Manhattan Life Ins. v. Farmers' & Citizens' Nat. Bank

16 F. Cas. 602, 10 Blatchf. 344, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1664

This text of 16 F. Cas. 602 (Manhattan Life Ins. v. Farmers' & Citizens' Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manhattan Life Ins. v. Farmers' & Citizens' Nat. Bank, 16 F. Cas. 602, 10 Blatchf. 344, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1664 (circtedny 1873).

Opinion

BENEDICT, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity brought to obtain a decree declaring the plaintiffs entitled to share, as creditors, in the distribution of the assets of an insolvent national bank, and enjoining any distribution of such assets otherwise than pro rata between the other creditors, and the plaintiffs as creditors to the amount of $10,-000 and interest.

The facts upon which the claim to this relief is based appear in the evidence as follows: On the 8th of August, 1867, one Beach, the president of the Farmers’ & Citizens’ National Bank, a corporation then, to all appearances, solvent, borrowed of the plaintiffs, for his own use, the sum of $10,000, upon the security of 550 shares in the capital stock of the bank. This bank had formerly been a state bank, with a capital of $160,000; but it had been changed into a national bank, as authorized by the national banking act, and its capital increased, or supposed to have been increased, to $300,000. The stock of the state bank held by each stockholder therein had been changed into stock in the national bank, to an equal amount, and the outstanding certificates of stock in the state bank were treat[603]*603ed by all as representing the same shares in the national bank, until surrender and other certificates issued in their place. At the time Beach effected the loan in question, he stood on the books of the Farmers’ & Citizens’ National Bank as the owner of shares of its stock exceeding 550 in number, which were formerly shares in the state bank, now shares in the national bank. Certificates in the usual form, representing these shares, had, prior to the change to a national bank, been given to one Crawford, and were still outstanding, held by bona fide holders, as security for loans. These certificates, Beach says, he anticipated were to be surrendered by Crawford, on the 8th of August, 1867, and, in anticipation of such a surrender during the day, as he says, he, on that day, caused to be issued and delivered to himself certificates representing 550 of these shares of the stock of the bank, no surrender of the outstanding certificates having been made. The certificates so issued, with a power of attorney to transfer and sell, he, on the same day, gave to the plaintiffs, as security for their loan to him. The certificates so passed to the plaintiffs were in the ordinary form, and certified that Beach was entitled to 550 shares in the capital stock of the Farmers’ & Citizens’ National Bank, transferable only on the books of the company, in person, or by attorney, on the surrender of the certificates. They were signed by Beach, as president, and Redfield, as cashier, and these officers were the transfer officers of the bank. The certificates were, in all respects, regular upon their face, but Redfield, the cashier, as well as Beach, the president, of the bank, knew that they were irregularly issued, because certificates for the same stock were then outstanding in the hands of bona fide holders, and beyond the control of the bank or of Beach. At the same time Beach did hold certificates for 535 shares of the capital stock of the bank, and there were, also, in the possession of the bank, certificates duly made out and executed for a much larger number of shares of stock, which had been subscribed for as part of increased capital of the bank, for which notes had been taken, and to which the subscribers named in the certificates, and who stood on the books of the bank as stockholders to the amount, were entitled, upon payment of the notes; but, as the evidence shows, the certificates for 550 shares, issued on the 8th of August, 1867, and delivered to the plaintiffs, were not intended to represent any of these other shares, but represented 550 of the shares certificates for which had been given to Crawford, and the return whereof was then anticipated. Upon the faith of the certificates so issued on August 8th, Beach obtained of the plaintiffs their check for $10,-000, and this check he at once passed into the possession of the bank, without any consideration, apparently with the intention of retiring the new certificates in ease the old ones given to Crawford were not surrendered and cancelled. The bank collected the check, the president and the cashier both knowing the circumstances under which it had been obtained from the plaintiffs, and the money of the plaintiffs thus passed into the assets of the bank. None of the certificates given to Crawford were ever surrendered or can-celled, nor was any transfer of the stock upon the books of the bank attempted, either by Crawford, or by the plaintiffs, or by any other person, and such transfer, doubtless, became impossible when, shortly after, the bank failed and its affairs passed into the hands of the defendant Platt, as receiver, appointed by the comptroller, under the national banking act [13 Stat. 99]. Upon ascertaining, after the failure of the bank, the character of the certificates delivered to them, the plaintiffs at once offered to surrender them and demanded back their money, which being refused, and the receiver announcing his intention to exclude them from sharing, as creditors, in the distribution of the assets of the bank, this action was brought.

It will be seen, from the facts above stated, that the transaction of the 8th of August, on the part of the bank officers, was a duplication of certificates for 550 shares of actual and valid stock of the bank then, as now, standing in the name of Beach, the president, upon the transfer books of the bank, but of which Beach was not then the owner, he having already passed away his title.

The main question in the case then arises— whether a fraud upon the plaintiffs was committed by Beach, when he passed to them, as regular and valid, such certificates as those of August 8th. Clearly, there was fraud. By necessary implication, Beach, when he delivered the certificates to the plaintiffs, represented that he was then the owner of the stock referred to therein; that no other person than the holder of those certificates! was entitled to that stock; and that the stock could not be transferred upon the books of the bank except upon a surrender of those certificates. "Whereas, Beach was not the owner of the stock, the holder of other certificates for the same Shares was entitled, upon a surrender thereof, to become the. stockholder thereof on the books of the bank, and, although a transfer of the shares, if actually made by the bank, upon a surrender of these certificates, would cut off the equitable .rights of otlier parties to the shares, still, such a transfer would be rendered impossible by a prior surrender of the old certificates and a transfer of the shares to the holders thereof, and could not be compelled, as against such holders, theirs being the prior of two equal equities. Herein lay the fraud upon the plaintiffs, and, by reason of that fraud, the plaintiffs became entitled, upon discovering it, to rescind the contract, give up the certificates, and demand their money. This they elected to do, and their demand is good [604]*604against the bank, because of the conceded fact, that their check, obtained by fraud, was delivered to the bank without consideration, and with full notice of the circumstances under which it was obtained, not only through Beach, its president, but through Redfield, its cashier, who received it; and the bank, after such notice, collected the check and now has the money. Money so collected is money had and received to the use of the plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
16 F. Cas. 602, 10 Blatchf. 344, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manhattan-life-ins-v-farmers-citizens-nat-bank-circtedny-1873.