Leggate v. Porter

79 P.2d 756, 26 Cal. App. 2d 545, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 1079
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 24, 1938
DocketCiv. 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 79 P.2d 756 (Leggate v. Porter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leggate v. Porter, 79 P.2d 756, 26 Cal. App. 2d 545, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 1079 (Cal. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

Plaintiff brought this action to recover $9,198.10 principal, besides interest, on four certificates of deposit issued by the Bank of Ocheyedan in Iowa. Defendant had judgment and plaintiff appealed.

The Bank of Ocheyedan was a private bank and was owned and operated by defendant. On September 2, 1930, the District Court of Iowa in and for the County of Osceola appointed A. J. Salland receiver of the bank “with power and authority to conserve the assets of said bank, to convert said assets into cash when he believes the same necessary and to dispose of said assets without converting the same into cash under proper authority of Court and to perform such other duties as may become necessary and as directed by the orders of this Court”.

The receiver qualified and entered on the performance of his duties. Claims were made in the receivership proceed *547 ings on the four certificates of deposit in question here. They were allowed and approved and the receiver paid three dividends on them totaling fifteen per cent of their face value. The receivership is still pending in the Iowa court and the claims have neither been released in nor withdrawn from that proceeding.

The main question presented for our decision is the right of plaintiff to pursue defendant in this action, he being the sole owner of the bank, and to recover and collect a judgment against him, based on a liability of the bank, during the pendency of the receivership proceeding in which plaintiff had appeared and presented his claims and upon which he had been paid substantial dividends by the receiver.

As the obligations on which this action is brought were made and are payable in Iowa, and as the receivership is pending in that state, it is obvious that reference should be had to Iowa law pertinent to the subject (Sullivan v. Shannon, 25 Cal. App. (2d) 422 [77 Pac. (2d) 498]), as that law must be determinative of some of the issues presented here. No Iowa statute law is cited to us and none appears to have been cited to the court below. The Iowa statutes are not available to us here. We will, therefore, consider this phase of the case in the light of the citations to and the discussions of the Iowa law contained in the three cases decided by the Supreme Court of that state to which we have been cited. (Bierma et al. v. Ellis, 212 Iowa, 366 [236 N. W. 402]; Ellis et al. v. Citizens Bank of Carlisle, 218 Iowa, 750 [251 N. W. 744]; Day v. Power et al., 219 Iowa, 138 [257 N. W. 187].)

It would seem that private banks are permitted to operate in Iowa. Apparently they need not be incorporated. However, such a bank seems to have an entity separate and apart from that of its owner and to be something more than a fictitious name under which its owner may conduct a banking business. A receiver may be appointed to take over the assets of such a bank and to administer and wind up its affairs. During such process assets of the bank are in the custody of the court. Such custody does not include the separate assets of the owner not invested in the bank. However, such separate assets form a fund which can be used when necessary in liquidating the liabilities of the bank. Such funds of the owner may be resorted to by the receiver in *548 a separate suit against the owner after authorization by the court. During the pendency of the receivership proceedings, and before their termination, a creditor of the bank who has filed and had allowed his claim in the receivership proceedings will not be permitted to obtain judgment against the owner for the amount of his claim. If, during such period, he sues the owner his suit will be abated (not dismissed) until such time as the receivership proceedings are concluded.

Prom the foregoing it would seem that the separate assets of the owner of the private bank do not come under the control of the receiver at the time when he is appointed' and qualifies. They do, however, constitute a reserve fund to which resort may be had to pay the liabilities of the bank upon which the receiver may draw, if necessary, to liquidate the bank’s debts. Thus they should be regarded as a fund for the benefit of all the creditors who have approved claims filed in the receivership. During the receivership proceedings each such creditor should have an equal proportionate benefit from this fund and no one such creditor should profit from it to the detriment of other creditors or the receiver.

In the case of Ellis v. Citizens Bank of Carlisle, supra, it appears that a private bank was owned by a group of persons which the court denominated a partnership. The receiver was ordered to bring suit against these owners to secure funds with which to liquidate the bank’s liabilities. Such a suit was filed but was never brought to trial. Instead, a compromise was effected between the owners and the receiver which was approved by the district court. In upholding the procedure, the Supreme Court of Iowa said:

‘ ‘ Has the district court wherein the receivership is pending power to authorize the receiver to compromise these claims with the respective partners at an amount less than the amount actually due thereon? The appellants argue that the title and ownership of their various deposit claims, together with the right to enforce or release same as against the various partners of said bank, is an individual personal right of such depositor against the individual partner. They are probably justified in this position, but this does not answer the question. Under our holding in the former appeal, they went into the equity court and submitted themselves to its jurisdiction in the receivership matter, and, having done so, they are subject to all the rights and powers that an. equity court *549 possesses under such circumstances and whatever order the court properly makes under such circumstances is binding on them. . . .
“Under the Iowa practice, the receiver is appointed in an equity court and is an arm of the court. By the filing of their claim with the receiver and having same approved by the receiver, appellants, together with all other depositors and all parties concerned in the ease, are before such court, and all their claims, whatever they may be, are within the jurisdiction of such equity court, and appellants are bound by the finding of such court determining their respective rights.”

The case of Bierma v. Ellis, supra, involved the liquidation through receivership of thp same insolvent bank. Several creditors of the bank whose claims had been filed and allowed in the receivership proceeding, sued the owners of the bank on their demands. These suits were dismissed in the trial court. In discussing this situation, the Supreme Court of Iowa said:

“The case presents an unusual and exceptional situation. A court of equity had acquired jurisdiction of the partnership and of all of the partners. The partnership was insolvent, and dissolution thereof was sought.

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Bluebook (online)
79 P.2d 756, 26 Cal. App. 2d 545, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 1079, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leggate-v-porter-calctapp-1938.