Lippitt v. Thames Loan & Trust Co.

90 A. 369, 88 Conn. 185, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 31
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 28, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 90 A. 369 (Lippitt v. Thames Loan & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lippitt v. Thames Loan & Trust Co., 90 A. 369, 88 Conn. 185, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 31 (Colo. 1914).

Opinion

Wheeler, J.

The application of the receiver, joined in by a number of the parties in interest, asks the advice of the court upon many questions arising in the course of the receivership. Those which we will discuss first concern the relation of the Thames Company to its various classes of depositors, and the relation of these classes of depositors to each other. Among the questions upon which our advice is sought are these: Are the savings department depositors entitled to be paid out of the assets “set aside for savings depositors,” and, if these prove insufficient, are they entitled, as to the balance, to share in the other assets? And is the said sum of $81,035.66 to be included in the investments set aside for savings depositors?

Upon insolvency of a corporation a court of equity will, unless the rules of law or statute law forbid, place all creditors upon an equality. Certain priorities are generally recognized in the distribution of the avails of the insolvent estate. The expenses of administration are first paid, and all taxes have priority of payment. *190 Frequently the order of payment of creditors is prescribed by statute, in whole or in part. Our statute so prescribes, in the case of a bank or trust company in the hands of a receiver.

General Statutes, §3482, provides: “The avails of the property of any bank or trust company in the hands of a receiver or receivers shall be appropriated ratably to the payment of: (1) the charges and expenses of settling its affairs; (2) the circulating notes, if any; (3) all deposits; (4) all sums which have been subscribed and paid in for its stock by the State or the school fund; (5) all other liabilities; and the surplus shall be distributed among the stockholders.”

This statute has been in force since 1837, long prior to the granting o.f the charter to the Thames Company. Under it all deposits of a trust company, whether in a savings or a commercial department, are to be treated alike and payable .from the avails after payment of the charges and expenses of settling the receivership (including taxes) and of any outstanding circulating notes. Savings deposits and commercial deposits are referred to as deposits in the statutes in force at and prior to the granting of its charter to the Thames Company. Our statute, in treating all depositors alike, whether savings or commercial, appears to have followed the general rule of the law. People v. Mechanics & Traders Sav. Inst., 92 N. Y. 7; First Nat. Bank v. Armstrong, 39 Fed. Rep. 231; Gluck & Becker on Receivers of Corporations (2d Ed.) 339, 340.

Unless repealed or modified by the charter of the Thames 'Company or by subsequent statute, § 3482 provides the method of distribution of the avails of the company in the hands of the receiver.

The charter authorizes the company to accept and execute all trusts and receive money on commercial or savings deposits. Section 5 provides: “All the capital *191 stock, property and estate of every kind belonging to said company shall be and stand charged with the fulfillment of said trusts, and the payment of said deposits, and said trusts and other funds, as the first, and prior lien thereon, in case of the failure of said corporation.” 6 Special Laws, p. 593. In terms the section impresses a prior lien upon all the assets of the company for the payment of all trusts and deposits with it. The relation of debtor and creditor entered into between the depositors and the company was additionally protected by the preference accorded deposits in th'e assets. In the event of failure, their prior lien was to be satisfied ahead of the general liabilities of the company.

General Statutes, § 3482, should be construed in connection with § 5 of the charter. Both effect the same purpose, to give all deposits and funds entrusted to the company priority of payment over all general liabilities. The expenses of administration are in any event a first charge. So that only one class of creditors, holders of circulating notes, are placed by the statute ahead of depositors who, if the charter stood alone, might perhaps be held subordinate to depositors. As there is no contest in this case between holders of circulating notes and depositors, we need not determine which would be entitled to priority as against this company. Certain it is there is no suggestion in the charter that other parts of this statute are affected by the charter; so that claims against the estate must be marshalled in accordance with its terms. So far as concerns the questions submitted to us, there is no inconsistency between the charter and § 3482. Both may and should be given complete effect.

All classes of deposits, in the distribution of the avails in the hands of the receiver, would have shared ratably had not the distribution been affected by the *192 Public Acts of 1907, p. 646, chapter 86, § 1, which provides: “All banks and trust companies maintaining a savings department, or soliciting or receiving deposits as savings, shall invest all such deposits hereafter so received according to the requirements of the statute laws of this State concerning the investment of deposits in savings banks; and said investments shall be for the exclusive protectiQn of the depositors in said savings department and shall not be liable for or used to pay any other obligation or liability of said bank or trust company until after the payment of all of the deposits in said savings department.” Obviously this provision was intended to safeguard the savings department deposits of a bank or trust company by requiring: (1) that the investment of all such deposits shall be in the investments by law permitted deposits in savings-banks; (2) that the investments of such deposits shall be for the exclusive protection of the depositors in the savings department; and (3) that these investments shall be used to pay the savings department deposits before they can be used to pay any other liability of the bank or trust company. The purpose of the statute was to add to the protection of the savings department depositor and not to diminish that which he already had. He had, by the charter, a prior lien upon all of the assets of the company. He had the right to share ratably in the avails in the hands of the receiver in a certain order. Neither privilege was taken from him by this statute. Another protectory privilege was added to these. If the investments in the savings department should not suffice to pay the savings department depositor in full, the unpaid balance of his deposit was placed on a parity with all other deposits, and entitled, on distribution, to share ratably in the order prescribed by § 3482. The certificate of deposit creates the relation of debtor and creditor between him *193 and the Thames Company. His deposit stood in precisely the position of other deposits in its right to share in the distribution of the avails.

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Bluebook (online)
90 A. 369, 88 Conn. 185, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lippitt-v-thames-loan-trust-co-conn-1914.