Fox v. Department of Financial Institutions

7 N.E.2d 39, 212 Ind. 85, 1937 Ind. LEXIS 273
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1937
DocketNo. 26,715.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 N.E.2d 39 (Fox v. Department of Financial Institutions) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fox v. Department of Financial Institutions, 7 N.E.2d 39, 212 Ind. 85, 1937 Ind. LEXIS 273 (Ind. 1937).

Opinion

Hughes, J.

This was an action instituted by the appellant against the Union Trust Company of South Bend, Indiana, then in voluntary liquidation, because of its refusal to apply certain deposit credits of appellant to a mortgage indebtedness, which appellant owed to the Trust Company under a mortgage made to it and for which appellant had previously asserted a demand. Subsequent to the filing of the complaint, the Department of Financial Institutions, having taken charge of the affairs of the Union Trust Company, became a party defendant. The complaint was in two paragraphs and the appellees, other than the Union Trust Company, were made parties on the theory that they claimed an interest in the subject-matter of the liquidation. At the trial, however, there was no contention that they had any interest and the trial court found and adjudged that they did not have any interest. The first paragraph of the complaint asserted that the appellant had a right to set-off against the mortgage indebtedness, by reason of the fact that between April 1, 1933, and June 20, 1933, certain depositors of the Trust Company sold and assigned their deposit credits to the appellant and that the appellant is entitled to set off the amount of these deposits, together with interest, as against said mortgage indebtedness. That such set-off was refused to be made by the Trust Company and the appellant brought this action to have said deposit liabilities set off as against said mortgage indebtedness and the release of said mortgage.

The second paragraph alleged the same facts as set *87 out in the first paragraph except the prayer of the complaint was for a declaration of the rights and duties of the various parties to the action. It appears from the complaint that within a short time after the suit was filed, the Department of Financial Institutions, pursuant to the Acts of 1933 (Acts 1933, pp. 195-198), took control of the property and affairs of the Union Trust Company and by its attorneys, substituted appearance of the defendant, and thereafter took charge of the litigation in behalf of the Union Trust Company. A demurrer was filed by the Department of Financial Institutions to each paragraph of the complaint, on the theory that no right of set-off existed at the time the appellants acquired the deposit credits and that at the time of the tender, the Trust Company was no longer engaged in the conduct of a trust and banking business as a going concern. That to permit a set-off would, in effect, result in an illegal preference.' The demurrer was sustained to appellant’s first paragraph and the appellant refusing to plead further as to that paragraph, judgment was rendered against the appellant and in favor of the defendant on the first paragraph. The demurrer to the second paragraph was overruled, for the reason that appellant was entitled to have a declaration of his rights. The appellee filed answer to the second paragraph of appellant’s complaint, based on the theory that appellee’s rights of set-off terminated not later than the commencement of the voluntary liquidation of the Trust Company. The cause was submitted to the court for trial, and a finding was made for the appellee and against appellant. The errors relied upon for reversal are as follows:

1. The trial court erred in sustaining appellee’s demurrer to the first paragraph of appellant’s complaint.

2. The trial court erred in its judgment upon the pleadings, holding against the appellant and for the appellee, Union Trust Company of South Bend, Indiana, *88 and Department of Financial Institutions, liquidating said Trust Company.

3. The trial court erred in overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial. The reason assigned in the motion for a new trial is that the decision of the court is contrary to law.

It was the finding and judgment of the lower court that the appellant’s rights as to the assigned accounts or deposits were limited to the right to participate in liquidated dividends pro rata with general creditors of the Union Trust Company.

The facts show that the Trust Company ceased to pay deposits on June 4,1931, and voluntary liquidation began on July 17, 1931, and on July 24, 1933, the Department of Financial Institutions took possession of the Trust Company’s assets. It is true that up to July 24, 1933, the liquidation was voluntary and involuntary after July 24, 1933, but during all of this time, the liquidation was going on and the Trust Company was not a going concern. The assets were being managed and handled presumably for the equal benefit of all the creditors and upon the theory that no one creditor should be given an advantage or preference over any other creditor.

We think it can be stated as a general principal of law that when a bank or trust company suspends operations as a going concern and is placed in involuntary liquidation, the rights of creditors attach and all creditors are then placed upon an equitable basis and no one is entitled to a preference over another. We can see no reason for a distinction being made as to creditors, whether the liquidation is voluntary or involuntary. In either case, the assets of the institution are in the custody of the law for the purpose of being adjusted and settled for the benefit of the creditors upon an equitable basis. This was the evident purpose of the voluntary liquidation statute, the same *89 as an involuntary liquidation. The assets are held in trust by the liquidating agents, for the benefit of the depositors and other creditors and disposed of in such manner that no one shall have an advantage over another.

In the instant case, it is seen that the deposits, on account of which the appellant demands a set-off as against his mortgage indebtedness, were assigned to the appellant between April 1, 1933, and June 20, 1933, or about two years after the voluntary liquidation began and suit was not begun until June 30, 1933, about one month before the institution was placed in the Department of Financial Institutions. Conceding that the Trust Company was insolvent when it went into voluntary liquidation on July 17, 1931, there is no claim on the part of appellant that the institution was solvent when about two years later he secured the assignments of the deposits and tendered them as a set-off, nor at the time suit was filed, or at the time judgment was rendered.

It must be remembered that in the instant case, it is not one where an individual is owing the bank and has a deposit which he is offering as a set-off, but it is a case where the appellant, long after the Trust Company went into voluntary liquidation, and within a very short time before it went into involuntary liquidation, bought from other depositors, their deposits and then offered these as a set-off against the mortgage indebtedness owing the Trust Company by the appellant. In the first instance, there was no preference created and no violation of the rule as to equality among creditors, for the reason that it is only the balance after the set-off is deducted which can be justly held to form a part of the assets of the institution. But here we have a case where the appellant had no deposit of his own but went out upon the market and purchased deposits *90 for the specific purpose of using them as a set-off against his indebtedness.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 N.E.2d 39, 212 Ind. 85, 1937 Ind. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-department-of-financial-institutions-ind-1937.