Jordan v. Clarence J. Lavin & Pilgrim Trust Co.

9 Mass. App. Div. 293
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedNovember 16, 1944
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Mass. App. Div. 293 (Jordan v. Clarence J. Lavin & Pilgrim Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jordan v. Clarence J. Lavin & Pilgrim Trust Co., 9 Mass. App. Div. 293 (Mass. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

Keniston, G. J.

The plaintiff is seeking to charge the trustee upon its answer as trustee, its answers to interrogatories propounded to it by the plaintiff and upon supplementary allegations of fact filed by the plaintiff neither admitted nor denied by the trustee, the plaintiff having obtained a finding against the principal defendant upon which he has received nothing.

The writ in the action is dated December 12, 1938 and was served twice upon the trustee, the first service being made at 10:34 a. m., on December 13, 1938 and the second service on December 30, 1938. Thereafter the trustee answered, “that at the time of the first service of the plaintiff’s writ upon it, it had not in its hands or possession any goods, effects or credits of the defendant, except that it [294]*294had in its possession the amount of $1259.12, standing in the name of Buchanan & Co., which sum was applied by the trustee to a loan due it from the defendant; that at the time of the second service of the writ upon it, to wit, December 30, 1938, it had no goods, effects or credits in its hands or possession; that except as aforesaid, it had no goods, effects or credits in its hands or possession at the time of the service of either writ.”

From the answers of the trustee to the plaintiff’s interrogatories, it appears that on the morning of December 13, 1938, prior to the first service of the trustee writ, the defendant had a deposit account with the trustee standing in the name of Buchanan & Co., on which checks were signed by the defendant and countersigned by M. B. Buchanan in the amount of $3206.62; that at 10 a. m.,\ checks of $1509.38 were paid and that at 10:34 a. m., the time of service of the writ on that date, there was a balance of $1659.12, after deducting a $6.00 charge because of. the attachment and $28.12, for uncollected funds which balance it held against a loan of $3000.00. The loan of $3,000.00 to Buchanan & Co., was evidenced by a note dated November 16, 1938, due three months thereafter on February 15, 1939 secured by collateral consisting of 50 shares of the $3.00 preferred stock of a Delaware corporation with appropriate instruments of transfer in blank so that such shares were transferable and six bonds payable to bearer both as to principal and interest at a future date, and transferable by delivery by or to any holder thereof in the amount of $1000.00 each. The note provided that any deposits of the principal defendant held by the trustee may at all times at the option of the trustee be held and treated as collateral security for the payment of the note. On December 30, 1937, the note was paid in full by the principal defendant and the collateral was released, the $1659.12 held in the [295]*295account being, applied to the note and the balance of the $3,000.00 being paid in cash.

It also appears from the plaintiff’s allegations of facts and at the hearing on the plaintiff’s motion to charge the trustee that the principal defendant Clarence J. Lavin, during the entire time from November 16, 1938 until after December 30,1938, carried on his business under the name of Buchanan & Co., and was the sole owner thereof, that all of the collateral held by the trustee belonged to the principal defendant, subject only to the claim of the trustee to hold the same as security for the note of $3,000.00, that the trustee had possession of the securities during all said time, that at all times from November 18, 1938 to December 30, 1938, both dates inclusive, the value of the 50 shares of stock was in excess of $1650.00 and of the bonds in excess of $4200.

It further appears from the testimony of the assistant treasurer of the trustee at the hearing on the motion to charge the trustee, that the charge of $6.00 and of $1659.12 was made to the account of the principal defendant on the books of the trustee on December 13, 1938, shortly after the service of the writ on the trustee, that the charge of $6.00 was evidenced by a charge-slip bearing the legend “for attachments by George C. Jordan, Jr.”, the plaintiff, that the charge of $1659.12 was in respect of a check for that amount drawn by the treasurer of the trustee and made payable to the trustee, but charged to the checking account of the principal defendant on the books of the trustee, that neither the check for $1659.12 nor any part thereof was credited on the note of the principal defendant until December 30, 1938, that on December 30, 1938 the principal defendant paid by check or cash the balance of his note over and above the $1659.12 and received from the trustee his note for '$3,000.00 and all of his collateral security and that the trustee kept the check for $1659.12 drawn by its [296]*296treasurer and made payable to itself and did not return it with the statement of the principal defendant’s account for the month of Decémber 1938.

The attorney for the trustee produced the check on charge for $1659.12 and admitted that it bore the legend “Holding it for Mr. Jordan” stating, “That is the way we (meaning the trustee) hold it. If the principal on this loan should be paid we might hold this money for the writ. ’ ’

This report is based upon the denial of plaintiff’s motion to charge the trustee, the order of the court discharging the trustee, and following requests and rulings thereon:

“2. Where the trustee holds collateral security for the payment of an obligation of the defendant to it, General Laws (Tere. Ed.) Chapter 246 Sec. 26 does not give the trustee a right to retain or apply towards the defendant’s obligation; other funds so as to enable the trustee to later deliver the collateral security to the defendant.
No. See App. Div. Opinion Case #354141 Levine v. Gorovitz.
3. The trustee in this case had no right to retain the sum of $1659.12 and not apply this sum on account of the defendant’s note until a later time when the balance was paid and the security returned to the defendant.
'4. Bonds in form payable to bearer, such as those held by the trustee , as collateral security in the case at bar, are attachable by trustee process to the extent of the amount or value of such bonds that are not used to make payments when the obligation which they were given to secure is paid.
This obligation wasn’t paid at the time of service of writ.
5. The Pilgrim Trust Company should be adjudged a trustee in so far. as the bonds held by it for security for the note of Buchanan & Col were not applied in payment of the note which they were given to secure.
No. Value of security could be determined only at time debt due.
[297]*2976. If the charge of $1509.38 made to the credit balance of $3202.62, standing to the principal defendant’s account of the books of trustee at 10:00 a. m. on December 13, 1938, was for a check that was never paid and subsequently cancelled, and no other change in the said account occurred on December 13, 1938 until after the service of the writ in this action upon the trustee, then the said sum of $1509.38 were goods, effects and credits of the principal defendant in the hands of the trustee at the time of service of the writ as aforesaid, and the trustee is chargeable.
These are not facts. First check never was honored.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Mass. App. Div. 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-clarence-j-lavin-pilgrim-trust-co-massdistctapp-1944.