SAGE, District Judge,
(after stating the facts as above.) The claim on behalf of complainant is that the $800,000 loan was from the Chemical Bank to the Fidelity Bank. The facts of the case are not in dispute. The transactions were between the proper officials of the two banks. As is claimed by counsel for the complainant, the Chemical Bank placed ihe amount of the loan to the credit of the Fidelity Bank, and so notified that bank. The money was drawn out'of the account of the Fidelity Bank upon drafts duly signed by it. The Chemical Bank dealt with Harper as an officer of the Fidelity Bank, and in no other capacity. As between the Chemical Bank and ihe Fidelity Bank, the transaction was, both in form and effect, a loan to the Fidelity Bank, and in no senáe a loan to Harper, individually. In fact, however, the loan was not a transaction of the Fidelity Bank. It was one of a long series of fraudulent; and criminal appropriations to his own use, by E. L. Harper, of the credit and money of the Fidelity Bank, which began on the' first day that the bank was opened for business, and continued until its insolvency. But, as between tlie Fidelity Bank and the Chemical Bank, (lie Fidelity Bank was estopped, by reason of Harper being its vice president and general manager, from proving 1lie fact as it existed, and from denying that the loan was made on its account. Harper was at the same time the leading and managing partner of the firm of E. L. Harpin' & Co., and by virtue of that relation came into possession and control of the 15 notes made for the accommodation of that firm by Whiteley, Fassler & Kelly. He used those notes in aid of the fraud which be was perpetrating against the Fidelity Bank, and E. L. Harper & Co. were estopped from denying to the Chemical Bank that those notes were properly pledged as security for the $800,000 loan. The legal maxim that., where one of two innocent persons must suffer by the wrong of a third, ihe one who made it possible for the third to effect the wrong must bear the loss, is in point. The fallacy of the claim for the complainant consists in overlooking, or failing to observe, that the estoppel which applies against the Fidelity Bank, in favor of the Chemical, is limited to themselves, and does not apply in favor of E. L. Harper & Co. It is settled that, in the relation of guarantor and principal, no privity arises, (Pritchard v. Hitchcock, 6 Man. & G. 151,) and the same is true of the relation of surety and principal, (Bigelow, Estop. 75.) An authority directly in point is Burnand v. Rodocanachi, L. R. 7 App. Cas. 333. In that case the respondents were insured, by valid policies, on a cargo which was destroyed by the Confederate cruiser Alabama. The underwriters paid the respondents, as on an actual total loss, the valued amounts, which were less than the real value. The United States, out of a compensation fund created after the loss, and distributed under an act of congress, paid to the respondents the difference between the sum received by them from the underwriters, and [170]*170their real total loss. Under the act no claim was allowed for any loss for which compensation had been made by an insurer, but, if such compensation was not equal to the loss actually suffered, allowance might be made for the difference. The complainant sued, on behalf of himself and all other underwriters interested, upon the policies issued to the respondents. The claim was that the insurers, haying- paid the total as agreed between them and the respondents, were subrogated to all their rights. The court below sustained the claim, but the decision was reversed on appeal. Lord Chancellor Selborne pointed out that the fallacy of the reasoning of the learned judges below was that they took the valuation of the policies as conclusive, and as operating by way of estoppel beyond the purposes of the contract of insurance, whereas, for purposes collateral to that contract, the insured could show that their loss was in fact greater than that which was covered by the policy. To apply that case to this: The Fidelity Bank was not permitted to show that the $300,000 loan was not in fact made by it, but, fraudulently, by its vice president, in furtherance of his own criminal purposes, because it had enabled that vice president to mislead the Chemical Bank into making the loan under the belief that it was conducting a genuine transaction with the Fidelity Bank. But Harper’s position as vice president of the Fidelity Bank gave him no authority or control over the Whiteley, Fassler & Kelly notes. As to the disposition of those notes, E. L. Harper & Co. had placed him in a position which enabled him to make fraudulent use of them, but gave them no recourse; against either the Chemical Bank or the Fidelity Bank. The Fidelity Bank had in fact nothing- whatever to do rvith the fraudulent use of those; notes,-and it bears no such relation to E. L. Harper & Co. as to be under any estoppel to establish the facts as they exist. To the extent that the Fidelity Bank made it possible for Harper to effect the fraudulent loan from the Chemical Bank, the Fidelity Bank must respond to the Chemical Bank. To the extent that E. L. Harper & Co. made it possible for Harper to use the Whiteley, Fassler & Kelly notes in effecting the fraudulent loan from the Chemical-Bank, É. L. Harper & Co. must be held responsible to the Chemical Bank. But to the extent that the Fidelity Bank has been injured by the fraud of Harper in the transaction, and that E. L. Harper & Co. have been injured, they must, severally, look to him alone. There was no privity in .this transaction between the Fidelity Bank and E. L. Harper & Co. There was privity between each of them and the Chemical Bank, and therefore, by estoppel, they are held liable to that bank. The Whiteley, Fassler & Kelly notes were never in the possession of the Fidelity Bank, nor indorsed to that bank, nor by it to the Chemical Bank. They were in the possession of E. L. Harper, and by him indorsed, and sent to the Chemical Bank. Whether E. L. Harper & Co. were chargeable with notice of Harper’s fraud in this matter is wholly immaterial. They are chargeable with the responsibility and liability resulting from having invested him with the authority which enabled him to do what he did do with those notes.
