People v. California Safe Deposit & Trust Co.

167 P. 388, 175 Cal. 756, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 756
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 27, 1917
DocketS. F. No. 8088.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 167 P. 388 (People v. California Safe Deposit & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. California Safe Deposit & Trust Co., 167 P. 388, 175 Cal. 756, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 756 (Cal. 1917).

Opinion

SLOSS, J.

On October 30, 1907, California Safe Deposit and Trust Company, a banking corporation, closed its doors. The bank commissioners took possession of its assets, and an action was begun, pursuant to the provisions of the statute then in force (Stats. 1903, p. 365), to have the said bank declared insolvent, and to have a receiver appointed for the purpose of liquidating its affairs. On January 14, 1908, adjudication of insolvency was made and a receiver appointed.

On April 10, 1908, O. M. Goldaracena, the appellant herein, filed his petition, asking that the receiver be declared to hold the sum of twelve thousand dollars in trust for him, and that he recover the same with interest. A second amended peti *758 tion was subsequently filed. The court sustained the receiver’s demurrer to the latter pleading, and the petitioner appealed. The appeal resulted in a reversal of the judgment entered upon the sustaining of the demurrer. (People v. California Safe Dep. & Trust Co., 19 Cal. App. 414, [126 Pac. 516, 520].) The ease went back for trial, and judgment was entered granting the petitioner some, but not all, of the relief claimed by him. His appeal from the second judgment is now before us.

The allegations upon which the petitioner sought relief were, in effect, that on September 20,1906, the California Safe Deposit and Trust Company had, by means of false and fraudulent representations, induced Mm to purchase one hundred shares of the capital stock of said company for the sum of twelvé thousand dollars; that he had not learned the falsity of the representations until shortly before beginning this action, and that he had promptly served upon the bank and the receiver his notice of rescission. He further alleged that the said sum of twelve thousand dollars paid by him remained in the possession of the bank continuously until the adjudication of insolvency, and that it thereupon passed into the hands of the receiver, who has since held the same, “and that the same can be traced and identified in his hands, and is the identical money of the petitioner.” It was held, on the former appeal, that the petition stated a cause of action, and this holding is, of course, binding here.

When the case came to be tried, the court found in favor of petitioner’s allegations with respect to fraud, discovery, and rescission. It found, however, that no part of the sum of twelve thousand dollars paid by the petitioner as the purchase price of the stock was continuously in the possession of said bank from the time of the payment until the appointment of the receiver, that the receiver did not receive any part of said sum, and that no part of it can be traced or identified into Ms hands. Accordingly, the court concluded that petitioner was entitled to a rescission of his contract, and to an allowed claim against the bank for $11,350, being the amount paid by him for his stock, less dividends declared and paid by the bank prior to the adjudication of insolvency. The judgment was that said claim be paid in due course of administration and liquidation of the affairs of the bank by the receiver, and that the petitioner be paid the dividends theretofore paid by the receiver to other general creditors, amounting to thirteen and *759 one-third per cent, with interest, and that he is entitled to receive on his claim such further dividends as may be declared and ordered paid upon common claims.

Upon this appeal the appellant insists that he was entitled to payment in full, rather than as a general or common creditor. His position is that the bank became an involuntary trustee of the twelve thousand dollars which it had obtained from him by fraud (Civ. Code, see. 2224), and that he had sufficiently traced this trust fund into the hands of the receiver to be entitled to payment in preference to general creditors. It is well settled that the beneficiary of a trust may follow and recover the trust fund if any property in the hands of the trustee or of those taking with notice can be identified either as the original property of the cestui que trust, or as the product of it. (Thompson’s Appeal, 22 Pa. St. 16.) Where, however, the identity of the trust fund has been lost, the beneficiary is relegated to the position of a general creditor, and must share pro rata with other general creditors. (Lathrop v. Bampton, 31 Cal. 17, [89 Am. Dec. 141].) The court below found that the fund claimed by petitioner could not be identified or traced into the assets going into the hands of the receiver, and the judgment is therefore clearly right, unless the appellant can establish his contention that the findings in this regard are contrary to the evidence. The record shows these facts: On September 20, 1906, the day Avhen the bank sold this stock to the petitioner, it had on hand in its vaults the sum of $177,664.13, and on the same day it had on deposit with other banks the sum of $1,326,436.98. At no time between said twentieth day of September, 1906, and the closing of the bank on October 30, 1907, did the amount of money held by the bank fall below $123,693.96. On the day when the bank closed its doors it had on hand $189,564.89 in cash, and $135,848.37 on deposit with other banks. The total deposits in the bank on September 20, 1906, were $8,507,605.07, and on October 30, 1907, $9,064,-510.64. Between these two dates the deposits and withdrawals from the bank aggregated many millions of dollars; the deposits during that period amounted to more than six million six hundred thousand dollars, and the withdrawals about the same. Claims aggregating $331,082.60 have been presented by persons who made deposits during the last four days of the active life of the bank. Such depositors demand *760 that the amount of their deposits be allowed as preferred claims.

The appellant insists that upon these facts the court was bound to find that the twelve thousand dollars received from him, as aforesaid, remained intact in the hands of the bank during the entire period intervening between the purchase of the stock and the closing of the bank, and that such fund had been identified and traced into the hands of the receiver. The argument is that since it appears that the bank had on hand at all times a sum in excess of twelve thousand dollars, the amount claimed by the petitioner, it must be presumed that it retained this sum to meet his claim arising from the fraud perpetrated upon him. The argument is based upon the well-settled rule that if a trustee mingles his own funds with the trust fund, and thereafter draws from time to time from the commingled mass, “it will be presumed that the moneys so drawn were from his own portion of the fund, rather than from the moneys held by him in trust.” (Elizalde v. Elizalde, 137 Cal. 634, 641, [66 Pac. 369, 70 Pac. 861] ; In re Hallett’s Estate, L. R. 13 Ch. Div. 696; National Bank v. Insurance Co., 104 U. S. 54, [26 L. Ed. 693]; Lewin on Trusts, *895.) Various expressions have been used, in defining the nature of the rule. In some of the cases, as pointed out by the appellant, it has been said that equity ■ will “attribute” the withdrawals to the trustee’s private account.

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Bluebook (online)
167 P. 388, 175 Cal. 756, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-california-safe-deposit-trust-co-cal-1917.