Merchants' Ice & Fuel Co. v. Holland Baking Co.

8 S.W.2d 1030, 223 Mo. App. 93, 1928 Mo. App. LEXIS 198
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 20, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 8 S.W.2d 1030 (Merchants' Ice & Fuel Co. v. Holland Baking Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merchants' Ice & Fuel Co. v. Holland Baking Co., 8 S.W.2d 1030, 223 Mo. App. 93, 1928 Mo. App. LEXIS 198 (Mo. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

*95 BAILEY, J.

This is a claim for preference filed by appellant corporation with the commissioner of finance in charge of the Holland Banking Company, which bank failed and was closed January 15, 1924. The claim was referred to the circuit court of Greene county for its determination, as provided by sections 11718 to 11722, inclusive, Revised Statutes 1919, and is in the nature of an equitable action or interplea. No question arises on the pleading. At the close of the evidence the trial court, upon request of appellant, made a finding of facts which is as follows:

“The court finds the facts to be that at the time the Holland Banking Company was closed by the finance commissioner, said bank being then insolvent, that the Merchants Ice & Fuel Company had on deposit the sum of $3761.17; and that on November 23rd, 1923, said company had borrowed the sum of $5000 from said bank, giving its promissory note due ninety days thereafter, that prior to the closing of the said bank it, the said Holland Banking Company, had borrowed of the Mechanics & Metals National Bank of New York City, on notes signed by the officers of the Holland Banking Company, the sum of $400,000, that the money was borrowed on a regular collateral note, and various notes held by the Holland Banking Company aggregating the sum of $400,000 were pledged as security to said New York Bank, among which notes so pledged was the $5000 note of the Merchants lee & Fuel Company; that at the time the Holland Banking Company closed it had on deposit with said New York Bank cash to the amount of $108,000.
" The court further finds the facts to be that shortly after the Holland Banking Company was closed, and before its $5000 note became due, the Merchants Ice & Fuel Company, through its secretary and treasurer, inquired of the deputy finance commissioner in charge of said Holland Banking Company, if their $5000 note was in the bank and was told by said commissioner that this note had been sold and was owned by the New York Bank.
“The court finds that this inquiry was made for the purpose of offsetting that company’s deposit in the Holland Banking Company against said note.
“The court further finds that in making such inquiry the secretary and treasurer of the company was acting upon the advice of counsel to the effect that if said New York Bank held said note as collateral to the indebtedness of the Holland Banking Company that a set-off could be obtained, but that if the New York Bank had purchased said note and was the owner thereof that such offset could not be had.
“The court finds that said Merchants Ice & Fuel Company believing the statement of the said deputy finance commissioner that its note had been sold and was owned by the New York Bank, and relying upon such statement, upon the maturity of said note paid the same to the New York Bank.
*96 "The court further finds that in the year 1925, said New York Bank collected its note and interest thereon in full from the collateral, including said deposit, and returned to the commissioner of finance in charge of the Holland Banking Company notes aggregating $108,000, and that prior to the month of September, 1925, said finance commissioner in charge of said bank had collected from the notes so returned from said New York Bank and formerly held as collateral to the said $400,000, a sum in excess of $35,000.”

Thereafter the court gave judgment against' the claimant dismissing its claim and this appeal followed. This court heretofore rendered an opinion, reversing and remanding the cause, but in due time sustained defendant’s motion for rehearing for reasons hereinafter discussed.

We believe the evidence fairly justified the finding of facts made by the learned trial judge as above set forth. In addition to that .finding, however, some other circumstances were shown which we deem of .some importance. The claimant, Merchants lee & Fuel Company, received a certificate from the commissioner of finance in charge of the Holland Bank after it closed, showing the amount of its deposit with that bank. Thereafter claimant collected forty per cent on this certificate from the McDaniel National Bank and endorsed the certificate to the McDaniel National Bank as security for the advance payment. At the time of the trial that certificate was being held by the McDaniel Bank. It also appears that there was no one among the bank’s patrons similarly situated to claimant; that is, there was no other depositor whose note had been placed as collateral with the New York Bank who also had a deposit in the Holland Bank at the time it closed and had thereafter paid his note to the New York Bank, as did claimant. The record shows that two depositors of the Holland Bank had offset their deposits against their notes previously held as collateral by the New York Bank but returned to the commissioner in charge of the Holland Bank, after the indebtedness to the New York Bank had been paid.

This case primarily involves the right of a depositor to set off the amount of his deposit in an insolvent bank against his note given to that bank. Had the note of claimant been held by the Holland Bank at the time the commissioner took charge, the right of set-off would of course have been complete. [Aab v. French, 279 S. W. 435, l. c. 437, and cases cited.]

The facts under consideration, however, complicate the question to an unusual degree. These facts may be briefly summarized as follows: The $400,000 borrowed from the New York Bank by the officers of the Holland Bank was used by the latter bank and not by the individual officers who signed the note; when the Holland Bank failed claimant had on deposit therein about $3700, and its $5000 note to the Holland Bank was in the hands of the New York Bank, *97 placed there, with other notes, ostensibly as collateral to the $400,000 note executed by the officers of the Holland Bank; these collateral notes in the aggregate equalled the amount of the officers’ note to the New York Bank; under the mistaken belief, induced by a statement made to the claimant herein by the bank commissioner in charge of the Holland Bank that the New York Bank owned claimant’s $5000 note, the claimant paid the New York Bank the amount due thereon when its said note became due; the Holland Bank, at the time it closed, liad on deposit with the New York Bank $108,000, which amount was applied by the New York Bank on the $400,000 note of the officers; as a result of that application of funds the New York Bank returned $108,000 in notes to the Holland Bank; several depositors of the Holland Bank were allowed to offset their deposits against their notes included in those so returned by the New York Bank; the commissioner thereafter collected about $35,000 of the notes returned; claimant has received forty per cent of its deposit from the McDaniel Bank, turning over as security its „ certificate showing the amount it had on deposit with the Holland Bank. There is no evidence that the board of directors of the Holland Bank authorized the officers of that bank to deliver claimant’s note to the New York Bank as security for the $400,000 note of said officers. Under such circumstances is claimant lawfully entitled to a preference Í

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Bluebook (online)
8 S.W.2d 1030, 223 Mo. App. 93, 1928 Mo. App. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-ice-fuel-co-v-holland-baking-co-moctapp-1928.