[171]*171There is another conclusive objection to the complainant’s claim to a decree in this cause. There is here a single debt against ihe Fidelity Bank, of £>100,000. It has been proven against the Fidelity Bank by the Chemical Bank, and the claim of the Chemical Bank has been sustained by this court, without any reductions on account of the payments made by the complainant, or of the notes held as collateral. It is well settled that a surety for a bankrupt cannot prove an additional claim, if the creditor has a right to prove the entire amount of that claim. Judge Lowell, in Re Souther, 2 Low. 322, says:
“The payment made hy the indorser after the maker of the note was a bankrupt cannot he proved hy the surety as money paid under-section 10, because it had not been paid at the time of the bankruptcy. It must either he proved as part of the note in the hands of the holder, and for the benefit of ¡lie indorser, or it is not provable at all.”
Judge Lowell finds the law as stated, not as a construction of a statutory provision of the bankrupt act, “but merely that the section recognizes a familiar equity, and takes for granted that a creditor may prove the debt notwithstanding payment in whole or in part by a surety, because he in fact proves as the trustee of the surety.” Ho, in Re Ellerhorst & Co., 5 N. B. R.
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SAGE, District Judge,
(after stating the facts as above.) The claim on behalf of complainant is that the $800,000 loan was from the Chemical Bank to the Fidelity Bank. The facts of the case are not in dispute. The transactions were between the proper officials of the two banks. As is claimed by counsel for the complainant, the Chemical Bank placed ihe amount of the loan to the credit of the Fidelity Bank, and so notified that bank. The money was drawn out'of the account of the Fidelity Bank upon drafts duly signed by it. The Chemical Bank dealt with Harper as an officer of the Fidelity Bank, and in no other capacity. As between the Chemical Bank and ihe Fidelity Bank, the transaction was, both in form and effect, a loan to the Fidelity Bank, and in no senáe a loan to Harper, individually. In fact, however, the loan was not a transaction of the Fidelity Bank. It was one of a long series of fraudulent; and criminal appropriations to his own use, by E. L. Harper, of the credit and money of the Fidelity Bank, which began on the' first day that the bank was opened for business, and continued until its insolvency. But, as between tlie Fidelity Bank and the Chemical Bank, (lie Fidelity Bank was estopped, by reason of Harper being its vice president and general manager, from proving 1lie fact as it existed, and from denying that the loan was made on its account. Harper was at the same time the leading and managing partner of the firm of E. L. Harpin' & Co., and by virtue of that relation came into possession and control of the 15 notes made for the accommodation of that firm by Whiteley, Fassler & Kelly. He used those notes in aid of the fraud which be was perpetrating against the Fidelity Bank, and E. L. Harper & Co. were estopped from denying to the Chemical Bank that those notes were properly pledged as security for the $800,000 loan. The legal maxim that., where one of two innocent persons must suffer by the wrong of a third, ihe one who made it possible for the third to effect the wrong must bear the loss, is in point. The fallacy of the claim for the complainant consists in overlooking, or failing to observe, that the estoppel which applies against the Fidelity Bank, in favor of the Chemical, is limited to themselves, and does not apply in favor of E. L. Harper & Co. It is settled that, in the relation of guarantor and principal, no privity arises, (Pritchard v. Hitchcock, 6 Man. & G. 151,) and the same is true of the relation of surety and principal, (Bigelow, Estop. 75.) An authority directly in point is Burnand v. Rodocanachi, L. R. 7 App. Cas. 333. In that case the respondents were insured, by valid policies, on a cargo which was destroyed by the Confederate cruiser Alabama. The underwriters paid the respondents, as on an actual total loss, the valued amounts, which were less than the real value. The United States, out of a compensation fund created after the loss, and distributed under an act of congress, paid to the respondents the difference between the sum received by them from the underwriters, and [170]*170their real total loss. Under the act no claim was allowed for any loss for which compensation had been made by an insurer, but, if such compensation was not equal to the loss actually suffered, allowance might be made for the difference. The complainant sued, on behalf of himself and all other underwriters interested, upon the policies issued to the respondents. The claim was that the insurers, haying- paid the total as agreed between them and the respondents, were subrogated to all their rights. The court below sustained the claim, but the decision was reversed on appeal. Lord Chancellor Selborne pointed out that the fallacy of the reasoning of the learned judges below was that they took the valuation of the policies