Grant v. Colonial Bank & Trust Co.

252 N.E.2d 339, 356 Mass. 392
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 4, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 252 N.E.2d 339 (Grant v. Colonial Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grant v. Colonial Bank & Trust Co., 252 N.E.2d 339, 356 Mass. 392 (Mass. 1969).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

The plaintiffs seek declaratory relief concerning a savings bank account (account no. 1690) issued by Colonial Bank and Trust Company (Colonial). 1 2 The trial judge made findings, adopted by him as a report of material facts, and determined ownership of the funds in account no. 1690. The final decree made a declaration of rights and gave Colonial directions concerning payment of the funds in the account. Colonial appealed. The evidence is reported. Except as otherwise noted, the facts are stated in accordance with the judge’s findings, which are justified by the evidence.

The trustees of Burnam Realty Trust (Burnam Trust) held three notes made by Kent (see fn. 1), each secured by a first mortgage on real estate and each guaranteed by Grant and Hoffman. On January 4, 1966, to permit Kent to sell the mortgaged real estate, these persons made an agreement (the January 4 agreement) with the law partnership of McLaughlin Brothers and others. The McLaughlin firm (the escrow agent) was to serve essentially as escrow agent for Burnam Trust to hold, as security for the payment of the notes from Kent to Burnam Trust, certain property of Kent, with the right to substitute collateral. Accordingly, Kent delivered on January 6, 1966, to Mr. Gilman, a partner in the firm serving as escrow agent, two savings account books, each for $10,000, to be held as such security. One of the accounts (the Winter Hill account) was in the Winter Hill Federal Savings and Loan Association.

*394 In March, 1966, Kent and Barry D. Coltin, president of Colonial, had a conversation in which Coltin requested Kent to deposit more funds with Colonial. Kent had been borrowing from Colonial on -unsecured notes since 1964. Kent told Coltin that he had the two savings account books held under the January 4 agreement, that they were held as security for Kent’s notes, and that he had the right to substitute collateral. Mr. Gilman, in behalf of the escrow agent, agreed to accept a savings account book with Colonial as a substitute for the Winter Hill account. The testimony shows that the substitution was on the condition that Kent first produce the new savings account book as collateral before the old book would be released and the amount in it could be withdrawn from the Winter Hill account for deposit with Colonial.

A savings account book for account no. 1690 was issued by Colonial in Kent’s name showing a deposit on April 1, 1966, of $10,000. On April 4, 1966, Kent delivered this to Mr. Gilman of the McLaughlin firm, with a withdrawal order for the whole amount in the account signed by Kent and witnessed by Eric Starr. Starr, so the testimony shows, worked for William Coltin & Company, with which Barry Coltin, brother of William, had his office. Starr accompanied Kent to Mr. Gilman’s office. At the time the book for account no. 1690 was delivered to Mr. Gilman, no funds in fact had been deposited with Colonial in the account. Kent and Starr received from Mr. Gilman the book for the Winter Hill account and withdrew the whole amount. The evidence shows that this was done by a check to Kent, indorsed by him for deposit, then delivered to William Coltin, and deposited with Colonial. An actual deposit with Colonial thus was effected. Cf. Brogna v. Commissioner of Banks, 248 Mass. 241, 243-244.

In February, 1966, Kent owed Colonial more than $15,000, partly at least on unsecured notes. On February 7, Colonial informed Kent that his unsecured line of credit for the ensuing year was to be $10,000. On March 1, Kent’s request for a short term loan of $5,000 was refused by Colonial, *395 although the testimony shows that other loans were later made to him. On August 7, Kent gave to Colonial a note for $10,000, payable in sixty days. It contained the provision set out in the margin. 3 This was a renewal of a prior note or notes. In October, 1966, Colonial “deemed itself insecure” because Kent had not met payments “on two automobiles financed by the bank.”

On October 11, 1966, Mr. Gilman informed Colonial by letter that he was holding account no. 1690 as security for Kent’s indebtedness to Burnam Trust, on which Kent was then in default. On October 14, Mr. Gilman sent the book' for account no. 1690 with the withdrawal slip to Colonial and asked for a check for the full amount with accumulated interest. On October 17, Colonial wrote to Mr. Gilman that it had applied the funds in account no. 1690, to Kent’s indebtedness to the bank. The trial judge found that this had been done because of Colonial’s receipt of Mr. Gilman’s letter of October 11.

The trial judge also found that Barry Coltin had actual knowledge of the January 4 agreement and that neither Mr. Gilman nor the trustees of Burnam Trust had any knowledge of the provisions of Kent’s note to Colonial. He ruled (1) that “whatever security interest was created by . . . the note, it was subject to the prior rights of the” plaintiffs of which Colonial, “through its president, had actual knowledge,” and (2) that the possession by Mr. Gilman of the book for account no. 1690 “created an interest in the intangible represented by the book.” In the final decree, it was declared that Colonial “had no right to appropriate” account no. 1690 to pay Kent’s note to it. Colonial was ordered to pay to Mr. Gilman the full amount of the account with interest.

*396 1. The assignment of the Winter Hill account gave to the escrow agent a security interest in that account. See Rix v. Dooley, 322 Mass. 303, 308. The escrow agent had at least a pledgee’s interest and an equitable title in the bankbook and in the sum deposited in the bank. 4 The evidence and findings clearly establish that substitution as collateral of account no. 1690 for the Winter Hill account was intended “to make no change in. . . [the escrow agent’s] security.” Cf. Piea Realty Co. Inc. v. Papuzynski, 342 Mass. 240, 248. Colonial issued the book representing account no. 1690 in circumstances clearly charging it with knowledge (through its president and a director) of the escrow agent’s security interest in it, in substitution for the Winter Hill account, and the intention of all concerned was to continue that interest.

2. A savings account book has special status as a security in Massachusetts. “It is well settled that a gift, pledge, or sale of a bank book, with or without a technical assignment of the debt evidenced thereby, vests a title not only in the book, but in the amount in the bank, which is enforceable in equity and that for the purposes of taxation the book is a security .... [L]ike a bill of exchange or note, it is for many purposes a chattel . . . and is not merely an evidence of debt but is representative of it.” See Stebbins v. North Adams Trust Co. 243 Mass. 69, 75-76,- and cases cited. 5

Such a bankbook, of either a Massachusetts savings bank or a Massachusetts company, has been recognized by statute as appropriate collateral for loans by Massachusetts savings banks. See G. L. c. 168, § 38, par. 3 (as amended through St.

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Bluebook (online)
252 N.E.2d 339, 356 Mass. 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-colonial-bank-trust-co-mass-1969.