State v. Bank of Magdalena

270 P. 881, 33 N.M. 473
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 28, 1928
DocketNo. 3264.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 270 P. 881 (State v. Bank of Magdalena) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bank of Magdalena, 270 P. 881, 33 N.M. 473 (N.M. 1928).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

WATSON, J.

Appellee is the receiver of the insolvent Bank of Magdalena, appointed under the provisions of Laws 1919, c. 120,- § 32. Appellant being a debtor of the bank, made claim to a set-off, which the district court denied.

When the bank suspended payment, appellant was-indebted to it on past-due notes aggregating some $4,800. Socorro county had on deposit in the bank some $10,000. The deposit was secured by a bond given by the United States Fidelity & Indemnity Company. This surety held indemnity in the form of a bond, given by four.of the directors of the bank, of whom appellant was one. The indemnitors were bound by an agreement among themselves that their liability should be proportionate to their stock holdings. Pursuant to these obligations, the indemnitors, after the bank’s suspension, paid the county deposit in full; appellant’s contribution thereto being nearly $7,500.

It is recited, in the judgment:

"That the only question presented to the court is one of law, namely, as to whether a surety, who has satisfied the liability of the defendant insolvent bank upon a deposit account of public funds and has become subrogated to the rights of a depositor, can set off his claim thereunder against his liability on promissory notes ■to the said insolvent bank.”

The same question is presented here. The fact that appellant was not himself the surety, but an indemnitor of the surety, received no consideration in the trial court. Appellant says it makes no difference, and that he stands in the same position as an original surety. He cites 37 Cyc. 434. Appellee acquiesces. We therefore assume the correctness of the proposition.

Numerous authorities on the question stated are found collected in the case note entitled “Set-Off by Surety of Claim Paid for Insolvent Principal Whose Assets are Being Administered for the Benefit of Creditors, against Own Indebtedness to Principal,” 40 A. L. R. 1096. There is a sharp conflict of judicial opinion. The annotator does not venture to express a view as to the merits of the question, nor as to the weight of authority. Michie lays it down that equity will allow such set-off. 2 Banks and Banking, § 135 (6), p. 1073. But he cites two New York cases only.

The authorities are unanimous in sustaining the equity to a set-off of a claim acquired prior to the insolvency, and equally so in denying it upon a claim subsequently acquired'. In the first case the asset which vests in the receiver is merely the balance owed to the insolvent. In the latter case, the debt, having passed to the receiver free from equities, cannot be reduced by a counter debt subsequently acquired. To allow a set-off in that case would be to the prejudice of an equity enjoyed by the creditors in general to equality of distribution. It would create a preference. The question upon which the courts have divided is this: Should equity regard the surety, who has entered into his engagement before insolvency, and whose liability has become fixed by the insolvency, but who has not actually satisfied the liability and become subrogated until after insolvency, as having acquired his counter debt after insolvency? Among the decisions holding that he should not be so regarded are Kilby v. First National Bank, 32 Misc. Rep. 370, 66 N. Y. S. 579; Chenault v. Bush, 84 Ky. 528, 2 S. W. 160; Nolan Lumber Co. v. Dudley Lumber Co., 128 Tenn. 11, 156 S. W. 465, 46 L. R. A. (N. S.) 62; Ann. Cas. 1914D, 744; Barney v. Grover, 28 Vt. 391; Cosgrove v. McKasy, 65 Minn. 426, 68 N. W. 76; North Side Bank v. U. S. F. & G. Co., 127 Wash. 342, 220 P. 822; Momsen v. Noyes, 105 Wis. 565, 81 N. W. 860.

The theory of these decisions, speaking generally, is that the liability of the surety is fixed at the moment of suspension of payments, and is upon a contract previously made. The surety from that moment is the insolvent’s debtor, subject only to the fulfilling of his obligation to satisfy the depositor, which, in the nature of things, requires some time. The obligation to reimburse the surety arises immediately upon refusal by the bank, by its suspension of payments, to pay the deposit. There is but one difficulty in this theory. The liability to reimburse, though fixed, is not enforceable in any ordinary action, until the surety has himself made payment. To meet this, the dpctrine of relation is invoked. The payment, when made, is given relation to the time of entering into the suretyship engagement, or at least to the time of insolvency.

Among the decisions to the contrary are the following: Mack v. Woodruff, 87 Ill. 570; Richardson v. Anderson, 109 Md. 641, 72 A. 485, 25 L. R. A. (N. S.) 393, 130 Am. St. Rep. 543; Starts v. George, 150 Mo. 1, 51 S. W. 489; U. S. F. & G. Co. v. Maxwell, 152 Ark. 64, 237 S. W. 708; U. S. F. & G. Co. v. Wooldridge, 268 U. S. 234, 45 S. Ct. 489, 69 L. Ed. 932, 40 A. L. R. 1094; Hammons v. U. S. F. & G. Co., 30 Ariz. 480, 248 P. 1086; Gilbertson v. Northern Trust Co., 53 N. D. 502, 207 N. W. 42, 42 A. L. R. 1553. The three last mentioned take the view that the doctrine of relation will not be invoked to do injustice.

The doctrine of relation, in'cases such as this, is favorable to a set-off. It is unfavorable to the equity of equality among creditors. Whether it promotes justice or injustice would seem to depend upon which equity is superior. It strikes us that the equity of set-off must he deemed superior. All authorities admit it in a proper case, 'always to the prejudice of the equity of equality. One may not, after his debtor has become insolvent, improve his situation to the disadvantage of other creditors by acquiring counter debts. The inequity of that is plain. But in the present case there was no acquiring of a counter debt after the insolvency.. The debt sought to be used as a set-off was already fixed upon appellant by his previous contracts and by the fact of insolvency. By no 'act of his has he improved his situation. If his claim should not be allowed, he must pay his debt in full, and rest satisfied with only a part of what is owed to him. Thus his treatment would be quite different from that of another creditor, whose equities differed only in an un-' substantial and theoretical way'. This view would seem to support the rule laid down by the authorities first cited.

Whether the decisions could be to any extent harmonized by consideration of statutory differences is a question we do not pursue. Certainly the provisions of the National Banking Act (Rev. St. §§ 5236, 5242 [12 USCA §§ 91, 194]) as to distribution and against preferences are different from our own statutes governing the same matters. We pass to a consideration of the latter.

The Banking Code of this state (Laws 1915, c. 67, as amended) makes no special provisions as to preferences or set-offs in case of insolvency. These matters are governed by the provisions of the general incorporation laws for the winding up of insolvent corporations. Laws 1919, c. 120, § 32. State v. People’s State Bank & Trust Co., 23 N. M. 282, 168 P. 526. -Those provisions recognize the principle of ratable distribution among creditors, and by inference discountenance preferences. Code 1915, §§ 949, 976.

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270 P. 881, 33 N.M. 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bank-of-magdalena-nm-1928.