Records v. McKim

80 A. 968, 115 Md. 299, 1911 Md. LEXIS 145
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 4, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 80 A. 968 (Records v. McKim) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Records v. McKim, 80 A. 968, 115 Md. 299, 1911 Md. LEXIS 145 (Md. 1911).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant’s intestate, Geoi’ge J'. Records, was a customer of McKim & Company, a partnership engaged in the banking and brokerage business in Baltimore. He deposited with the firm certain securities as collateral for advances by it in the purchase of stock and bonds on his account. A receiver was subsequently appointed for the partnership. This action was taken on a bill filed by a creditor and by one of the members of the firm. The only defendant was Hollins McKim, who was alleged in the bill to be engaged in business as a banker and broker under the name of McKim & Company. It was averred that the plaintiff part *301 ner, while a member of the firm and contributing his services to the business, had never contributed or agreed to furnish any capital, and that the assets of the firm were the property of Hollins McKim and consisted in part of cash, securities and loans to customers, and in a large measure of real estate upon some of which it was difficult to realize readily either by sale or mortgage. The bill further stated that owing to withdrawals of deposits and other causes the cash on hand and other available funds had been reduced to a point below the requirements of the banking business, and demands had been made by customers which could not be immediately met, but if time were obtained in which to realize upon the real estate and other property of Hollins McKim, the business could be wound up and the claims of creditors settled. There were other allegations as to the necessity for a receivership, and there was a prayer for that relief. The defendant immediately filed a consent answer, and an order was thereupon passed by the Court below appointing a receiver with authority to take possession of the property and assets of the partnership and of its members and to pay the proceeds under the direction of the Court to the creditors or other persons entitled.

The receiver came into possession of certain stock and bonds purchased by the firm for Mr. Records, the appellant’s intestate, and for which it had advanced $37,773.49. A sale of these securities and the collection of dividends on them produced the sum of $28,187.84, leaving an indebtedness of $9,441.97 due from Mr. Records to the receiver to which the collateral we have mentioned as having been deposited by him with the firm should have been applicable. It appeared, however, that this collateral, in connection with securities belonging to the firm and other customers, had been rehypothecated by McKim & Company with the Mercantile Trust Company and the Rational Bank of Baltimore for loans to the partnership, the proceeds of which were deposited to its credit in the last-named institution. Hpon the application of Mr. Records permission was granted him by the Court *302 below to pay to tbe receiver the sum of $17,860.00, the amount ascertained to be the loaning value of his repledged collateral, with the understanding that the fund should be applied to the redemption of his securities from the pledgees. This arrangement was carried into effect, with the result that Mr. Records recovered his stock and bonds by the expenditure stated. Against this was chargeable his indebtedness ■ of $9,441.97 to the firm, leaving a balance of $8,418.03 for which he is a creditor of the estate in the hands of the receiver. The questions we are to determine relate to certain claims of priority as to this indebtedness.

The order providing for the redemption of the rehypothecated securities of Mr. Records reserved to him “the right to file with the auditor his claim (to be thereafter passed upon by the Court) for preference over the general creditors of McKim & Company,” and the claim was subsequently referred to the auditor with direction that he ascertain whether it was “entitled to a preference out of the general assets in the possession of the receiver or against any special fund or balance which may come into the hands of said receiver from the persons, firms or corporations” to whom the securities in question had been repledged.

The auditor has reported in two accounts funds or distribution aggregating $55,694.31, and it is stated by agreement that the estate yet to be accounted for amounts to approximately $75,000;00. It is recited in the auditor’s report that all the funds distributed in the case are derived exclusively from the individual assets of Hollins McKim. In the accounts already filed the creditors are divided into five classes. The first includes those who are designated by the auditor as individual creditors of Hollins McKim. Their claims amount to only a few hundred dollars and are allowed in full. The second class embraces the depositors of the firm. These claims aggregate about $126,000.00. The third class includes creditors whose claims, the total of which is about $20,000.00, originated in the rehypothecation of collateral pledged with the firm to secure it for advances made *303 to customers in the purchase of stocks and bonds. In the case of claims belonging to this class there was no redemption of the securities, but they were sold by the institutions to which they had been pledged, and the customers were treated as creditors of the estate in the hands of the receiver to the extent of the difference between the selling values of their collateral and the amounts of their respective indebtedness to the firm. Class four comprises creditors in the situation of Mr. Records. The only difference between these and the creditors of class three is that the former advanced the necessary funds to secure the redemption and restoration of their repledged collateral, while the latter permitted their securities to be sold. In each instance the values represented by the sale or redemption constitute the basis of the creditors’ claims. The total of the debts in the fourth class is about $26,000.00. The fifth and final class is made up of miscellaneous liabilities amounting to several hundred dollars.

After the claims of the first class had been given priority in the audit, all the other claims were placed on an equality in the distribution of the estate. Mr. Records and the other creditors of the fourth class excepted to the audit on the ground that their claims were not allowed preference over the general unsecured creditors of Hillins McKim and McKim & Company. The audits were ratified with the assent of the exceptants under a stipulation that the question of their right to preference be reserved for the future action of the Court, and that if their claim to priority should be sustained, they should be satisfied out of funds of the estate remaining for distribution. The exceptions of the appellant and one of the other creditors of the same class were subsequently heai’d and overruled' by the Court and the order to that effect is the occasion for the present appeal.

The primary contention of the appellant is that the rehypothecation of the securities of her intestate by McKim & Company was a tort for which the members of the firm were severally as well as jointly liable, and that a claim growing *304 out of such a transaction is entitled to priority over ordinary joint contract debts of the firm in the distribution of the individual estate here under administration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 A. 968, 115 Md. 299, 1911 Md. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/records-v-mckim-md-1911.