Marvin v. First Nat. Bank of Aurora, Ill.

10 F. Supp. 275, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1663
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedMarch 8, 1935
Docket13287
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 10 F. Supp. 275 (Marvin v. First Nat. Bank of Aurora, Ill.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marvin v. First Nat. Bank of Aurora, Ill., 10 F. Supp. 275, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1663 (N.D. Ill. 1935).

Opinion

LINDLEY, District Judge.

Plaintiffs bring this suit against the receiver of the First National Bank of Aurora, seeking to have established their claims as beneficiaries of a trust and to have the same paid out of the trust fund held by the receiver for the benefit of such beneficiaries. This fund was originally in the hands of the state auditor of Illinois and consisted of $50,000 in liberty bonds deposited by the bank, in order to comply with the statute of Illinois, upon its application to be authorized to conduct a trust department. In equity cause No. 13611 in this court the receiver filed his petition, setting up that such bonds were held by the auditor for the protection of the bank’s trust creditors, and that the total trust liabilities did not exceed $40,000, included in his application a recital that a trust in favor of plaintiffs in this suit was among the protected debts, and prayed that the auditor should be directed to surrender the bonds to the receiver to be applied by him in discharge of the said trust liabilities. In the resulting order, the court found a trust in favor of the plaintiffs to be one of the trust estates protected by the fund, and that the total trust liabilities against said fund did not exceed $40,000, and directed the auditor to surrender the bonds to the receiver and the latter to hold same or the proceeds of sale thereof segregated from the general assets of the bank in trust for the creditors of the trust department. Plaintiffs accordingly brought this suit seeking a decree that they are entitled to recover the amount due them under the terms of their *276 alleged trust,' and to have same satisfied, from the said securities.

The bank, in the year 1920, procured a certificate from the Federal Reserve Bank in pursuance of the Federal Reserve Act (44 U. S. Stat. pt. 1, p. 276, 12 USCA § 248 par. (k), which permits national banks to act as trustees where state banks might so act, the said certificate reciting that the operation of the trust department should be in accordance with the regulations of the Federal Reserve Board promulgated in pursuance of the act. These regulations pro-' vide that a trust officer shall be selected and certain duties performed in the administration of all trusts. Following the receipt of this certificate, the bank received authority on May 22, 1920, from the auditor of the state of Illinois to act as trustee.

Some three years later, February 1, 1923, the bank entered into a formal trust agreement with the plaintiffs. In this the bank was named as trustee. It recited that the res of the trust consisted of four of five $5,000 notes executed by John K. New-hall and Albert Snook, secured by trust deed executed likewise in favor of the bank as trustee.

The trust agreement was signed by plaintiffs and by the bank by Frank B. Watson, its president. It bore the seal of the bank and was attested by John M. Raymond, as secretary of the bank. The other $5,000 note was owned by Cleora Marvin. The trust agreement recited that plaintiffs Marvin and Fishburn desired to create a trust in order to make provision for the payment to their mother, Stolp, of the net income growing out of the four notes in question; that they deposited the notes with the bank as trustee; that the bank would collect and pay to said Stolp the net income derived from said securities, after deduction of taxes and a commission of 5 per cent., during the life-time of the mother or until the trust should be revoked as provided in the agreement. The res of the trust; after the payments to the mother, was at all times the property of plaintiffs. At that time the bank had no designated trust officer, although the federal regulations required such, and formally named no such officer until 1927. Frank Watson was president of the bank, and, as such, was the chief administrative and executive officer. He was active in the bank, being present daily, devoting his entire time to the administration of its affairs, for a.salary of $7,200 per year.

It appears that no entry of the trust was made upon the books of the bank, but account was kept of the interest collected from the makers of the note, which was paid regularly to the beneficiaries under the trust agreement. None of the beneficiaries lived in Aurora. To them remittances were duly mailed, accompanied by letters, signed by Watson, as president, or by the cashier or assistant cashier.

On January 25, 1928, all five of the notes were paid, and the payor issued a check to “First National Bank, .Trustee, Aurora, Illinois,” drawn on the Northern Trust Company of Chicago, in the sum of $25,750, being the full amount of the principal and interest due on the notes at the date of maturity, February 1, 1928. The check was indorsed “First National Bank, Trustee, Aurora, Illinois, by F. B. Watson, President” . and then by the bank to the Union Trust Company of Chicago, and remitted to the latter, wherein it was deposited on January 26, 1928, to the credit of the First National Bank of Aurora, becoming a part of the total deposit that bank then had with the Union Trust Company in its general account of upwards of $230,000. Thus the entire res of the estate was paid to the bank as trustee and by the bank deposited to its own credit in the Union Trust Company of Chicago. In the absence of any avoiding facts, it is obvious, on this record, that when the bank, as trustee, received cash representing the res of the estate and deposited the entire amount to its own credit, it thereby converted the trust fund to its own use as a bank, and nothing it did thereafter in the way of disposition of that fund would discharge its liability for conversion as trustee, except the performance of its trust obligations as set out in the trust agreement, that is, an accounting with the beneficiaries of the trust. Thus, in Central R. & Banking Co. v. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co., 114 F. 263, 265 (C. C. A. 5), the court said:

“It is immaterial whether there be force or not in appellants’ contention that the Central Railroad & Banking Company of Georgia had no power to make itself the trustee of the’sinking fund. It is evident that, that corporation having received the fund, a court of equity will not allow it to be withheld to the detriment of those to whom it belongs or who have claims upon it.”

See discussion in 4 Thompson on Corporations (3d Ed.) § 2893.

*277 It does not appear how, when, or whether this deposit with the Union Trust Company was withdrawn by the First National Bank of Aurora. It is shown that, beginning substantially contemporaneously with this transaction, the president of the bank, with the aid of some of the employees of the bank, in the course of a few months, disbursed in favor of certain depositors of the bank and to Watson an amount aggregating the total amount of the trust fund. Obviously, under the law, these acts by a trustee can have no effect in the way of a discharge of its liability for conversion of the trust fund unless the beneficiaries are, in some way, barred by their acts.

The bank did not advise plaintiffs of the fact or of the manner of collection of the trust fund, but continued to forward interest to the beneficiaries. On February 4, 1930, Watson suggested that Stolp retire a $600 note she owed the bank out of the corpus of the trust estate, and Mrs. Marvin answered that such suggestion was unsatisfactory, as it would create a new res of $19,400.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. Supp. 275, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marvin-v-first-nat-bank-of-aurora-ill-ilnd-1935.