Hack, Rec. v. Christina

11 N.E.2d 152, 213 Ind. 68, 1937 Ind. LEXIS 377
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1937
DocketNo. 26,934.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 N.E.2d 152 (Hack, Rec. v. Christina) 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
Hack, Rec. v. Christina, 11 N.E.2d 152, 213 Ind. 68, 1937 Ind. LEXIS 377 (Ind. 1937).

Opinion

Treanor, C. J.

This is an equitable proceeding to *70 establish a trust in certain mortgage securities which had been separated from the general assets of the Washington Bank and Trust Company, and which, as stated on the individual mortgage record sheets, had been pledged to secure First Lien Savings Certificates.

In an action by the State of Indiana, on the relation of its Bank Commissioner, against the Washington Bank and Trust Company, the Circuit Court of Marion County adjudged the bank insolvent, and appointed a receiver to liquidate the assets and adjust the affairs of the bank. Appellant, Oren S. Hack, is the qualified receiver of the bank.

By leave of court Theodore W. Christina filed an amended intervening petition against the receiver of the bank in behalf of himself and all other persons, firms, partnerships, etc., similarly situated, in which he alleged in substance that the Washington Bank and Trust Company of Indianapolis, Indiana, was a corporation organized and doing business under the laws of the State of Indiana relating to bank and trust companies; that about the year 1926 the Washington Bank and Trust Company organized and established a Trust and Savings Department, separate and distinct from the other departments of said company, for the purpose of selling- and issuing First Lien 6% Real Estate Certificates which were to be secured by mortgage notes and first mortgage liens, and that all mortgage liens and notes and the proceeds thereof as and when collected would be used solely to pay said First Lien 6% Real Estate Certificates sold and issued by said company.

During the year 1928 the Washington Bank and Trust Company changed the original plan and a Blue Pass Book was used which contained the printed form of the original certificates, which book was to be held by each person, firm, partnership, etc., buying First *71 Lien 6% Real Estate Certificates. The purpose of the combination of Certificate and Blue Pass Book was to afford a convenient method of buying a First Lien 6% Real Estate Certificate by small partial payments, designated as deposits.

Appellee, Christina, further alleged in his intervening petition that upon accepting payments from purchasers of the First Lien 6% Real Estate Certificates the Washington Bank and Trust Company kept separate ledger books for such deposits, and that certain books, records and mortgages were stamped with a rubber stamp with the words “Mortgage to secure payment of First Lien Savings Certificates”; that as purchases were made, the amount was entered on the records of said department and upon the pass books held by the investors.

Appellee, Christina, claimed that he and all other holders of First Lien 6% Real Estate Certificates, or Blue Pass Books, were entitled to be paid the total sum of payments into this department plus interest at the rate of 6% per annum, less a 9% dividend which had been paid by a prior Receiver of the Washington Bank and Trust Company.

The court below found the facts specially and stated conclusions of law thereon that appellee, Theodore W. Christina, and all depositors holding deposits in the Blue Pass Books issued by the bank, had a lien on and were entitled to priority of payment over all other creditors of the bank from the fund accruing by reason of liquidation of certain mortgage securities held by the bank at the time it closed. The court entered judgment accordingly and ordered appellant, as receiver, to pay in full from funds accrued from liquidation of such securities, the claim of Theodore W. Christina and all other depositors holding Blue Pass Books issued by the bank.

For the purpose of supplying the basis of our discus *72 sion we set forth the following excerpts from the finding of facts:

“5. That said Trust Company maintained together with its general banking department a Trust Department, a Bond Department, a Real Estate Department, an Insurance Department, and in connection with its general banking business a Savings Department, and that in this Savings Department which was supervised and administered by employees of said Trust Company after January, 1927, there existed two separate departments of said Savings Department, one known as the Savings account and the other as the Blue Pass Book account, and although the same employees received and accepted deposits in each of said departments those deposits which were deposited in the Blue Pass Book Department were kept by way of record upon paper which was blue in color and different in respect to color from the general Savings Department deposits, and that pass books which were blue in color were issued to each depositor who had deposited his money in the Blue Pass Book Department of said Savings Department of said Trust Company.
“6. That a separate ledger was kept by said Trust Company in which the names of the people making deposits in the Savings Certificate Department were kept and in this same ledger the amount of their deposit was also noted and a box or vault was indicated for the keeping of these records separate and apart from the other department. That from time to time the general banking department either through agents or officers took possession of and took over the money which had been deposited by the holders of BLUE PASS BOOKS and ^the same was commingled with the general monies of the banking department of the Trust Company but when this occurred entries were made in the books and this separate ledger heretofore referred to debited the department of the bank in such amount of money which had been taken possession of by the general banking department through its agents or officers.
"7. The Trust Company loaned from the general fund of the banking department money on notes secured by first mortgage on real estate and *73 other collateral and that a record of such loans was kept in the mortgage ledger and that when the FIRST LIEN 6% REAL ESTATE SAVINGS CERTIFICATES and the BLUE PASS BOOKS were issued and deposits received thereon the Trust Company selected through its officers and agents from these mortgage real estate loans certain notes and mortgages approximately equal in face value to the amount paid in on the CERTIFICATES AND BLUE PASS BOOKS and on the mortgage ledger heretofore referred to marked on said ledger the following ‘Transferred to Secure First Lien Savings Certificate’ and indicated the date of the transfer. The record kept by the Trust Company for each of such mortgages carried the following language stamped upon it ‘This Mortgage Pledged to Secure First Lien Savings Certificates.’ That from time to time as the deposits increased in the SAVINGS CERTIFICATE Department additional mortgage loans which had been made by the bank were selected from the general bank assets and the record ledger of the Trust Company was stamped in the manner as set out aforesaid. That the face value of these- securities designated in the manner as indicated on the books of the Trust Company at the time it closed was $473,421.74 and that the total aggregate amount of the CERTIFICATES or BLUE PASS BOOKS deposits which appeared upon the records of the Trust Company as having been.paid in by such depositors was the sum of $647,751.78.
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Related

Hack v. American Surety Co. of New York
96 F.2d 939 (Seventh Circuit, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.E.2d 152, 213 Ind. 68, 1937 Ind. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hack-rec-v-christina-ind-1937.