Twentieth Street Bank v. Gilmore

71 F.2d 594, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3148
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 11, 1934
Docket3621
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 71 F.2d 594 (Twentieth Street Bank v. Gilmore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Twentieth Street Bank v. Gilmore, 71 F.2d 594, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3148 (4th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

PARKER, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the District Judge confirming an order of a referee in bankruptcy, whieh summarily directed the Twentieth Street Bank of Huntington, W. Va., to pay over to the trustee in bankruptcy of the Keister Milling Company the sum of $2,690.58. This sum was the balance on deposit to the credit of the milling company when it was adjudged a bankrupt on December 37, 1932, if the attempt by the bank to credit the deposit on a note whieh it held be disregarded. The bank not only claimed the right to apply the balance on the note, hut also denied the jurisdiction of the court to adjudicate the matter in a summary proceeding. The contention of the trustee in bankruptcy was that the balance represented funds accumulated for the benefit of creditors while the milling company’s business was being operated by a creditors’ committee and was not a deposit made by the bankrupt in the ordinary course of business; that the hank had full knowledge of the character of the funds, since its president was one of the creditors’ committee; that the bank’s claim of right to apply the funds on the note of the bankrupt was merely colorable and without substance; and that the court, for this reason, had jurisdiction summarily to direct the payment to the trustee of the balance of the deposit, which admittedly belonged to tbe trustee if the bank could not apply it on the note. Two questions are presented by the appeal: (1) Whether the hank had the right to apply the deposit balance on the note; and (2) whether the court had jurisdiction to adjudicate the matter in a summary proceeding.

On the first question, it appears that the funds constituting the deposit balance were unquestionably deposited while a committee of creditors was operating the business of the milling company, and that such deposits were not made in the ordinary course of business by the corporation, but under such circumstances as to constitute them a fund for the benefit of its creditors and to estop the bank from asserting against them any banker’s lien or right of set-off. These circumstances were as follows: The milling company in the early part of the year 3932 was losing money and was in a bad way financially. In June, 1932, it placed its business in the hands of a committee representing three of its principal creditors to whom by far the larger part of its indebtedness was owing. This committee appointed a manager for the business and directed its operation. The policy adopted was to pay nothing on the larger debts outstanding and as little as possible on the others, and to use funds collected only for the operation of the business. About the middle of November the manager was instructed not to pay even the interest on the old debts, and to push collections. On November 2.9tb it was decided that bankruptcy was inevitable, and the manager was directed to pay nothing except what was necessary to run the business and to put all collections in the bank. On November 30th the balance in hank on general account was only $671.21. From December 1st to December 15th the deposits were $3,780.17 and the withdrawals only $2,160.80. Applying to this situation the “first in first out” doctrine of Clayton’s Case, 1 Mcr. 572, Bryant v. Williams (D. C.) 16 F. (2d) 159, it is clear that the balance of $2,200.80 represented deposits made subsequent to December 1st. The remaining $400 was in a special deposit account, the purpose of which is not disclosed in the record, $200 thereof having been deposited on November 14th and $200 on November 21st.

The bank had full knowledge of the poli *596 cy which was being pursued in handling the affairs of the milling company; and of the fact that deposits made in the name of the' corporation were in reality made at the direction of the committee of creditors in pursuance of that policy; for its president, a Mr. Hall, was one of the members of the committee. The policy pursued by the committee was thus described by Mr. McClure, its chairman :

“After discussing the thing, and going over with the directors and Mr. Martin, the bookkeeper, the debts they had, we realized we could not pay them, and, the instructions were that they were not to pay any of the old indebtedness, for instance the Twentieth Street Bank and the First Huntington National Bank, and any of the other old big accounts, because we did not have the money to pay with, and if you paid one you simply took it from another, so we quit right there, although on some of the bigger accounts we gave a note, and paid a little interest on that, and some accounts of a few dollars paid them, and made little payments along, just stalling for time to see if the depression would not get over and business better and save the plant.
“It was my understanding of it, that that was the policy of all members of the committee. They elected me chairman, but I was governed, of course, by the balance of the committee’s ideas, as well as my own, and there was never any disagreement between the three of us.
“Mr. Hall and Mr. Boone concurred in the policy just spoken of, the only policy we could use, and we would have been foreed to that, because we could not pay these things and keep the mill running, because when a car of grain came in we had to pay for it before we got it off the track, and it got to the point where practically all stuff came in C. O. D.
‘“That policy was pursued from the time the committee took over the management of the Keister Milling Company until its bankruptcy; there was a little change after November 29th, 1932. Up to that time the policy was to pay as little as possible, and just enough that we could keep going, but after November 29th, 1932, there were absolute instructions not to pay anybody anything. * * * ”

And regarding the period between November 29th and December 12th he testified: “In the interim, from November 29 until December 12, since we all felt in our own minds that bankruptcy was coming, Mr. Gilmore, the manager, was instructed not to pay any bills, except what he bought to run the mill with, for instance, gasoline, oil, and of course he had to pay freight, and might have to buy something locally so the mill eould run, or maybe a little wheat. He was instructed to pay those bills, but not to pay qny accounts that had existed at that time, or any interest on them, and to collect every cent of money he eould and get it in the bank so that when we got ready to go into bankruptcy, we would have as much funds on hands as possible, and then let the Court decide where the money should go, rather than decide ourselves. As we said to him, and everybody agreed and understood, that any money paid when we knew we were going to have to quit would constitute a preference.”

A meeting of the stockholders and directors of the milling company was held on December 12th with the creditors’ committee, and it was decided to file a petition in bankruptcy. This petition was filed five days later, being delayed so as not to interfere in any way with a mortgage sale of the plant of the company which had been advertised. In the meantime, on December 15th, Mr. Hall, who as above stated was one of the committee of creditors and the president of the bank, directed that the bank credit the balance, which had been deposited in the name of the milling company under the direction of the creditors’ committee, on one of the notes of the milling company which the bank held.

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Bluebook (online)
71 F.2d 594, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/twentieth-street-bank-v-gilmore-ca4-1934.