Doerschuck v. Mellon

55 F.2d 741, 60 App. D.C. 383, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 4121
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedDecember 21, 1931
DocketNo. 5402 (Equity No. 50033)
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 55 F.2d 741 (Doerschuck v. Mellon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doerschuck v. Mellon, 55 F.2d 741, 60 App. D.C. 383, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 4121 (D.D.C. 1931).

Opinion

GRONER, Associate Justice.

' This is an appeal from decrees dismissing on the merits plaintiff’s bill of complaint, and also the bill of complaint of a number of interveners asking the same relief. The facts as shown by the bill may be epitomized as follows:

Gustave Doersehuek, a citizen and resident of New York state, purchased in September, 1916, from Zimmerman & Forshay, bankers in New York, a block of German government bonds. (Appellants are his executors; we shall call them plaintiff.) The German government delivered the bonds to the Deutsche Bank in Berlin, Germany, for the account of Zimmerman & Forshay, where they remained to the end of the war, and, as the interest became due, the German government deposited the amount due with the Deutsche Bank in exchange for'maturing interest coupons then detached. The fund so accruing remained in the Deutsche Bank to the credit of Zimmerman & Forshay. In the latter part of 1919, the Deutsche Bank delivered the bonds to Zimmerman & Forshay, and Zimmerman & Forshay delivered same to plaintiff and to each of the intervening plaintiffs in accordance with their respective interests, but the German enemy property custodian, for reasons which do not appear, refused to permit the money to the credit of the interest account to be drawn on. Zimmerman & For-shay, apparently in order to make complete delivery to its customers, then purchased German marks at the rate of 4 cents per mark, and opened a new account to their credit in the Berlin bank, drew on this account in favor of the purchasing bondholders for the amount of accrued interest due each bondholder, and delivered their cheek on this private account contemporaneously with delivery of the bonds.

In August, 1922, by Agreement between the United States and Germany (42 Stat. 2200), a commission was established to determine the claims of American citizens against the German government and German nationals under the terms of the 1921 Treaty between the United States and Germany (42 Stat. 1939), and the Treaty of Versailles. To this commission Zimmerman & Forshay presented a claim for the value in United States money, as of a time prior to the German military collapse, of the marks put to their credit in the Deutsche Bank by the German government, but which had been at all times thereafter withheld, as we have noted, and as a result of which their value had greatly depreciated. In 1923, Zimmerman & For-shay were adjudged involuntary bankrupts in the Southern District of New York, and, in a composition effected with creditors, caused the defendant Z. & F. Assets & Realization Corporation of Delaware to be formed for the purpose of taking over by assignment certain of their assets for liquidation and distribution to their creditors, and among the assets so transferred was the claim of Zimmerman & Forshay pending before the German American Commission.

The commission in January, 1927, made an award to Z. & F. Corporation of $817,-134.84, with interest at 5 per cent, from January 10,1920, which sum represented the value in United States money of the interest coupon account in the Deutsche Bank on the basis of 16 cents in United States currency for each German mark. A part of the fund so awarded was paid into the United States Treasury, and $400,000 thereof was paid by the Secretary of the Treasury to the Z. & F. Corporation; but no part was paid or distributed to the plaintiff or the other holders of German bonds. The bill alleges that another payment was about to be made to Z. & F. Corporation which would be distributed by it without regard to the plaintiff’s rights, and that no recovery thereof could be had of the Z. & F. Corporation because it is without financial responsibility, and has no other assets than the claim to said fund. The bill then alleges that the award and the money paid into and to be paid into the Treasury on account of the award is a trust fund in which the Z. & F. Corporation has no interest by virtue of the assignment to it, except to the extent of the value at the time of the payment by Zimmerman & Forshay of the marks paid to the plaintiff and other German bondholders, and that the excess, amounting to 12 cents in American currency for each German mark, though allowed by the commission in the name of Zimmerman & Forshay, is a trust fund which belongs to plaintiff and the other holders of German bonds purchased from Zimmerman & Forshay; that the United States claims no interest in the fund; and that the payment thereof to the rightful own[743]*743er by tbe defendant Andrew W. Mellon, Secretary of tbe Treasury, is purely a ministerial duty.

The prayer of the bill is that the Secretary of the Treasury be required to show cause why he should not be enjoined from paying over the balance of the fund to Z. & F. Assets Corporation, that a receiver be appointed to hold the fund pending the determination of the ownership, and that the court hold that the fund is a trust fund upon which plaintiff and others similarly situated have a lien, etc.

Stated in a little more condensed form, the bill alleges that Zimmerman & Forshay, prior to American entry into the World War, sold German bonds to various investors in the United States and received constructive delivery of the bonds at the Deutsche Bank in Berlin and actual delivery after the termination of hostilities but prior to the peace treaty between United States and Germany, but that delivery of the interest money, which had accrued and which belonged to the purchasers of the bonds as of the date of delivery of the bonds and which had been deposited in the Deutsche Bank to the credit of Zimmerman & Forshay, was withheld by the German government, so that Zimmerman & Forshay were only able then to make delivery to their customers of the bonds with the accrued interest coupons detached. That in these circumstances, Zimmerman & Forshay, without notice, voluntarily purchased German marks equal to the accrued interest and paid same to the respective bondholders, and, having thus voluntarily satisfied the interest requirements of, the bonds sold by them, claimed the right, by purchase or subrogation, not only to the detained fund in bank to their credit, but as well to the claim for damages for its detention, and, as a result of such claim, the defendant Z; & F. Corporation, as their assignee, was awarded a premium of 12 cents per mark over the cost of the marks disbursed by them to the holders of the bonds.

The learned trial judge was of opinion that in these circumstances the bill filed by the plaintiff and by the interveners was without equity, because “when this payment was made, the plaintiff [neither] protested or made any claim that he was not receiving all that he was entitled to; nor that he was in any way misled or deceived by Zimmerman & Forshay; nor that he received any less than he would have received had the fund been turned over to Zimmerman & Forshay at the time when the latter gave him the cheek for interest.”

We find ourselves unable to agree in this conclusion.

Plaintiff (and interveners) was just as much the owner of the German bonds purchased from Zimmerman & Forshay as though he had physical possession of them, and this, of course, is equally true of the interest coupons attached to the bonds.

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Bluebook (online)
55 F.2d 741, 60 App. D.C. 383, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 4121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doerschuck-v-mellon-dcd-1931.