Irving Trust Co. v. Bank of America Nat. Ass'n

3 F. Supp. 103, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1559
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 11, 1933
StatusPublished

This text of 3 F. Supp. 103 (Irving Trust Co. v. Bank of America Nat. Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Irving Trust Co. v. Bank of America Nat. Ass'n, 3 F. Supp. 103, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1559 (S.D.N.Y. 1933).

Opinion

FRANK J. COLEMAN, District Judge.

The question presented is whether a voidable preference was created in favor of the defendant bank by the repayment of a day loan which had been made to the bankrupt on the same day, which was the day before the petition in bankruptcy was filed. The bankrupt, Broomhall, Killough & Co., Inc., was a dealer in securities and had a long standing arrangement with the defendant in relation to day loans. These were applied for each morning before the opening of the market with the understanding that they would be repaid the same day and the application was a routine matter effected by the delivery to the bank of a printed form of note together with the borrower’s cheek, both in the amount of the loan. The note yas in the following form, in which the borrower inserted the amount applied for:

“New York-— 19—

“The undersigned hereby applies to the Bank of America National Association, for •a loan of - Dollars ($-), to be credited to the account of the undersigned, upon the terms and conditions below stated and to be repaid at or before the close of business this day. The avails of the said loan shall bo received and used by the undersigned only for one or both of the following purposes: To pay, in whole or part, the purchase priee of, and thus to obtain certain securities which the imdersigned has contracted to purchase and receive; or, to pay in whole or part another loan or other loans heretofore made to the undersigned and thus, to release certain securities held as collateral to such other loan or loans. The undersigned, as trustee for the Bank, shall obtain possession of the securities aforesaid; and shall deliver, or cause to be delivered, the same to the Bank, as security for this loan, before the dose of business on this day, unless in the meantime the amount of this loan shall have been repaid to the Bank. The undersigned may, however, before the close of business this day, sell or transfer, for cash or its equivalent, or pledge for money contemporaneously loaned, or exchange for other securities, any or all of said certain securities, but the proceeds of such sales, transfers and pledges, shall be received by the undersigned as trustee for the Bank, and shall be delivered by the undersigned to the Bank before the close of business this day where they shall be credited in payment pro tanto of said loan, and the securities received in exchange shall be in all respects charged with the same trust, and subject to the same rights of the bank of possession, and otherwise, as herein provided in respect of the certain securities so exchanged.

[105]*105“The undersigned, as further security to the Bank hereby assigns to the Bank, its successor and assigns, all of the right, title, and interest of the undersigned to and in the certain securities hereinabove referred to, and to and in any and all claims of the undersigned against third parties now existing.and that may be created this day for the purchase price, or any present unpaid balance thereof, of any of said certain securities sold or that may be sold by the undersigned, and to and in all claims of the undersigned against customers of the undersigned for the balance due or to become due this day of the purchase price of any of said certain securities delivered or deliverable to such customers.

“Nothing herein contained is intended to lessen the liability of the undersigned to the Bank arising from the making of said loan; nor to impair the effect of any General Collateral Agreement given by the undersigned to the Bank; nor to confer upon the undersigned any authority to create any liability on the part of the Bank.

«_!/

On July 2,1930, the bankrupt in ordinary course applied for and received a loan of $150,000 which the defendant made by crediting the bankrupt’s general deposit account with that amount. During the day some intimation of the bankrupt’s critical financial condition reached the defendant, and at about 3 o’clock two of the defendant’s officers went to the bankrupt’s place of business and received for deposit cheeks in excess of the bankrupt’s withdrawals against the day loan. Part of these deposits were subsequently repaid to the trustee, leaving $82,156.58 in the hands of the defendant, which the latter has applied in full payment of the balance due on the bankrupt’s withdrawals against the day loan. This is the sum in suit, and the question presented is whether the defendant had the right to retain it in full payment, whereas the general creditors will receive only a small percentage.

On the day following the loan, July 3d, the petition in bankruptcy was filed, and it is undisputed that the bankrupt had been insolvent for a long period before. There can be no substantial doubt but that when the defendant received the $82,156.58 it had reasonable ground for believing that a preference in its favor would be effected thereby if there was no legal justification for the payment upon the grounds hereinafter considered. One of the special questions submitted to the jury was upon this point, and they answered it in the affirmative. Not only is this finding amply supported by the evidence, but a verdict to the contrary would, in my opinion, be clearly against the weight of the evidence.

The defendant contends that there was legal justification for the payment upon various grounds, the first of which is that the day loan was induced by the fraud of the bankrupt, and that the defendant, therefore, had the right to rescind it "and to trace the money advanced into any securities purchased with it. All of the money drawn by the bankrupt under the day loan was used, in the purchase of securities, some of which were resold by the bankrupt on the same day. Of the $82,156.58 received by the defendant in repayment, $60,732 was represented by cheeks received by the bankrupt as the selling price of securities so resold, and for present purposes may be considered in tne same light as the securities themselves. The balance received by the defendant was not the proceeds of securities purchased with money from the day loan, but the bankrupt had on hand at the time of the repayment to the defendant securities or cheeks of the value of $17,530 which had been acquired with moneys from the day loan.

Even if there had been such fraud on the part of the bankrupt as would have given the defendant the right to rescind the loan and trace the proceeds, it could not justify the payment in suit. The defendant did not rescind the loan, but accepted repayment of it in accordance with the express terms of the note. It is urged that in doing so the defendant relinquished a right to trace and recover the proceeds of the loan, thereby benefiting the estate pro tanto, and that therefore the payment should be" offset to the extent of the value of the securities which might have been recovered. This argument finds support in Illinois Parlor Frame Co. v. Goldman (C. C. A.) 257 F. 300, and Fisher v. Shreve, Crump & Low Co. (D. C.) 7 F.(2d) 159, but in Cunningham v. Brown, 265 U. S. 1, 44 S. Ct. 424, 68 L. Ed. 873, the Supreme Court held that a right to rescind for fraud which is not exercised does not validate an otherwise preferential payment. Nothing was said about fraud at the time of the payment nor was it a reason actuating either the defendant or the bankrupt. Indeed, it does not even appear that the defendant was aware of the circumstances upon which it now predicates it.

But there was no fraud in the legal conception, whatever might be that of ethics.

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Bluebook (online)
3 F. Supp. 103, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irving-trust-co-v-bank-of-america-nat-assn-nysd-1933.