Durham Loan & Trust Co. v. Chambers

14 F.2d 53, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2003
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 21, 1926
DocketNo. 2418
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 14 F.2d 53 (Durham Loan & Trust Co. v. Chambers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Durham Loan & Trust Co. v. Chambers, 14 F.2d 53, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2003 (4th Cir. 1926).

Opinions

ROSE, Circuit Judge.

This proceeding was begun by a bill in equity to recover certain payments alleged to have been preferential and to set aside two deeds of trust. It was filed by S. C. Chambers, trustee in bankruptcy of C. W. Andrews & Bros., Inc., a bankrupt corporation, against the Home Savings Bank, the Durham Loan & Trust Company, and E. J. Hill, trustee, under the deeds attacked. For brevity, these persons and corporations will be referred to as the trustee, the bankrupt, the bank, the trust company, and E. J. Hill, respectively.

The bankrupt was a corporation formed in 1920 to take over the business of the Andrews whose name it bears. He held all of its stock, except some $700 owned in varying amounts by his father, his brother, and another member of his family. It was a borrower from the bank, and prior to the 21st of July, 1922, owed the latter something over $19,000 on notes indorsed by the father. By that time, as we now know, the bankrupt's financial condition was bad. There was on record a mortgage from it for some $1,300 representing a part of the purchase money of the land, as well as four other mortgages aggregating some $4,000 or more for machinery or equipment purchased by it. On the 15th of July three separate suits upon overdue accounts were brought by mercantile concerns against it. None of them was defended, and they resulted, some two months later, in judgments for an aggregate amount somewhat in excess of $4,000. In July the bank was pressing for the payment of the notes. The bankrupt asked its counsel, a gentleman who now appears for the trust company, to secure elsewhere a loan sufficient to pay them. He was not called as a witness by either side, and the loan was actually solicited from the trust company by E. J. Hill, a practicing lawyer and a brother of a gentleman who was president both of the bank and of the trust company. Before the hearing below, he had been paralyzed, and his testimony was not taken. According to the evidence of the cashier for the trust company who acted for it in the transaction, Mr. Hill came to him and asked him for a loan to be secured by the indorsement of the elder Andrews and by a mortgage upon the entire plant of the bankrupt subject to a prior claim for the purchase money mortgage already mentioned. The cashier says at the time he talked the matter over with the loan committee of the trust company they es[54]*54timated the plant to be worth from $30,000 to $40,000, and the elder Andrews to be good for $20,000 to $35,000. The trust company did not require any examination of the title, nor any search of the court records to find out whether there were any suits against the bankrupt or not. Its cashier did not inspect the plant otherwise than by looking at it from a distance of a couple of hundred feet while from time to time he was on his way to or from a golf course. He never saw its books. He says something about having seen’a statement of the bankrupt’s condition showing it to be solvent, but the testimony is that such statement was not exhibited to him until after the transaction was completed. It is admitted that on July 21st, when the first deed of trust which it purported to secure was executed, the $15,000 was not paid over to the bankrupt, but was, by direction of Mr. E. J. Hill, who solicited the loan for the bankrupt, placed on the trust company’s books to the credit of the bank, and a duplicate deposit slip showing that such amount had been deposited to the credit of the bank was given Mr. Hill. The bank returned to the bankrupt its note for a like amount.

It would appear from the testimony that at that time some $4,500 or more of the loan from the bank was not due. The next month, on the 22d of August, and apparently without any further examination, the trust company, on a second deed of trust, loaned the bankrupt an additional $4,618. This loan was made, not by giving a check to the bankrupt, but was handled like the $15,000. It was for the exact amount still due the bank.

In the mercantile creditors’ suits already mentioned, -judgments were due on the 13th of September. On the 11th, two days before the elder Andrews, at the instance of his son, filed a bill in the state court for a receiver, and one was duly appointed. This official seems to have disposed of practically all the property not covered by the deeds of trust requiring all of it, except $8.03 to pay the expenses of the receivership. An involuntary petition for adjudication in bankruptcy was filed against the bankrupt on the 28th of October, and adjudication thereon followed on the 20th of November. In addition to the few dollars turned over by the receiver, the trustee succeeded in collecting from the book accounts $6.93. Other than these trifling sums aggregating $14.96, the only property which came to the trustee, was covered by the deeds of trust. After considerable advertising, it was sold at auction for $15,000. The prior specific liens on the property, some or all of which have been mentioned, were paid under orders of the court, leaving in the hands of the trustee a balance of $10,700. It should be said that the common president of the bank and the trust company was out of town at the times the loans were made, and the evidence ' is that he knew nothing about them.

The trustee in his bill of eomplaint prayed that the deeds of trust be declared null and void, and the proceeds derived from the sale of the property covered by them be applied to the payment of all creditors of the bankrupt in proportion to their claims, and that the payments to the bank of the sums of $15,-000 and $4,618, respectively, be declared a preference, and that the bank be required to-repay them to the trustee, and for other and further relief.

By the decree from which the trust company appeals, the learned court below found that the trust deeds covered all of the bankrupt’s property; that at the time of their execution and delivery the bankrupt was insolvent, and the trust company was in possession of sufficient facts to put it upon inquiry as to the solvency of the bankrupt. It was thereupon adjudged that the deeds were void, and that the net proceeds of the property once covered by them belonged to the trustee. Prior to the time at which the deeds were made, the trust company was not a creditor of the bankrupt, and it had, therefore, no claim which could have been preferred. The only assumption upon which the giving of these deeds could of itself have been a preference was that in their taking the trust company was not acting for itself in any real sense, but was merely an agent for the bank, which was to be the real beneficiary of them. In that event their legal effect would have been precisely the same- as if they had been made directly to the bank, and, if either the bank or the trast company, as its agent in the matter, had at the time reasonable ground to believe that the bankrupt was insolvent, and that the making of the deeds would secure to-the bank a larger proportion of its claim than other creditors would receive, they would have constituted a voidable preference, as the eóurtbelow adjudged they did. Even without being preferences, they would have been voidable if in taking them the purpose of the trust, company vvas knowingly to aid the bankrupt-in giving the bank a forbidden preference. Dean v. Davis, 242 U. S. 438, 37 S. Ct. 130, 61 L. Ed. 419.

If the trust company was neither the agent of the bank, nor knowingly co-operating with the bankrupt to secure a preference for the bank, the deeds themselves would be unassailable, and the trust company would be [55]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 F.2d 53, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2003, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durham-loan-trust-co-v-chambers-ca4-1926.