as conclusive, and as operating by way of estoppel beyond the purposes of the contract of insurance, whereas, for purposes collateral to that contract, the insured could show that their loss was in fact greater than that which was covered by the policy. To apply that case to this: The Fidelity Bank was not permitted to show that the $300,000 loan was not in fact made by it, but, fraudulently, by its vice president, in furtherance of his own criminal purposes, because it had enabled that vice president to mislead the Chemical Bank into making the loan under the belief that it was conducting a genuine transaction with the Fidelity Bank. But Harper’s position as vice president of the Fidelity Bank gave him no authority or control over the Whiteley, Fassler & Kelly notes. As to the disposition of those notes, E. L. Harper & Co. had placed him in a position which enabled him to make fraudulent use of them, but gave them no recourse; against either the Chemical Bank or the Fidelity Bank. The Fidelity Bank had in fact nothing- whatever to do rvith the fraudulent use of those; notes,-and it bears no such relation to E. L. Harper & Co. as to be under any estoppel to establish the facts as they exist. To the extent that the Fidelity Bank made it possible for Harper to effect the fraudulent loan from the Chemical Bank, the Fidelity Bank must respond to the Chemical Bank. To the extent that E. L. Harper & Co. made it possible for Harper to use the Whiteley, Fassler & Kelly notes in effecting the fraudulent loan from the Chemical-Bank, É. L. Harper & Co. must be held responsible to the Chemical Bank. But to the extent that the Fidelity Bank has been injured by the fraud of Harper in the transaction, and that E. L. Harper & Co. have been injured, they must, severally, look to him alone. There was no privity in .this transaction between the Fidelity Bank and E. L. Harper & Co. There was privity between each of them and the Chemical Bank, and therefore, by estoppel, they are held liable to that bank. The Whiteley, Fassler & Kelly notes were never in the possession of the Fidelity Bank, nor indorsed to that bank, nor by it to the Chemical Bank. They were in the possession of E. L. Harper, and by him indorsed, and sent to the Chemical Bank. Whether E. L. Harper & Co. were chargeable with notice of Harper’s fraud in this matter is wholly immaterial. They are chargeable with the responsibility and liability resulting from having invested him with the authority which enabled him to do what he did do with those notes.
[171]*171There is another conclusive objection to the complainant’s claim to a decree in this cause. There is here a single debt against ihe Fidelity Bank, of £>100,000. It has been proven against the Fidelity Bank by the Chemical Bank, and the claim of the Chemical Bank has been sustained by this court, without any reductions on account of the payments made by the complainant, or of the notes held as collateral. It is well settled that a surety for a bankrupt cannot prove an additional claim, if the creditor has a right to prove the entire amount of that claim. Judge Lowell, in Re Souther, 2 Low. 322, says:
“The payment made hy the indorser after the maker of the note was a bankrupt cannot he proved hy the surety as money paid under-section 10, because it had not been paid at the time of the bankruptcy. It must either he proved as part of the note in the hands of the holder, and for the benefit of ¡lie indorser, or it is not provable at all.”
Judge Lowell finds the law as stated, not as a construction of a statutory provision of the bankrupt act, “but merely that the section recognizes a familiar equity, and takes for granted that a creditor may prove the debt notwithstanding payment in whole or in part by a surety, because he in fact proves as the trustee of the surety.” Ho, in Re Ellerhorst & Co., 5 N. B. R. 144, after citing section 5070 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, it is said:
“The two clause's together secure ilie attainment of jusüce in all cases. By tho first the surety who has discharged the debt is subrogated in the right of tho creditor whom he Inis paid. By the second the creditor may prove tho whole debt. The surety cannot in such case prove, for that would be proving the same debt twice. But. if the surety has paid part, the creditor, after receiving in dividends satisfaction of the balance due him, will hold, as trustee for the surety, any dividends received hy him in excess.”
A surety — and this is the only relation which is claimed by counsel for Harper & Co. in (.he present case — may pay the debt, and then prove it;, or he may compel the creditor to prove it. But he cannot, without paving the debt, make a second proof after the same debt has once been proved hy the creditor.
The hill also seeks to have Ihe claim upon the Whiteley, Fassler & Kelly notes allowed in favor of the complainant as an offset to the claim of the Fidelity Bank against E. L. Harper & Co. It is scarcely necessary to add to what has already been said that a claim that cannot he proved cannot he allowed as an offset.
The bill will be dismissed at the costs of the complainant.