Reichert v. Fidelity Bank & Trust Co.

241 N.W. 236, 257 Mich. 535, 1932 Mich. LEXIS 873
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1932
DocketDocket No. 225, Calendar No. 36,371.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 241 N.W. 236 (Reichert v. Fidelity Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reichert v. Fidelity Bank & Trust Co., 241 N.W. 236, 257 Mich. 535, 1932 Mich. LEXIS 873 (Mich. 1932).

Opinions

Fead, J.

Defendant Fidelity Bank & Trust Company, originally organized as a trust company, was authorized to conduct a general banking business, with commercial and savings departments, under 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 12019.

For some years, petitioner, Paw Paw Savings Bank, had kept a commercial deposit account with defendant and sometimes borrowed money from it. Defendant was closed October 7, 1931, at which time petitioner owed it $10,734.35 on a note for borrowed money and had commercial credits on deposit account and certificate of $9,415.85.

When the note was given, defendant’s officers “allotted and allocated” it to the. commercial department, but the next day transferred it to the trust department, where it since has remained. This was done without notice to or knowledge or consent of petitioner, and was in accordance with the banking practice of daily making transfer of assets from one department to another to fulfill the statutory requirements regarding investments and reserves in different departments and to maintain the proper separation of accounts.

Petitioner claims the right to set off its credits against the note. The receiver denies the right of set-off, on the contention that allowance of a commercial department credit against a trust department note would deplete the assets of the latter department to the amount of the credit, and result in violation of 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 12019:

“All such other securities and assets of the company shall be segregated as trust department assets *538 and held by the company primarily for the benefit and security of the creditors of the company in its trust department and shall be used and applied for the satisfaction of any and all such creditors before the same, or any part thereof, shall be used or applied for the benefit or security of depositors or other creditors of said company in either its commercial or savings bank business.”

To similar effect is the statute covering the savings department, 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 11928. The commercial department is without statutory preferences on liquidation.

There are no decisions in point in. this State, and the few cases in other jurisdictions, while helpful, are not persuasive, because of difference in statutes, or in historical conceptions of banks, or for other reasons. As other questions of set-off are pending in this court, this case will be used as a vehicle for a somewhat general discussion of the right. The profession will appreciate that only mutual credits and debits, not impressed with a special contract or status, are under consideration.

Although it has three departments, an institution like defendant is a single legal corporate entity and is so dealt with by the public. By deposit, the relation of creditor and debtor is created. By loan, the relation of creditor and debtor is created. In both instances the relation is between the corporation, not a department of it, and the customer. The accounts are mutual, and each party is entitled to set-off against the other. 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 14132; State Banking Com’r v. E. Jossman State Bank, 185 Mich. 24 (Ann Cas. 1917C, 1203); 25 A. L. R. 938, note; Ann. Cas. 1916D, 599, note.

The right of set-off is valuable and should not be infringed or denied to either bank or customer un *539 less, because of the statutes giving preferences to savings depositors and trust creditors in the assets of the respective departments, there is no alternative. Any conflict must be resolved to conserve both right and preferences if it can be done.

It will be conceded that the full statutory preferences to savings depositors and trust department creditors must be preserved. Equally important, however, it must be accepted that neither is entitled to greater preference than the statutes give, and that the preference cannot be increased at the expense of the creditors in another department. Any rule which decreases or increases the statutory preference is unsound. “

Set-off of a commercial deposit against a savings or trust department loan would decrease the assets of such department and decrease the preference.

Set-off of a savings or trust department deposit against a commercial loan would increase the preference in the department of deposit, by reducing the claims and leaving the assets intact, and would decrease the assets the statutes give to creditors in the commercial department.

Set-oif of a savings deposit against a trust loan, or vice versa, would increase the preference in the department of deposit and decrease it in the department of loan.

If, however, no cross-departmental set-off at all be allowed, the preference would be unimpaired.

The effect of partial or no cross-departmental set-off should be considered. It would result in a receiver being compelled to pay dividends on a deposit although, in another department, he holds a note of the depositor which he cannot collect and would force him to take legal action to subject dividends to the loan. Worse, it would enable the *540 officers of an operating bank, by marks on a book, to transfer a loan to or from the department of deposit, and, thereby, to grant or deny the depositor a set-off, at their pleasure and to its advantage. The latter situation is intolerable.

It is not a good excuse for such injustice and inequity to say that the customer is presumed to know of the departmental preferences established by statute and to deal with the bank with reference to them. The customer has no power or duty to keep the books of the bank, to select the department to hold the loan nor to keep it there, nor to transfer it back and forth between departments. He deals with the bank as an entity,'which it is, and its internal business is not his concern.

The allowance of set-off without infringement of statutory preferences offers no difficulties to a court of equity.

It is only the balance of the debt, after deducting the credit, which is an asset of the bank. 3 Michie on Banks and Banking, § 81.

‘ ‘ The rule that a receiver of an insolvent is merely an assignee, so that choses in action pass subject to any right of set-off existing at the time of his appointment, applies to the receiver of an insolvent bank, who must allow the right of set-off when it exists.” 3 Michie on Banks and Banking, § 119.
“The receiver stands in the place of the bank which he represents, and has only such rights as it had, so that the rights of third parties are not increased, diminished, or varied by his appointment. He takes charge of the banking affairs where the bank left them, and takes over its assets with its concomitant burdens. In other words, he takes only such title to the assets as the bank itself had, subject to all equities which existed against the assets *541 in the hands of the bank. ’ ’ 3 Michie on Banks and Banking, § 96.

See, also, Thompson v. Union Trust Co., 130 Mich. 508 (97 Am. St. Rep. 494); Williams v. Johnson, 50 Mont.

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Bluebook (online)
241 N.W. 236, 257 Mich. 535, 1932 Mich. LEXIS 873, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reichert-v-fidelity-bank-trust-co-mich-1932.