Jensen v. American Bank of Spokane

288 P. 660, 157 Wash. 240, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 900
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1930
DocketNo. 22330. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 288 P. 660 (Jensen v. American Bank of Spokane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jensen v. American Bank of Spokane, 288 P. 660, 157 Wash. 240, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 900 (Wash. 1930).

Opinion

French, J.

The appellant, as receiver of an insolvent corporation, commenced this action for the purpose of recovering from the respondent bank certain payments which it is claimed had been received from the insolvent corporation, or had been taken from' the deposits of the insolvent corporation made with such bank, and which payments, it is claimed, constituted a preference under the trust fund doctrine as announced by this court in various cases which have been before us. The respondents Lane and Trenary, it is claimed, participated in enabling the bank to receive the funds in controversy, and it is also claimed that respondent Lane had himself received certain preferential payments. After appellant had introduced his testimony in the trial court, the sufficiency of the evidence was challenged, and the action was dismissed. This appeal follows.

*242 The facts, as we gather them from the very .voluminous record, do not seem to be seriously in dispute. The Trenary Service & Sales, Inc., was organized some time in the late summer or early fall of 1924. The principal stockholders of the company at the time of its organization were T. S. Lane and James. F. Trenary. Mr. Trenary, for some years prior to the organization of the company, had been conducting a small automobile business, doing repair work and dealing somewhat in used cars. Mr. Lane was, at that timé, the principal owner of a rather large automobile concern in the city of Spokane, and this latter concern had experienced some financial difficulties, and the matter had so worked around that Mr. Lane was' able to take over and dispose of. all of the assets of this concern. These assets were valued at approximately sixteen thousand dollars, and the most valuable part of the assets consisted of parts for Packard cars, and were turned in to the Trenary company.

Mr. Lane also purchased and paid cash for $3,400 worth of the stock of the Trenary company. The majority of the common stock, and it was the common stock that controlled the business affairs of the company, was owned by Mr. Trenary, and he was the president and active manager of all of the business affairs of the company. Mr. Lane seems to have acted as an officer of the company a few times during Mr. Trenary’s absence, although not formally elected as an officer, and, generally speaking, we think the record shows that he had very little to do with the business affairs of the company, excepting that, from time to time, as .occasion demanded, he was called upon to, and did, assist in a financial way.

Trenary is referred to in the record by a number of parties as a master salesman, and the history of the company seems to show sufficient justification for *243 so regarding him. The record indicates that, in the spring of 1925, the company was greatly handicapped by reason of the fact that they were unable to secure sufficient cars from the factory to come anywhere near filling their orders. The company had, in the meantime, secured the Packard agency for all of that vast territory surrounding Spokane, and had established local agencies in Wenatchee, Walla Walla, and other places. About April 1, 1925, the company transferred its banking business to the American Bank of Spokane, and for the period of a number of months thereafter sold substantially all of its conditional sales contracts to the respondent bank. Beginning in the late fall of 1925, however, the company began to sell certain conditional sales contracts to parties other than the bank.

In the middle of J anuary, 1926, the company needed some immediate cash, and gave to Mr. Lane a note for seven thousand dollars, payable on demand, and at the same time, and as collateral security to guarantee the payment of this seven thousand dollar note, executed to Mr. Lane a written assignment of about eighteen thousand dollars worth of accounts receivable. Mr. Lane executed his personal note for seven thousand dollars to the bank, and pledged with that note, as collateral security, the note which the Trenary company had given him, together with the assignment of the accounts, and the bank advanced the seven thousand dollars. We think it is apparent from the testimony that this seven thousand dollars was advanced on Mr. Lane’s personal credit. The bookkeeper of the Trenary company, at that time, was instructed that as fast as these accounts were paid in to deliver the money to the bank to be credited upon the note, and thereafter there was transferred to the *244 bank and credited on the note approximately three thousand dollars.

Beginning, generally, in the late fall or early winter of 1926, the respondent bank, which, as heretofore set out, purchased a large number of conditional sales contracts from the Trenary company, began to promptly charge back to the Trenary company’s bank account all unpaid installments on the various contracts which the bank had purchased. These charge-backs were made pursuant to the agreement under which the company sold the conditional sales contracts, and the amount charged back within a short time prior to the date when the assignment was made to the Spokane Merchants’ Association aggregates several thousand dollars.

It is the contention of the appellant “that respondents Lane and Trenary are responsible to the creditors of the company for their misconduct,” and that the assignment of accounts receivable made to Mr. Lane as security at the time he advanced the seven thousand dollars was fraudulent, and that the amounts paid to the bank thereunder are recoverable, and, in support of this position, appellants cite Benedict v. Ratner, 268 U. S. 353.

This was a case where an advancement of fifteen thousand dollars had been made to a corporation, and security had been taken of “all accounts receivable then outstanding and all which should thereafter accrue in the ordinary course of business.” The accounts were to be collected by the company, but, until required to do so, the company was under no obligation to' apply any of the collections to the repayment of the loan. After stating the facts and setting forth the rule, contended for by both parties, Mr. Justice Brandéis, speaking for the court, states:

*245 “A title to an account good against creditors may be transferred without notice to the debtor or record of any kind. But it is not true that the rule stated above and invoked by the receiver is either based upon or delimited by the doctrine of ostensible ownership. It rests not upon seeming ownership because of possession retained, but upon lack of ownership because of dominion reserved.”

And further on in the opinion:

“But it is only where the unrestricted dominion over the proceeds is reserved to the mortgagor that the mortgage is void. This dominion is the differentiating and deciding element.”

Again, later in the opinion, the court states:

“In the case at bar, the arrangement for the unfettered use by the company of the proceeds of the accounts precluded the effective creation of a lien.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
288 P. 660, 157 Wash. 240, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jensen-v-american-bank-of-spokane-wash-1930.