Union Bank v. Smith

24 F. Cas. 554, 4 D.C. 509, 4 Cranch 509
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia
DecidedMarch 15, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 F. Cas. 554 (Union Bank v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Bank v. Smith, 24 F. Cas. 554, 4 D.C. 509, 4 Cranch 509 (circtddc 1835).

Opinion

Cranch, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

(Thruston, J., absent.)

The libel states that on the 10th of April, 1827, the respondent settled his first administration account of the estate of Samuel Robinson, leaving a balance in his hands of $8,390.01f to be distributed among the creditors, being less than fifty per cent, of the whole amount of claims. The libellants aver that the respondent ought to be charged with interest upon that sum from the time he received it until the distribution, because he has used and employed it, and it has produced interest. That he ought, within thirteen months after the date of his letters of administration, to have paid to the libellants their proportion of the assets; and, not having done so he is liable for the interest from that time, although he may not have used the assets, .and although they may not have earned interest. They also insist that he ought to have invested the assets in productive funds, and therefore is chargeable with interest; but he has refused to charge himself with interest, or to account therefor; wherefore they pray that he may be cited to account in the Orphans’ Court and be decreed to charge himself with interest and to pay the libellants their respective proportions of the principal and interest, &c.

The answer of Mr. Smith admits the amount of assets in his hands, as charged ; and states that the Bank of the United States gave him notice of their claim, and insisted that it was entitled to priority of payment. That Mr. Thompson, another of the libel-lants, also insisted that his claim was entitled to a preference; that these claims amounted to more than all the assets; and that these creditors gave him a written notice and request that the said assets should not be distributed until their right to priority of payment should be decided by the judgment of a court of equity in a suit then forthwith to be instituted ; that the Union Bank denied the right of priority of payment claimed by those other creditors, and notified the respondent that they would contest the same; that in a suit brought by that bank against the respondent, to try the right of priority which was contested by those other creditors, judgment was finally rendered by the Supreme Court of ’the United States at January term, 1831, against the right of priority. That he was always ready with the funds to pay the creditors, from the time limited by law for ‘the distribution, until he did distribute, in the year 1832, if the creditors could have agreed among themselves as to the priority of payment. He denies that he was in any default, and that he is chargeable with interest, having been always ready to pay, and has been only hindered by the litigation of the creditors among themselves. He denies that he was under any obligation to invest the assets in productive [511]*511funds, and avers that he never did so invest them, or in any property from which he derived any profit, benefit, or advantage; nor did he lend the same for profit. That he placed them to his private account in the Farmers and Mechanics Bank of Georgetown, among his own funds, and drew on that account, as usual, when his convenience required. That he always had resources at his command, by which he could, at any time have paid the libel-lants, and was always ready and willing to pay them.

This answer having been excepted to, Mr. Smith, in a further answer, says that the sum of f8,390.01| was placed to his debit (credit ?) in the Farmers and Mechanics Bank of Georgetown, on the 27th of March, 1827. That it appears by successive settlements of his accounts with that bank, that from that time to May, 1830, “a list of which is hereunto annexed as part of this-answer,” there were to the credit of his accounts, balances, whenever settled, of much larger amount than the assets, except for a short period in 1827 and 1828, “ so that the said assets do not appear to have been used, (with the said exception,) before May, 1830,” from which period, until the decision of the Supreme Court, he admits that the fund was used by him in his trade.

The list of balances, referred to, is not a list of balances in the respondent’s account, but in the joint account of W. & C. Smith with the bank. It does not appear who W. & C. Smith were, but if it should appear that they were a mercantile firm, and that the assets were placed in the bank subject to their use and control, and mingled with their funds, I should think the respondent was chargeable with interest for the whole time the money was at their disposal, although they might have always had credit enough in bank to answer for it. It was a fund, when thus placed, which either partner had a right to draw out at any time ; and it was as much liable to the creditors of W. & C. Smith, as to those of S. Robertson, and perhaps more so. If W. & C. Smith had failed, indebted to the bank, the bank would have retained it, and it would have been lost to the estate of Robertson. Although W. & C. Smith may not actually have used the money, yet if gave them credit with the bank, so that they might more readily obtain discounts.

In the case of Treves v. Townsend, 1 Bro. C. C. 384, the defendant contended that he ought not tó be charged with interest, because “ he always kept an equal sum at his bankers, ready to answer to it.”

But to this Lord Loughborough answered : the money of a merchant, at his bankers, does not lie idle; it is part of his stock in trade.”

In the present case, it does not appear that W. & C. Smith [512]*512were not stockholders in the bank; and if they were, they derived a benefit from the deposit which the bank had a right to use in its ordinary business of discounting bills and notes.

It has been suggested that, although a court of equity could charge the respondent with interest, yet the Orphans’ Court, which is of limited jurisdiction, cannot; for it can only charge the administrator with the actual increase of the estate in his hands.

But that point seems to be settled by the Court of Appeals in Maryland, in the case of Gwinn v. Dorsey, 4 Gill & Johns. 461. That case also decides the point, that, if an administrator has applied the assets to his own use and profit, he is chargeable with interest from the time he received them; and if he kept them by him, or omitted, without reason, to distribute them, he is chargeable with interest from the time limited by law for the distribution, whether he made profit by them or not.

Mr. Smith placed these assets in a situation where they may be presumed to have produced him profit, and if they did not, it was his own fault. It is true, that he was in no default for not having distributed the assets sooner than he did, but having mingled them with his own funds, upon which he drew, without discrimination, for his own purposes, or for' those of the firm of W. & C. Smith, he must be presumed to have applied them to his own temporary use and profit.

The libel complains of the commission of five per cent, paid to a collector, and of ten per cent, claimed by the respondent, as commissions.

These complaints, however, seemed to have been abandoned at the argument, as matters within the exclusive discretion of the Orphans’ Court. See Wilson v. Wilson, 2 Gill & Johns. 20.

This cause seems to have been set for hearing on bill and answer ;■ Mr. Smith’s answer, therefore, is to be received as evidence in his favor.

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Bluebook (online)
24 F. Cas. 554, 4 D.C. 509, 4 Cranch 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-bank-v-smith-circtddc-1835.