Stubbs v. Fulton Nat. Bank of Atlanta

146 F.2d 558
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 6, 1945
DocketNo. 10908
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 146 F.2d 558 (Stubbs v. Fulton Nat. Bank of Atlanta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stubbs v. Fulton Nat. Bank of Atlanta, 146 F.2d 558 (5th Cir. 1945).

Opinion

LEE, Circuit Judge.

The American Bond & Share Corporation, a Georgia corporation, was declared a bankrupt in April, 1935, and Thomas M. Stubbs was appointed successor trustee. Between December 31, 1933, and June 1, 1934, both dates inclusive, it had negotiated six loans with the Fulton National Bank of Atlanta, Georgia, in the name of its president, B. R. Bradley, and had transferred to the bank various stocks and bonds as collateral security for said loans. These loans were paid in full between January 25 and August 15, 1934, and the securities were returned by the bank to Bradley from whom they were received.

As trustee of the bankrupt, Stubbs brought these proceedings under Section 70, sub. e, of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898, 11 U.S.C.A. § 110, sub. e, and under Section 28-201 of the Georgia Code, to set aside all transfers from the bankrupt to Fulton National Bank on the ground that they were made with intent to defraud creditors of the bankrupt under State law. Count 1 of the bill was to set aside each transfer of securities to the bank as collateral for each loan made, and count 2 was to set aside the transfer of funds to the bank to pay said loans. A master was appointed who found that the trustee was entitled to recover on count 1 the sum of $87,864.12, plus interest from the time of the transfers, such amount being the value of the securities at the time of transfer, on all loans except the first loan; and the master found that if the trustee elected to recover under count 2, he was entitled to recover the sum of $120,297.72, plus interest, being the aggregate of all payments to the bank in liquidation of said loans.

Following a hearing on objections to the master’s reports, the District Judge found against the trustee and denied recovery under count 2, holding that all six loans were valid loans and the transfer of funds to the bank to repay the same was not in fraud of creditors. He also found against the trustee on the transfer of securities to secure the first four loans, attacked in count 1, on the ground that these transfers were received in good faith by the bank and were not, as to it, in fraud of creditors. With reference to the transfer of collateral to secure the fifth and sixth loans, he found in favor of the trustee on the ground that, when the transfer of the collateral was made, the bank had constructive knowledge of the purpose of the bankrupt to defraud its creditors. He fixed the value of the securities transferred to secure the last two loans at the highest proven value between the date of the transfer and the filing of suit, and, in keeping with the measure of damages under Georgia law in tro-ver actions, gave judgment against the bank [560]*560in favor of the trustee in the sum of $45,-959.74, with interest from the date of the decree. This amount by stipulation was reduced to $45,225.34 to correct an error in addition. The trustee appealed from the judgment to the extent that it denied recovery under count 2 for the transfer of funds to repay the loans and denied recovery under count 1 for transfers of securities to secure the first four loans. The bank cross-appealed from the judgment against it in the sum of $45,225.34.

Few, if any, of the primary facts are in dispute. The dispute has to do with the inferences or conclusions drawn from the facts.1 The bankrupt was organized in 1931. In 1932 Bradley acquired the controlling interest in said corporation and became its president and moving spirit, and shortly thereafter it engaged in the business of trading upon the exchanges with money and securities deposited with it by numerous customers under two contracts, a power of attorney agreement and a hypothecation card. Under the power of attorney agreement, the corporation, its officers, agents, substitutes, and/or nominees were given absolute and ungoverned discretion as attorney in fact for the depositor to carry on trading activities with the moneys and securities deposited, either separately or as part of a fund created by similar deposits, it being expressly provided that such funds were to “be employed in buying, selling, exchanging, trading in, or otherwise dealing in and with, either out-right or upon margin, stocks, bonds * * *, either upon short or long account or otherwise,” and that such transactions might be effected directly through any broker, bank, or any member of a stock exchange. The hypothecation agreement provided that the. funds and securities deposited by the customer should be held as security for the performance of all obligations arising in connection with the customer’s account, with full authority given, from time to time and without demand or notice, to pledge or re-pledge all or any of the securities, separately or together with others, either for the amount due by the custorher or a greater sum, and at such interest rates as the corporation might approve, and in express language provided that the corporation might “loan, borrow, deliver, and otherwise dispose of the securities separately or with others.”

The corporation carried on its dealings with brokers and with banks in its own name, in the name of Bradley, its president, and of Hearn, its treasurer. In 1933 by proper resolutions it placed its assets under Bradley’s control and at his disposal and gave him absolute authority, at his discretion, to trade and deal with said securities and to pledge and borrow money thereon as he saw fit. He in turn wrote and signed a letter, and placed it in the hands of the corporation, reciting in effect that all accounts carried in his name were for and in behalf of the corporation and were the corporation’s property.

In the early part of December, 1933, Livingston & Co., brokers, through whom the corporation had been trading on the exchanges, was carrying for the corporation, against the trading account in its name, a debit balance in the amount of $20,670.01, and against the trading account in the name of Bradley, a debit balance in the amount of $25,305.74. On January 9, 1934, the debit balance against the trading account carried in the name of Hearn was in the sum of $40,700.17. To secure these various trading accounts, Livingston & Co. held securities in “street names,” 2 transferred by [561]*561the corporation and in which it had considerable equity.

Livingston & Co. maintained a local office in Atlanta through which it did business with the bank. The superintendent of this office introduced Bradley to Mr. Clay, the president of the bank, in the spring or summer of 1933, stating to him that Bradley was a shrewd trader who handled his accounts well. Bradley shortly thereafter opened an account with the bank. In the late fall of 1933, Bradley decided to close out the Livingston & Co. accounts, and approached Clay for a loan. On December 21, 1933, the bank made a loan to Bradley for account of the corporation in the sum of $55,000, $45,975.75 of which was paid over to Livingston & Co. by the bank in settlement of the trading accounts carried in the corporation’s name and in Bradley’s name, and Livingston & Co. surrendered to the bank the listed securities it held. On January 9, 1934, the bank made a second loan to Bradley for account of the corporation in the sum of $40,000, and said amount, together with other funds deposited by the corporation, was used by the corporation to pay the balance due Livingston & Co. by the corporation against the account carried in the name of Hearn, in the sum of $40,700.17. Thereupon Livingston & Co. surrendered to the bank the listed securities it held to secure the Hearn account.

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Bluebook (online)
146 F.2d 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stubbs-v-fulton-nat-bank-of-atlanta-ca5-1945.