Doggett v. Chelsea Trust Co.

73 F.2d 614, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 2773
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedNovember 10, 1934
Docket2908
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 73 F.2d 614 (Doggett v. Chelsea Trust Co.) 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
Doggett v. Chelsea Trust Co., 73 F.2d 614, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 2773 (1st Cir. 1934).

Opinion

WILSON, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the District Court of Massachusetts affirming the orders of a referee in bankruptcy.

From the pleadings set forth in the record, it appears that the H. T. West Company, which hereinafter will be referred to as the West Co., filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy on August 23, 1932, and on the same day it was adjudicated a bankrupt, and the case was referred to a referee in bankruptcy. On September 20, 1932, the appellant was appointed trustee of the estate of the bankrupt.

On September 14 the appellee, which hereinafter will be referred to as the Trust Company, filed a petition with the referee setting forth that in the regular course of business it had loaned the bankrupt money and taken notes as evidence of said loan with an assignment of accounts receivable as collateral security; that the trustee since his appointment had collected said accounts re *615 ceivable and had refused to turn over iho sums so collected to the Trust Company, and prayed that the trustee be ordered to turn over the proceeds thereof to the Trust Company.

To this petition the trustee answered, admitting Hint lie had collected certain of the accounts receivable, but with ihe approval of the court and consent of the Trust Company, and that he was holding the proceeds subject to the order of (lie court; but set forth that within four months of the filing of iho petition in bankruptcy the bankrupt had transferred property to the Trust Company under conditions which resulted in giving ihe Trust Company a preference over oilier creditors and prayed that such transfer be declared to be a voidable preference.

The trustee also filed a petition with the referee alleging that the Trust Company had in its possession approximately $1,700 represented by certificates of deposit, whieh had been improperly withhold by the Trust Company; that since the filing of the petition in bankruptcy it had collected the sum of $115.91 oil a certain trade acceptance, ihe proceeds of which it had improperly withheld from the trustee; and that the Trust Company had also improperly withheld deposits made by the bankrupt prior to the filing of its petition in bankruptcy in the amount of approximately $3,3ol.

The referee heard those petitions by agreement of the parties, who waived all questions as to pleadings and jurisdiction, and, in general, found that the Trust Company was entitled to apply in payment of a $5,000 note, though not yet due, the deposits of $3,361.91, and ihe $1,704.78 alleged to be held on certificates of deposit, and that it was entitled to have the trustee turn over to it the sum of $4,920.67, whieh it was agreed that the trustee had collected on the assigned accounts receivable, less the sum of $115.91 collected by the Trust Company on the trade acceptance, and ihat the Trust Company was entitled to collect the remainder of the accounts receivable assigned to it prior to bankruptcy and after liquidation of all the indebtedness of the bankrupt, pay any balance to the trustee.

On the petition of the trustee for a review of the referee’s order, the referee certified to the District Court his findings of fact, whieh, in substance, are as follows:

-//,/The Trust Company had been lending money to the West Co. for about twelve years. On April 7, 1932, two unsecured notes of $5,000 each fell due. Following a practice of long standing, the West Co. substituted two new notes, unsecured, for $5,000 each, and payable on July 7, 1932. Shortly after this, and before April 28, 1932, the West Co. asked for a new loan. By this time the bank had come under new management. A new president insisted upon an examination of the affairs of Iho West Co., and it was found that the West Co. was borrowing from a New York finance company on accounts receivable. The Trust Company refused to go on if thé West Co. continued to pledge its «accounts receivable to outside finance compiinies. The new president demanded that the West Co. must do all of its business with the Trust Company, or none. Accordingly, it was arranged for the Trust Company to advance about $4,500 with which the- West Co. paid off the New York finance company and got back the receivables previously pledged to that company. The Trust Company then insisted that the West Co. take up one of the $5,000 unsecured notes whieh was not due until July 7, 1932, and substitute therefor a collateral note for $5,000, secured by a second mortgage on some property in Winchester. This new note was dated April 28, 3932, and made payable July 28, 1932.

After this new arrangement the Trust Company made loans to the West Co. from time to time on accounts receivable to the extent of 65 per cent, of their face value, taking in each instance an assignment of such receivables to secure the advances made. The Trust Company, however, allowed the West Co. to collect the assigned receivables and to keep 35 per cent, of the amount so collected; the remaining 65 per cent, being paid to the Trust Company in reduction of its loans.

On «July 7, 1932, when the second $5,000 unsecured note fell due, the Trust Company demanded and received a note in collateral form, which became due October 7, 1932, and whieh provided that any moneys or other property of the maker in the possession of the Trust Company might at all times at the option of the Trust Company be held and treated as collateral for its payment. When the note of $5,000 secured by the Winchester mortgage came due on July 28, 1932, it was also renewed for three months in collateral form. Thereafter business between the Trust Company and the West Co. continued «as usual, and the Trust Company continued to advance substantial sums on receivables «assigned as security.

On August 13, 1932, the treasurer of the West Co. informed the Trust Company that the West Co. had to have about $5,000 more *616 to pay a creditor who was pressing for payment. At this time the West Co., in addition to the $10,000 evidenced by the two collateral notes, owed the Trust Company $7,842 for new money advanced on assigned accounts receivable as security. The Trust Company refused to make further loans to the West Co. and proceeded to liquidate its loans.

On August 15 following, the Trust Company applied the entire amount which the West Co. had on deposit subject to cheek, viz., $3,361.91, in liquidation of the $5,000 collateral note due October 7,1932.

The Trust Company also proceeded to collect the receivables assigned to it. There was evidently an understanding between the parties that the 35 per cent, which had previously been retained by the West Co. should now be held by the Trust Company in a separate ' fund, against which the Trust Company would issue certificates of deposit. No certificates of deposit, however, were ever issued to the West Co. The 35 per cent, of the receivables collected by the Trust Company before a receiver- was appointed for the West Co. amounted to $1,704.78. The Trust Company at some time after the adjudication of bankruptcy, and before the appointment of the trustee, applied this sum to the liquidation of the collateral note due October 7, 1932, which sum, together with the amount of the checking account already applied by the Trust Company to this note, was sufficient to pay it in full.

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Bluebook (online)
73 F.2d 614, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 2773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doggett-v-chelsea-trust-co-ca1-1934.