Hayden v. Citizens' Nat. Bk. of Balt.

87 A. 672, 120 Md. 163, 1913 Md. LEXIS 106
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 8, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 87 A. 672 (Hayden v. Citizens' Nat. Bk. of Balt.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayden v. Citizens' Nat. Bk. of Balt., 87 A. 672, 120 Md. 163, 1913 Md. LEXIS 106 (Md. 1913).

Opinion

Stockbridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In June, 1909, a certificate of incorporation was executed by three persons as incorporators for the purpose of the conduct of a fruit and produce commission business under the name of “J. H. Seward and Company, Incorporated”. The certificate of incorporation provided for an authorized capital of $50,000.00, of which amount three shares were subscribed for at the first meeting of the incorporators, and *164 subsequently stock was issued for cash subscriptions to the amount of $16,500.00. The stockholders, in whose names these certificates were made out, do not appear to have individually paid for the stock so issued in their names, but the amount of the subscriptions was apparently paid by Mrs. J. H. Seward, the wife of the man whose name was given to the corporation, and who became president of it, and continued in such capacity down to the appointment of a receiver on January 6th, 3911. The method employed in making payment for some of the stock was devious, and with no sufficient reason appearing therefor, and the holders of the stock named in the certificate do not make it entirely clear whether they received, or thought they received, the stock issued in their names as a gift, or whether the stock was in reality the stock of Mrs. J. H. Seward, and the business, therefore, her business conducted under the form of a corporation. This, however, is not material to the case as presented by the record.

The corporate entity so created began business in the month of June, 1909, and continued for eighteen months, when proceedings were instituted by Mrs. J. H. Seward by a bill alleging the insolvency of the corporation, and praying for the dissolution of the corporation, the appointment of a receiver, and other relief. On the same day that the bill was filedj in accordance with a resolution adopted by the Board of Directors, an answer was filed admitting the insolvency of the company, and assenting to the appointment of a receiver, and upon such bill and answer a receiver was appointed on the 6th day of January, 1911. The answer did not give any assent to the dissolution, nor did the decree attempt to dissolve the corporation. Thereafter, on the 4th of May, 1911, the bill of complaint in this case was filed.

At the time of the appointment of the receiver there stood to the credit of J. II. Seward & Oo., Inc., on the books of the Citizens’ National Bank, the sum of $21,250.51. At the same time the bank was the holder of the four following-promissory notes of the corporation, which it had discounted; one for $9,200.00, due January 6th, 1911; one for $2,300.00, *165 due January 19th, 1911; one for $3,000.00, due March 14th, 1911, and one for $4,500,00. due April 12th, 1911; in all. $19,000.00. It also held a few small notes of customers of J. H. Seward & Co. which had been endorsed by the corporation, and discounted at the bank. All four of the notes mentioned above were notes of the corporation, bearing the endorsement of Josephine A. Seward, the wife of J. H. Seward. On January 6th, 1911, the date of the appointment of the receiver, and of the maturity of the note for $9,200.00, the same not having been paid, the bank charged it as a debit against the amount of the deposit standing to the credit of the corporation, and on the day following it in like maimer debited the remaining notes which it held of the Seward Company. It claimed the right to do this under what is known as the Banker’s lien, and the present bill seeks to set aside this setting off of $19,000.00 against the deposit of $21,000.00, as being an attempt to create an unlawful preference in favor of the bank, one which would operate at the same time to discharge the liability to the bank of Mrs. J. H. Seward as endorser upon the notes; and in the alternative, is a prayer to require Mrs. Seward to pay to the receivers the $19,000.00 so appropriated by the bank to the payment of its own debt. The bill alleges a fraudulent-collusion between the corporation and the bank, in that the bank had knowledge of the financial condition of Seward & Co. and that the $21,000.00 of credit had been”accumulated there for the purpose of carrying out the scheme of unlawful preference to the bank and release the liability of the endorser.

That the alternative relief prayed against Mrs. Seward in the bill can not be granted is sufficiently established by the case of Hughes v. Hall, 117 Md. 547, in the language of Judge Peabce, when he said: “It can not be successfully contended that a prior decree for the dissolution of an insolvent corporation is Dot essential to the maintenance of a bill by a receiver to set aside an unlawful preference made by it.”

*166 In considering the question of the right of the hank to assert a lien for the benefit of notes of a customer which it has discounted, hut which az*e not yet due, there has been some divez'sity of decision in this country, and in such States as New York (Jordan v. Bank, 74 N. Y. 467), Missouri (Kortjohn v. Bank, 63 Mo. Ap. 166), South Carolina (Bank v. Mahon, 59 S. E. 31), Illinois (Bank v. Proctor, 98 Ill. 558), Wisconsin (Oatman v. Bank, 77 Wis. 501), and Michigan (Bradley v. Smith's Sons, 98 Mich. 449), it is held that in oz’der that the bank may assert the lien and maintain the set off, .the debt must be due. In Wisconsin thez^e is an express statute to that effect, and in Michigan a substantially similar statute. In New York the decisions while assez-ting the broad, general proposition, qualify it in two ways: Eirst, that if the zzote is a demand note it may be set off against the deposit of a customer under the lien (People v. St. Nicholas Bank, 44 App. Div. 313),. and, second, in the leading case of Jordan v. Bank, Supra, it is expressly stated that the “insolvency of a paz’ty sometimes moves equity to grant a set off which would not he allowed at law.” In other states the zfight of set off is distinctly z’ecognized as existing izz favor of a bank whether the note be dzze or not. Ky. Flour Co. v. Bank, 90 Ky. 225; Nashville Trust Co. v. Bank, 91 Tenn. 336; Georgia Seed Co. v. Talmadge, 96 Ga. 254; Skunk v. Bank, 16 Weekly Law Bulletin, 353, where the Ohio Cozzrt held that when a depositor becomes insolvent the bank holding zzotes not due which it had discounted for him and the proceeds of which had gone izzto his deposit account, the bank could, as against the insolvent or his assignee, withhold enough of the deposit to pz’otect szzch notes. Stewart v. Bank, 6 Wkly. Notes of Oases (Pa.) 399, in which the Pennsylvania Court sustained the zught of lien upozz the ground that the establishment of insolvency operated to mature all debts. Ainsworth v. Bank. 119 Cal. 470; Demmon v. Bank, 5 Cush. 194, and Thomas V. Bank, 99 Iowa, 202.

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Bluebook (online)
87 A. 672, 120 Md. 163, 1913 Md. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayden-v-citizens-nat-bk-of-balt-md-1913.