In Re Canal Bank & Trust Co.

172 So. 421, 186 La. 366, 1937 La. LEXIS 1087
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 4, 1937
DocketNo. 33975.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 172 So. 421 (In Re Canal Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Canal Bank & Trust Co., 172 So. 421, 186 La. 366, 1937 La. LEXIS 1087 (La. 1937).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

On December 19, 1932, the Orleans Homestead Association executed a negotiable promissory note for $30,000, due in 90 days, payable to the Canal Bank & Trust Company, and delivered it to the bank. The consideration for the note was money borrowed. By payments or agreements be-’ tween the parties, the amount now due on the note is $7,085.23.

On December 23, 4 days after the note was executed and delivered, the bank delivered it in pledge, along with other collateral, to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (hereinafter referred to as R F C) as security for a loan. On March 6, 1933, about 14 days before the note fell due, the Canal Bank & Trust Company was closed under United States Treasury Regulations and a Presidential Proclamation. It was not allowed to reopen until March 20, and then on a restricted basis, the result being that 95 per cent, of all deposits then in the bank was “frozen,” no depositor being allowed under federal regulations to withdraw more than 5 per cent, of his deposit.

At the time the bank was closed on March 6 and when it was permitted to reopen on a'restricted basis on March 20, the Plomestead Association had on deposit in the bank a sufficient sum to pay the note and all interest thereon. The note fell due on March 20, 1933, the day on which the bank reopened on a restricted basis', and on that day the secretary of the Orleans Homestead Association called at the bank to discuss payment of the note out of its deposit. Seven days later the secretary of the association requested the bank to apply its frozen deposit to the payment of its note, and on April 28, The Homestead Association tendered its checks drawn on the bank sufficient in amount to pay the loan. The bank refused to permit payment of the *369 note out of the frozen deposit, on the ground that the note was then held in pledge by the RFC, a third person.

'On May 20, 1933, the Canal Bank & Trust Company was taken over for liquidation by the Louisiana State Banking Commissioner and was, on the day this suit was filed, and is now, in process of liquidation. The Orleans Homestead Association intervened in the liquidation proceedings, the purpose of the intervention being to obtain a decree ordering the bank “in liquidation to set off the frozen balance of $7,085.23 on deposit in said Canal Bank & Trust Company in the name of the Orleans Homestead Association against the balance due on the note dated December 19th, 1932, and due March 20th, 1933, as of the due date of said note March 19th or 20th, 1933 and that said note be returned to the Orleans Homestead Association marked ‘Paid and cancelled’ together with all collateral securing said note.”

By amended and supplemental petition, the RFC was made a party defendant. In this petition intervener alleged that the R F C did not acquire the note in pledge until May 20, 1933, two months after the note fell due.

Answers were filed by the liquidator of the bank and the R F .C, in which they set up substantially the facts as stated above,, and, in addition, expressly averred that the note was pledged by the bank long before it became due; that the RFC was a holder of it in due course and that therefore intervener was cut off from claiming the benefit of those equities, that is, the benefit of set-off, which it could have claimed against the bank had the note not gone into the hands of an innocent holder for value before maturity. Intervener’s demand was rejected by the trial court, and this appeal followed.

The identical situation here presented and the same pleas and defenses here made were presented and made in the case of In re Liquidation Canal Bank & Trust Co., Intervention of Gay-Sullivan Co., 182 La. 421, 162 So. 31, 102 A.L.R. 1091, except that in the present case it is conceded that the note involved is a negotiable instrument.

Under our holding in the Gay-Sullivan Case, intervener’s demands must be rejected unless it is true, as intervener alleged and now contends, that the note went into the hands of the RFC after maturity.

Counsel for intervener says that the Canal Bank & Trust Company owned the note when it fell due on March 20, 1933, and owned it on April 28, when intervener tendered its checks drawn on the bank for the amount of its debt. Even if it did, that fact does not help plaintiff’s cause.

Counsel argues that because the bank owned the note, compensation took place and that intervener is entitled to plead set-off, and cites the Wainer Case reported in 178 La. 961, 152 So. 578, and First National Bank of Ruston v. Canal Bank & Trust Co., 181 La. 445, 159 So. 711, in support of his theory. In those cases it was held that a depositor was entitled to offset his debts to the bank with his frozen deposit. But neither of those cases has any application *371 here, because in the Wainer Case the rights of a third person were not involved, and in the Bank of Ruston Case, while the RFC became the holder of the participation certificates before their maturity dates, these certificates were nonnegotiable, for which reason the Bank of Ruston was entitled to plead all such equities against the P. F Cas it had against the Canal Bank & Trust Company.

In the present case the note involved is a negotiable instrument. But if it was pledged after maturity, the RFC is not a holder in due course and is entitled to no more consideration than would have been due the bank had the note not been negotiated. That is conceded by all parties.

This brings us to the question whether the note was pledged after maturity. It is not disputed that the note was •pledged originally by the Canal Bank & Trust Company to the RFC before its maturity. But counsel for intervener contends that it went back into the hands of the Canal Bank & Trust Company and was again pledged on May 20, 1933, when it was overdue. The proof administered •does not support that contention.

The Orleans Homestead Association, intervener, first became indebted unto the '.bank in June, 1932, and to evidence that in•debtedness, executed its note payable to the bank. That note was dated June 20 and •matured on September 20. Not being able •to pay the note at maturity, the Homestead Association executed another note of like amount and tenor, dated September 20 and maturing December 20. This note was not paid, and on December 19 a like note was executed to take up the one which matured on the 20th. The last note mentioned matured on March 20, 1933. This is the note here involved.

In April, 1932, the Canal Bank & Trust Company applied to the RFC for a loan of $3,600,000, whidi was granted, the amount to be disbursed as, if, and when the bank delivered collateral to secure the amounts advanced. On July 19, 1932, the RFC disbursed to the bank $490,576, and to secure that advance the bank pledged certain collateral, including the note of the Orleans Homestead Association dated June 20 and maturing September 20, 1932. From April 21, 1932, when the bank obtained the first loan from the R F C, on down to May 20, 1933, the bank was at all times heavily indebted unto that concern. When intervener’s first note to the bank fell due on September 20, 1932, it was in the hands of the R F C as pledgee, and in order that it might be paid or renewed, pledgee delivered it to the bank on a trust receipt or certificate.

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Bluebook (online)
172 So. 421, 186 La. 366, 1937 La. LEXIS 1087, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-canal-bank-trust-co-la-1937.