Hirning v. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis

42 F.2d 925, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1230
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedJuly 28, 1930
DocketNo. 2225
StatusPublished

This text of 42 F.2d 925 (Hirning v. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hirning v. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, 42 F.2d 925, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1230 (mnd 1930).

Opinion

SANBORN, District Judge.

This is a suit to recover $21,355.82, the amount of two remittances sent by the Farmers’ National Bank, of Brookings, S. D., to the defendant on the 16th and 17th days of November, 1926, which it is alleged constituted an unlawful preference under 12 USCA § 91.

The Reserve Bank, as a clearing house and agent for its member banks, received, on November 13, 1926, for collection, cheeks on the Fanners’ National Bank of Brookings to the amount of $22,114.22, and on November 15th similar cheeks to the amount of $15,-020.88. On those days it mailed cash letters, being the cheeks referred to, to the Brookings bank for collection and remittance. Under its rules, the Reserve Bank was agent for the forwarding banks, with the right to send the cheeks to the Brookings bank for collection and to receive money or drafts therefor. The Reserve Bank granted provisional credits to the forwarding banks on their reserve accounts for the cheeks, but retained the right to reverse the credits if the cheeks were not paid. Of the cheeks sent to the Brookings bank, it accepted $22,059.11 of those included in the cash letter of the 13th, and $14,880.86 of those included in the cash letter of the 15th. The cheeks were not actually charged to the accounts of its depositors until November 18th, when the bank was in charge of a national bank examiner. On the 16th of November, the Brookings bank sent two drafts to cover these cash letters to the Reserve Bank, in which the Reserve Bank was named as drawee. The reserve account of the Brookings bank in the Reserve Bank was not large enough to take eare of the drafts. For the purpose of providing sufficient funds therefor, it sent to the Reserve Bank, on the evening of the 16th, cheeks, for collection and credit, drawn by others on other banks to the amount of $10,029.07, on which the Reserve Bank collected $8,355.82, which was credited to the reserve account of the Brookings bank. It also remitted to the Reserve Bank, on November 17th, $13,000 in currency, which was also credited to its reserve account. The $13,-000 in currency was actually mailed after a resolution of the board of directors of the Brookings bank, closing the bank, had been adopted on the evening of November 16th. The Brookings bank closed its doors, so far as the transaction of ordinary banking business was concerned, at 4 p. m. on the 16th. While [926]*926there is some uncertainty as to the time of the adoption of the resolution and the mailing of the checks, I find that the $10,029.07 of cheeks was also mailed after the adoption of the resolution closing the bank, that the bank was then insolvent, and that both remittances were made “in contemplation of insolvency.” See Ball v. German Bank (C. C. A.) 187 F. 750. It was determined, however, during banking hours on the 16th,. to send the remittances. While the condition of the bank was substantially the same for several days prior to the adoption of the resolution, it is apparent that the determination to close it by those responsible for its conduct did not occur until the evening of the 16th. At that time it was evidently determined that it was impractical to borrow sufficient funds to keep the bank open, and that lack of public confidence in the bank made it advisable to close its doors. Some eighteen banks had recently failed in Brookings county, three of them in the city of Brookings, and a rapid decline in deposits shortly before the bank closed indicated a dark future for it even if it was able to secure the necessary funds to continue in business.

On the morning of the 17th, the Reserve Bank was notified that the Brookings bank had closed, but that sufficient funds had been sent to the Reserve Bank to take care of its cash letters. The Reserve Bank did not charge up the drafts drawn by the Brookings bank to its reserve account, but reversed the credits given to the forwarding banks, notifying them that if permitted to charge up the drafts, it would later give them credit. On January 27, 1927, relying upon advice of counsel, a letter from the then receiver, and a letter from J. E. Fouts, assistant supervising receiver, division of insolvent national banks, which letters were construed as granting permission to charge the drafts to the reserve account, the Reserve Bank did charge them to that account, and credited the forwarding banks with the amount of the cheeks contained in the cash letters of November 13th and 15th. Then followed this suit by the present receiver to recover the remittances.

The receiver claims that the Reserve Bank was a creditor; that in making the remittances the Brookings bank intended to prefer the Reserve Bank as a creditor and to prevent a ratable application of the assets of the Brookings bank to the payment of its debts as provided by law. All of this the Reserve Bank denies.

The question presented is one about which there can be and is a difference of opinion. I do not find that this exact situa^ tion has ever been presented to a federal court. It is obvious that if the Reserve Bank was a creditor of the Brookings bank at the time these remittances were made, the receiver should prevail. Ball v. German Bank, supra.

It is clear that the Reserve Bank was not originally a creditor of the Brookings bank; that it was a mere agent for the forwarding banks, responsible only for its own negligence. Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond v. Early (C. G. A.) 30 F.(2d) 198; Early, Receiver v. Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, 281 U. S. 84, 50 S. Ct. 235, 74 L. Ed. 718. The Reserve Bank did not own the cheeks which constituted the cash letters and it was a matter of indifference to it whether the cheeks were paid or not.

The receiver claims that the Reserve Bank became a 'creditor when it accepted the drafts or, at any rate, when it charged them up to the reserve account of the Brookings bank. I am unable to see that the relation which it bore to the Brookings bank originally was ever changed. It was at all times acting on behalf of its principals, the forwarding banks, as their agent, and, under the rules which governed its operations, it had the authority to send the cheeks to the Brookings bank for collection and take drafts which were sent in payment therefor. As agent, it was authorized to (appoint the Brookings bank an agent to collect from itself these checks and to require the Brookings bank to account for the cheeks or their proceeds. The agreement of the Brookings bank was to remit for such cheeks as it accepted or collected. It was the agent of the Reserve Bank for that purpose. ' If it was to charge them to the accounts of its depositors, its duty was to remit for them in cash or its equivalent. It was not the debtor of the Reserve Bank for the amount of those checks; but, if it accepted them, its position was that of an agent who had received money or its equivalent for his principal and .which in equity belonged to the principal. If the Brookings bank had used these checks for its own purposes, without accounting for them, it would have been guilty of conversion. If, instead of charging the checks to the accounts of its depositors, it had collected the checks in cash from them, that cash would have belonged to the Reserve Bank, and if it had been mingled with the other cash of the bank, the receiver could have been required to pay it over on the theory that the cash was impressed with [927]*927a trust to the extent of the amount for -which the Brookings bank should have accounted. The liability of the Brookings bank to account became absolute upon the acceptance of the cheeks. Quoting from Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond v.

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Related

Early v. Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
281 U.S. 84 (Supreme Court, 1930)
Federal Reserve Bank v. Peters
123 S.E. 379 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1924)
Federal Reserve Bank v. Bohannan
127 S.E. 161 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1925)
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond v. Early
30 F.2d 198 (Fourth Circuit, 1929)
Ball v. German Bank
187 F. 750 (Eighth Circuit, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
42 F.2d 925, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hirning-v-federal-reserve-bank-of-minneapolis-mnd-1930.