Matter of Zimmerman
This text of 69 B.R. 436 (Matter of Zimmerman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In the Matter of Sheldon ZIMMERMAN, Debtor.
Keith E. BROADNAX, Trustee, Plaintiff,
v.
PRUDENTIAL-BACHE SECURITIES, INC., Defendant.
United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Wisconsin.
*437 Jack U. Shlimovitz, Ludwig & Shlimovitz, for plaintiff.
Elizabeth A. Orelup, William H. Harbeck, Quarles & Brady, for defendant.
MEMORANDUM DECISION
C.N. CLEVERT, Chief Judge.
The debtor, Sheldon Zimmerman, is a former account executive for defendant, Prudential-Bache Securities, Inc. (Bache). While at Bache, he contributed to an employee savings fund (Bayco account funds) administered by the company's benefits department and maintained by the Irving Trust Company. On January 3, 1984, Zimmerman left Bache to join another securities firm. At that time, he requested and was entitled to receive vested benefits of over $20,000, payable on March 31, 1984, the end of the calendar quarter following termination of his employment.
The day after leaving his position at Bache, Zimmerman agreed to repay Bache for personal trading losses amounting to $90,660. He, therefore, executed a promissory note requiring payment in full with interest at 14% per annum, an initial payment of $40,000 and monthly payments thereafter in the sum of $1,688.67. But by mid-January, 1984, Zimmerman realized he could not repay the note as agreed. Consequently, on January 19th, his attorney proposed to Bache's attorney that the note be modified. His attorney wrote:
As to the $40,000 due on or before February 1, 1984, Mr. Zimmerman proposes to turnover the balance in his Bayco savings account, approximately $20,000, as soon as it matures. His first monthly installment will commence with May 1, 1984, with payment of $844.33. Payments of this amount (1/2 of that provided in the note) will continue for another two months at which time the monthly payments would increase to the amount set forth in the note. At the end of the term, September 1, 1986, Mr. Zimmerman will discharge the full balance remaining due.
Bache's attorney accepted the proposal and, with Zimmerman's authorization, directed the company's benefits department to deliver to him a check for the balance payable to Zimmerman from his Bayco account on March 31st. However, after the check was delivered to Bache's attorney, Zimmerman refused to endorse it and the check remained uncashed when Zimmerman filed his petition on June 27, 1984.
Keith Broadnax, Zimmerman's Chapter 7 bankruptcy trustee, subsequently initiated this adversary proceeding seeking turnover of the Bayco account funds pursuant to 11 U.S.C. §§ 363 and 542. Bache counterclaimed seeking a declaratory judgment that as a result of debtor's pledge in its favor the estate has no interest in the funds; Bache is entitled to possession of the funds to reduce Zimmerman's obligation to Bache; Bache is entitled to an order, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 554(b), directing the trustee to abandon any interest he may claim in the funds; and, Bache is entitled to an order directing the trustee to take reasonable and necessary steps to enable it to take possession of the Bayco account. In the alternative, Bache asks for relief from the automatic stay in order to *438 enable it to take possession of the Bayco account.
ANALYSIS
At common law a pledge is defined as a security interest in a chattel or in an intangible represented by an indispensable instrument, the interest being created by a bailment for the purpose of securing the payment of a debt or the performance of some other duty.[1]Restatement of Security § 1 (1941).
The elements of a pledge include a contract between pledgor and pledgee whereby the property is to be held as security. Matz v. Farmers and Citizens Bank, 218 Wis. 613, 618, 261 N.W. 755, 757 (1935). In order to perfect a pledge and create a lien it is essential that the pledgee have possession of the pledged property. Geilfuss v. Corrigan, 95 Wis. 651, 665, 70 N.W. 306, 310 (1897); Restatement of Security, supra, at Comment a. However, a pledge of property that is in the possession of a third person may be created by the pledgor's assent coupled with notification to the third person pledge holder that the property has been pledged to the pledgee. Restatement of Security, supra at § 8.
In this case, the purported pledged property consists of funds in an employee savings account maintained at the Irving Trust Company. "When a person deposits money with a bank in a general account such as a savings account, a creditor/debtor relationship is established. The bank becomes liable on the terms of the expressed or implied contract of deposit." (Citations omitted) Ma v. Community Bank, 494 F.Supp. 252, 256 (E.D.Wis.1980) aff'd in part and rev'd in part, 686 F.2d 459 (7th Cir.1982), cert. denied 459 U.S. 962, 103 S.Ct. 287, 74 L.Ed.2d 273 (1982) reh'g denied 459 U.S. 1081, 103 S.Ct. 504, 74 L.Ed.2d 642 (1982). Hence, "[m]oney deposited in a general account at a bank does not remain the property of the depositor. Upon deposit of funds at a bank, the money deposited becomes the property of the depositary bank; the property of the depositor is the indebtedness of the bank to it, a mere chose in action." Miller v. Wells Fargo Bank International Corp., 540 F.2d 548, 560 (2d Cir.1976); See also, Walton v. Piqua State Bank, 204 Kan. 741, 466 P.2d 316, 329 (1970). As such, a deposit account is an intangible property interest which may be pledged where possession is accomplished through the device of an indispensable instrument. Walton, supra, 466 P.2d at 327; Restatement, supra, at § 1 Comment e. This document then represents the intangible property right "to the extent that it stands in the place of, or embodies, or reifies, the intangible [so that] a pledge of the document amounts to a pledge of the right." Annotation, Pledge by Transfer of Instrument, 53 A.L.R.2d 1397, 1398 (1957).
Court's have refined the definition of an indispensable instrument to require that it give to the holder thereof exclusive control and irrevocable authority over the property interest pledged. Thus, it was held in the Miller case that a telex test key number was not an indispensable instrument even though it gave the purported pledgee bank sole physical control over the deposit or withdrawal of funds in a time deposit account. The court found that the bank failed to establish that the telex key number gave it irrevocable authority over the account or that the depositor could not have gained access to the account. Miller, 540 F.2d at 563. Similarly, in Walton v. Piqua State Bank, supra,
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