People ex rel. Nelson v. Dahlgren State Bank

264 Ill. App. 513, 1932 Ill. App. LEXIS 29
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 1, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 264 Ill. App. 513 (People ex rel. Nelson v. Dahlgren State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Nelson v. Dahlgren State Bank, 264 Ill. App. 513, 1932 Ill. App. LEXIS 29 (Ill. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Edwards

delivered the opinion of the court.

On July 23, 1930, the auditor of public accounts closed the Dahlgren State Bank, appellant, as insolvent. Subsequently, Claud Crocker, on September 5, 1930, was appointed receiver. The appellees, by intervening petitions filed in the circuit court of Hamilton county, in proper proceedings there pending, asked that they be decreed preferred claims on the assets of the bank, to satisfy the value of certain Liberty Bonds previously left with the bank for safe-keeping. The chancellor, upon hearing, held in their favor and decreed that they have preferred claims on the general assets of the insolvent bank, from which decree the appellant has prosecuted this appeal.

The material facts, with one exception concerning bonds to the amount of $600, are not disputed. Appellees deposited Liberty Bonds, amounting to $18,100, with the bank, taking certificates therefor, which stated that the bonds were to be returned to the several owners upon demand and the surrender of the certificates properly endorsed.

The bank, on November 30, 1929, borrowed from the Citizens National Bank of Evansville, Indiana, the sum of $8,000, giving its note therefor, and as collateral security notes aggregating $11,058 face value, secured by real estate mortgages. On February 10, 1930, a second loan, in the sum of $7,000, was obtained from such Citizens National Bank, and $10,000 of the bonds in question were deposited as collateral therefor. On March 4, 1930, a renewal note, to replace the one of $8,000, was executed, and the Citizens National Bank demanding that the collateral therefor be bonds instead of notes secured by mortgages, the Dahlgren State Bank deposited with said Citizens National Bank $5,000 more of appellees ’ bonds, the renewal note stating on its face that the collateral for same was $5,000 Fourth Liberty Bonds and $3,000 on other note. Whereupon said mortgage notes, in such sum of $11,058, were returned to the Dahlgren State Bank, placed in its files, and in such condition came into the possession of the receiver. The proceeds of both loans were deposited in the Citizens National Bank to the credit of the Dahlgren State Bank, and by the latter bank drawn against from time to time, in the course of its business, to cover- clearings with other correspondent banks.

From the time of securing the first loan to the date of its closing, the Dahlgren State Bank received deposits in ordinary course, and made loans aggregating $5,847.19, of which amount $2,884.40 was loaned after February 10,1930. Certain bonds, aggregating $2,500, owned and deposited by appellee Ben Konert, were sold by the bank at his direction, and certificates of deposit executed therefor in his name. About these last mentioned bonds there is no dispute, and they are not involved in this controversy.

At the time the bank closed it held unsecured loans of $82,650.44, and loans secured by real estate mortgages amounting to $24,101.57. Cash in the bank and its correspondents, according to the receiver’s schedule, amounted to the sum of $829.15. On September 18, 1930, the Citizens National Bank sold the bonds deposited with it on account of said loans, for $15,740.41, deducted the amount due it on the two loans, and deposited the balance, or $654.45, to the credit of the Dahlgren State Bank.

It appears from the testimony that $15,600 of appellees’ bonds were sent to the Citizens National Bank. As before shown, $15,000 were deposited as collateral for the two loans respectively of $8,000 and $7,000. What became of the remaining $600 of bonds is not shown by the evidence. All the bonds, sent to the Evansville bank are described in the testimony, as to ownership, number and denomination; however, there is no word of proof as to the time of their transmission or delivery, nor as to which appellees were the owners of the bonds deposited to collaterally secure the different loans, nor as to which appellees were the owners of the $600 bonds sent for some purpose not disclosed by the record.

It is conceded that the Dahlgren State Bank had no title to any of such bonds, nor right to use them for its own purposes; that appellees gave it no authority to do so, and that its conversion of the bonds was unwarranted and wrongful.

The question involved is whether appellees are entitled to have a trust impressed upon the assets of the Dahlgren State Bank which entitled them to a preferred lien thereon as against the general creditors. The relation of appellees to said bank, regarding these bonds, was that of trust, and hence fiduciary in character. Woodhouse v. Crandall, 197 Ill. 104. Furthermore, as a consequence of such relationship, whatever proceeds resulted from the sale or hypothecation of the bonds were impressed with a trust. Leach v. Sanborn State Bank, 203 Iowa 401, 212 N. W. 694, 697, and cases cited.

In order that a preferential claim, based upon the theory of a trust, be enforced against the assets in the hands of the receiver of an insolvent bank, the trust funds must be traced into the assets. In Woodhouse v. Crandall, supra, the rule in Illinois is stated to be: “So long as it can be identified, either as the original property of the cestui que trust, or as a product of it, equity will follow it, and the right to reclaim it fails only when the means of ascertaining its identity fails.”

In cases where the trust property has been converted, and the proceeds can be traced into specific funds or specific identified property, the preferred claim cannot be allowed against the general assets of the trustee, but only as to such fund or assets as it is shown the proceeds of the trust property went into, and only to the extent they were placed therein. Woodhouse v. Crandall, supra, at page 116; Macy v. Roedenbeck, 227 Fed. 346; Cavin v. Gleason, 105 N. Y. 256, 11 N. E. 504; Drovers’ & Mechanics’ Nat. Bank v. Roller, 85 Md. 495, 36 L. R A. 767.

At the time of making the $8,000 loan on November 30, 1929, the Dahlgren State Bank took from its assets notes secured by real estate mortgages of the face value of $11,058, and deposited same as collateral for the loan. On March 4, 1930, this note was renewed; at which time there was deposited $5,000 more of such bonds, which, together with $3,000 of the amount deposited with the $7,000 loan, was stated on the face of the renewal note to be its collateral. Upon this being done, the Citizens National Bank returned to the Dahlgren State Bank such notes in the sum of $11,058. The consideration for the. return of these notes was the deposit of the Liberty Bonds. In other words, by turning over to the Citizens National Bank the bonds belonging to certain of appellees, the Dahlgren State Bank redeemed its own notes which had passed from its control when the $8,000 loan was originally made. The bonds were exchanged for the notes, which found their way back to the files of the Dahlgren State Bank, and thus came into the possession of the receiver. The effect of the transaction was that the latter bank converted such bonds, arid received in return the said notes. It thereby changed the form of the trust property, which, in its altered state, came into the custody of the receiver.

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Related

Campbell v. Albers
39 N.E.2d 672 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1942)
People ex rel. Nelson v. Citizens State Bank
274 Ill. App. 444 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1934)

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