National City Bank of Chicago v. Kalamazoo City Sav. Bank

232 F. 669, 146 C.C.A. 595, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1866
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 2, 1916
DocketNo. 2721
StatusPublished

This text of 232 F. 669 (National City Bank of Chicago v. Kalamazoo City Sav. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National City Bank of Chicago v. Kalamazoo City Sav. Bank, 232 F. 669, 146 C.C.A. 595, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1866 (6th Cir. 1916).

Opinion

DENISON, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). This statute has been accepted, by the Supreme Court of Michigan, as providing that the pledgee or purchaser of bank stock, who presents the certificates to the bank for transfer on its books, has an absolute right to such transfer as against any claim by the bank against, its stockholder, unless such claim is upon a debt which is “due'’ in the sense of being past due; in other words, “due” and “matured,” in different parts of the section, are synonymous. That court has also considered the respective rights of the bank and the pledgee in the cases later mentioned, -and so far as it has thus construed the statute, it is, of course, our duty to follow; but some study of the principles involved in this situation, and in these Michigan cases, seems necessary before making their application to the facts in this case. We shall, for convenience, speak of the issuing corporation as the bank, and of the person loaning money upon the stock and taking it as collateral security as the pledgee.

It will be noticed that the statute contains two possibly effective provisions: The first is, “no transfer of stock shall be valid against the bank so long as,” etc.; the second is, “no stock shall be transferred on [671]*671the books of any bank * * * where,” etc. The first seems to relate to a transfer, in the broadest sense of that word, and the second to the entry of that transfer on the books so as to perfect the legal title. Considering the first provision by itself, it seems clear enough that not oidy the statutory provision but the converse must be accepted, and, accordingly, that a “transfer” is valid if the stockholder is not then liable to the bank upon a. matured obligation; and so it would seem that the rights of the parties are to be judged as of the date when the pledgee acquires his interest. If this language alone were considered, it could hardly be material whether the interest, taken by a pledgee and assignee of certificates before transfer on the books, should be called legal or equitable; under either name, it is a substantial interest. This section does not purport to create or declare any lien in favor of the bank until the maturity of the debt, and it seemingly must follow that the pledgee’s interest will be superior to any subsequently accruing statutory right in favor of the bank. However, the second statutory provision relates to the time when the pledgee demands a transfer on the books, and makes the right to such transfer conditional upon the nonexistence at that time of a debt to the bank which is then past due.

If the pledgee has acquired, by such original transfer, an interest good and valid against the bank, there is no equitable reason why this interest should be ousted by the subsequent maturity of the bank debt; yet the second statutory provision implies such ouster. There seems no way to reconcile the two provisions and give effect to each, unless it is upon the theory that the pledgee who takes the stock gets an inchoate or contingent priority over any existing and unmatured bank debt, which priority, as against the statute which still continues to threaten, the pledgee can fix and ripen only by demanding a transfer or doing some equivalent thing before the fatal incident — the maturity of the bank debt — happens. The pledgee is in the position of a mortgagee who has not recorded his mortgage, and is likely to lose his lien by the levy of execution by a creditor; this statute provides for an automatic execution; the lien, comparable to an execution lien, is precipitated by the mere coming of maturity.

It is to be noticed, also, that under this statute the usual equitable principles which fix priorities between conflicting claimants are wholly .disregarded and an arbitrary rule is substituted. " It seems plain that the statute does not intend to affect the stockholder’s full control of his stock, so long as he is not in default at the bank, and that, though the pledgee or purchaser of stock may know that the stockholder is indebted to the bank for more than the value of the stock and that the debt will come due tomorrow, yet to-day he can acquire the stock by pledge or by purchase, present it for transfer on the books, and— lacking fraud — acquire a superior title. All the notices which the bank might serve would be waste paper. On the other hand, if the bank debt has matured before a demand for transfer or equivalent event happens, the right of the bank becomes superior by arbitrary provision, not by any equitable principle. The maturity of the debt does not prejudice the bank — rather the contrary; the bank does not do any[672]*672thing or part with anything at maturity whereby it ought to be preferred over an outstanding superior equity. The date of the original loan by the bank, which is the only date as of which it can have equities against other claimants, is, in the statute, left out of account. These considerations confirm the conclusion that the statutory lien, when perfected by the happening of the statutory event, ought to prevail against the outstanding nonstatutory lien, which has not been perfected in the method provided.

It is obvious, we think, that the pledgee’s demand for transfer-, in order to satisfy this theory, need not be a present demand; an anticipatory one, or even a contingent one, may be equivalent. The important thing is the election by the pledgee to insist upon his right of priority, or his willingness to waive such right. The existence of the pledge does not necessarily imply that the pledgee will enforce his rights to the extent of injuring the bank. The stockholder may be amply responsible for the pledgee’s loan, the pledgee may have other sufficient security, special and personal considerations would often control, the chance that a debt to the bank will mature and remain unpaid before the pledgee’s debt matures may seem very small — in many cases, the pledgee would deliberately elect not to make claim, as against the bank, even at some risk to the pledgee. It follows that mere knowledge by the bank of the pledgee’s loan is not equivalent to notice or knowledge that the pledgee will insist upon his priority. This, again, confirms the conclusion that the statute ought to be construed to give the priority to the bank upon maturity, unless, before that time, the pledgee has elected to demand his priority and the bank has knowledge of such election.

Are the Michigan decisions consistent with this conclusion? In Michigan Trust Company v. State Bank, 111 Mich. 306, 69 N. W. 645, it does not appear whether the bank or the pledgee first gave credit, but not until after the maturity of the bank debt did the pledgee give notice to the bank that the pledgee held the stock as collateral and intended looking to it for payment of the note. The lien or claim of the bank was held valid as against the pledgee; and the formal notice from the pledgee is treated as being the demand, or equivalent to the demand, for transfer to which the statute refers. In Citizens’ Bank v. Kalamazoo Bank, 111 Mich. 313, 69 N. W. 663, the same situation existed, and the same result was reached. In Oakland Bank v. State Bank, 113 Mich. 284, 71 N. W. 453, 67 Am. St. Rep. 463, it is taken as clear without discussion that the lien of the bank was superior, where it was for a debt which was due before the pledgee acquired his interest. In Brinen v. Muskegon Bank, 174 Mich. 414, 140 N. W. 529, the only question in dispute was whether the debt to the bank was in fact matured when the pledgee demanded the transfer; and it was conceded that the pledgee was without remedy if the bank debt had, at that time, matured.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Michigan Trust Co. v. State Bank
69 N.W. 645 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1896)
Citizens' State Bank v. Kalamazoo County Bank
69 N.W. 663 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1896)
Oakland County Savings Bank v. State Bank
71 N.W. 453 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1897)
Just v. State Savings Bank
94 N.W. 200 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1903)
Brinen v. Muskegon Savings Bank
140 N.W. 529 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1913)
Hotchkiss & Upson Co. v. Union Nat. Bank
68 F. 76 (Sixth Circuit, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 F. 669, 146 C.C.A. 595, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-city-bank-of-chicago-v-kalamazoo-city-sav-bank-ca6-1916.