumed that Lumpkin is insolvent since otherwise the preference could be recovered from him and the Trustee would have no claim against the Creditor Bank.

The legal question arises under § 60, sub. b, of the Bankruptcy Act (11 U.S.C. A. § 96, sub. b) which reads, insofar as material, as follows:

“(b) Any such preference may be avoided by the trustee if the creditor receiving it or to be benefited thereby or his agent acting with reference thereto has, at the time when the transfer is made, reasonable cause to believe that the debtor is insolvent. Where the preference is voidable, the trustee may recover the property or, if it has been converted, its value from any person who has received or converted such property, except a bona-fide purchaser from or lienor of the debtor’s transferee for a present fair equivalent value * *

[354]*354Since the preference apparently cannot be recovered from Lumpkin the Trustee contends in the alternative, first, that the Creditor Bank received “the property” which was the subject of the preference and that that property can therefore be recovered from the Creditor Bank, or, second, that if it be considered that Lumpkin converted the property then he did so when he delivered his own check to the Creditor Bank and that in such case the Trustee can recover its value from the Creditor Bank on the ground that the Creditor Bank was not a “bonafide purchaser from or lienor of the debtor’s transferee for a present fair equivalent value”.

Although neither counsel nor the court have been able to find any authority directly in point, since apparently no such contention has ever been made heretofore, the court has come to the conclusion that the Trustee cannot recover on either of the alternative grounds above stated.

I.

The Contention that the Secured Creditor Received the “Property”.

The Trustee contends that Lumpkin did not “convert” the property which was the subject of the preference but passed it on to the Creditor Bank and that the Trustee can therefore recover “the property” from the Creditor Bank.

The word “converted” is not defined in the Bankruptcy Act and its meaning has not been discussed in any reported ease that I have been able to find. It is not defined in Black’s Legal Dictionary. Of the seventeen definitions given in Webster’s New International Dictionary, Second Edition, Unabridged (many dealing with such unrelated meanings as a spiritual conversion, etc.) the most appropriate for present purposes seem to be the following:

“5. To change or turn from one state to another; to alter in form, substance, or quality; to transform; transmute.
******
“7. To exchange for some specified equivalent; as to convert goods into money.
******
“12. Finance. To change (one form of security obligation, or the like) into an equivalent of another nature.”

Especially the latter two definitions, Nos. 7 and 12, seem most nearly to define the meaning which must be intended by the use of the term in § 60, sub. b of the Bankruptcy Act.

I feel therefore that the Creditor Bank definitely did not receive the property which Lumpkin received. What Lumpkin received was the check of an insolvent firm. If he had held it long enough he would not have been able to collect it in full. He very promptly “converted” it by depositing it in his own bank account, thus changing “one form of security obligation * * * into an equivalent of another nature”. This was conversion number one for, whereas before he held a claim against an insolvent corporation, he now had converted it into a claim against a solvent bank. However he again converted the property when he drew his own check against his own bank account in Lumpkin’s bank and handed it to the Creditor Bank.

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Bluebook (online)
205 F. Supp. 352, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodson-v-lumpkin-vawd-1962.