Thomas v. Marine Bank & Trust Co.

101 So. 315, 156 La. 941, 1924 La. LEXIS 2129
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 28, 1924
DocketNo. 25938
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 101 So. 315 (Thomas v. Marine Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Marine Bank & Trust Co., 101 So. 315, 156 La. 941, 1924 La. LEXIS 2129 (La. 1924).

Opinions

THOMPSON, J.

The question presented in this case is the legal right of the Marine Bank & Trust Company, after the People’s Bank had become insolvent and had been taken over for purposes of liquidation by the state bank examiner, to apply a sum on deposit to the credit of the People’s Bank and a surplus collected on bills receivable of the People’s Bank which had been jfiedged to [943]*943the defendant bank for a particular debt, to the payment of a debt due the defendant bank for Liberty bonds which had been placed with the People’s Bank and disposed of for account of the Marine Bank.

The pertinent and material facts are admitted. In the months of December, 1920, and January and the first half of February, 1921, the People’s Bank, through its cashier, acting under a resolution of the board of directors, borrowed from the Marine Bank the sum óf $74,500, which loan was evidenced by several promissory notes executed on behalf of the People’s Bank. To secure the amount borrowed bills receivable of the People’s Bank to the amount of $106,318.36 were pledged to the creditor bank. The notes contained the following stipulations:

“At the maturity of this note, or when otherwise due, as above provided, any money, stocks, bonds or other property of any kind whatsoever, on. deposit or otherwise, to the credit of the maker, on the books of said Marine Bank & Trust Company or in its possession. shall at once stand applied to the payment of this note, or any other indebtedness, up to the limit above stated, unless it be otherwise paid.
“In the event of the undersigned failing or being unable to meet any of his obligations or in case' of the insolvency or bankruptcy of the undersigned, this note and all the said liabilities shall become and be immediately .due and payable without demand or notice, notwithstanding any credit or time allowed the undersigned by any instrument evidencing any of said liabilities.”

The People’s Bank was closed on account of insolvency, and was taken over by the state bank examiner on February 21, 1921. A few days prior thereto the Marine Bank had sent to the People’s Bank Liberty bonds amounting to $5,000 to be delivered to certain purchasers. The People’s Bank collected on these bonds, and placed to the credit of the Marine Bank $4,750.98.

On October 28, 1921, the amount due the Marine Bank by the People’s Bank, including principal and interest for money borrowed, was $75,996.24, and for Liberty bonds-sold $4,750.98, making a total of $80,747.22.

The Marine Bank had on deposit to the-credit of the People’s Bank $3,418.21, and had collected on the pledged collaterals $77,149.-95, making the aggregate amount due the-People’s Bank (with $187.63 interest on deposits) on October 28, 1921, $80,755.79.

So that, if the Marine Bank had the right, to apply the deposit of $3,418.21, with interest and the amount of the collections on the-pledged collaterals, after satisfying the debt due for borrowed money, to the discharge-of the amount which the People’s Bank owed on the Liberty bonds, there would be due by-the Marine Bank only $8.57. But, if the application or imputation could not be thus-made, then the Marine Bank admittedly owes, the People’s Bank $4,759.55, the amount herein sued for, and for which judgment was rendered in plaintiff’s favor by the lower court.

It is conceded by counsel for the defendant that the 'relation of creditor and. debtor does not exist as between a bank and. its depositor, in the sense that the bank could apply the funds on deposit to the payment of the debts of the depositor without agreement to that effect or that legal compensation or set-off could be asserted by the-bank as against a depositor.

In the case of Morgan v. Lathrop, 12 La. Ann. 257, it was.said that it is settled law in this state that in the confidential contracts arising from irregular deposits of this-nature compensation does not take place, and the depositary is not authorized to apply the-funds on deposit in his hands to the payment of the debts of the depositor. Murdock v. Citizens’ Bank, 23 La. Ann. 116; Breed v. Purvis, 7 La. Ann. 53; Bogert v. Egerton, 11 La. Ann. 75.

In Beatty, Syndic, v. Scudday, 10 La. Ann. 404, Mr. Justice Spofford, concurring in the-judgment, said:

“I think it manifest that compensation never took place by * * * operation of law, which. [945]*945is the only species of compensation treated of in the Civil Code. It seems to be conceded by the parties that both debts are liquidated. But the fact that one of them was an irregular deposit, whilst the other was an ordinary ■debt, was an obstacle to their mutual extinguishment.”

It is to be observed, that the Marine Bank •sought to apply the funds on deposit to the credit of the People’s Bank to the payment ■of the debt due for money collected by the People’s Bank on the Liberty bonds long after the latter bank had become insolvent •and while it was in course of liquidation' by the examiner of state banks. In People’s Bank v. Mississippi & Lafourche Drainage Dist., 141 La. 1009, 76 South. 179, it was said:

“There is express law upon the subject of the extinguishment of debts by compensation, and hence no occasion or authority for resorting to equity; but, if it were otherwise, there is no principle of equity which entitles a person who is, at once, a depositor in, and a borrower from, a bank, to be made whole, in the event of its insolvency, by the plea of compensation, when the other depositors stand to lose the entire amounts deposited by them.”

The Marine Bank could not have enforced the collection of the proceeds of the Liberty bonds from the People’s Bank except in due course of its liquidation by the bank examiner, and then only to the extent of its distributive share of the assets or dividends.

To permit the defendant bank to apply the funds coming into its hands from collections on the bills receivable in excess of the debt due for borrowed money to the claim for the amount of the Liberty bonds, long after said People’s Bank had become insolvent and was in- course of liquidation, would be unjust and inequitable to other depositors and creditors of said insolvent bank.

It is a rule of law that the property of a debtor is the common pledge of all his creditors, unless there exists between the creditors some lawful cause or legal right of preference.

And as the death of a debtor fixes the rights of the creditors as they exist at that moment, so the civil death or the insolvency of the People’s Bank fixed the rights of all its creditors as they existed at the time the affairs of said bank were taken over for liquidation by the state banking department, and no subsequent act of the defendant bank has changed or could change the legal sitúa-, tion from what it then was.

But it is urged by the defendant bank that by special agreement and mandate contained in the notes, which we have copied in the first part of this opinion, the creditor bank was authorized to apply to the payment of any debt which might be due or owing to it by the People’s Bank any money, bonds, stocks, or other property of any kind whatsoever, and that under this stipulation the defendant bank was justified in applying the funds coming into its possession after the declared insolvency of the People’s Bank to the payment of the Liberty bond debt.

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Bluebook (online)
101 So. 315, 156 La. 941, 1924 La. LEXIS 2129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-marine-bank-trust-co-la-1924.