Union Guardian Trust Co. v. Emery

290 N.W. 841, 292 Mich. 394, 1940 Mich. LEXIS 454
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1940
DocketDocket No. 68, Calendar No. 40,472.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 290 N.W. 841 (Union Guardian Trust Co. v. Emery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Guardian Trust Co. v. Emery, 290 N.W. 841, 292 Mich. 394, 1940 Mich. LEXIS 454 (Mich. 1940).

Opinion

McAllister, J.

The above case is a consolidation of 203 cases on trial and review.

On proclamation by the governor of the so-called bank holiday, the Union Guardian Trust Company was closed as of February 11,1933. After operation by a conservator, appointed by the State banking-commissioner, the company was reorganized in April, 1934. By the plan of reorganization, all the *401 assets of the company were set aside in a fund designated as a depositors’ and creditors’ trust fund for liquidation by a trustee for the benefit of creditors, and provisions were made for the filing and allowance of claims, with the right of claimants to file suit to establish such claims as were disallowed. Plaintiffs were claimants who sought preference. Their claims were allowed as general claims, and they thereupon filed suit to establish preferences. The circuit court found constructive trusts resulting from certain of the deposits made and that such trust funds could be constructively traced. On other claims, it found that certain plaintiffs were cestuis que trust ent under agreements of trust with the company, and on such claims preference was allowed. Claims of other plaintiffs were held to be trusts, but preference was denied because of inability to trace. Prom the decree, the trustee for creditors appeals; and certain plaintiffs file cross appeals.

The primary questions to be determined are whether certain trusts ex maleficio arose as a result of the conduct of the trust company and whether, in other instances, there was an actual trust relationship growing out of contract. It is contended by defendant trustee for creditors that the relations above mentioned were those of debtor and creditor, and that there were no trust relationships between the trust company and the other plaintiffs.

In order to arrive at its conclusion that certain claimants are entitled to a preference over general creditors, the trial court found that the conduct of the trust company in accepting the deposits in question and in issuing certificates of deposit was ultra vires and, therefore, constructively fraudulent; that thereby there arose a constructive trust impressed upon the general funds of the trust company in favor of the claimants.

*402 Section 6164, 2 Comp. Laws 1897 (see 3 Comp. Laws 1929, §12018 [Stat. Ann. § 23.248]), under which, the trust company was organized, provides:

“Any corporation organized or existing under' this act shall have power in and by its corporate name to take, receive and hold, and repay, reconvey and dispose of any effects and property, both real and personal, which may be granted, committed, transferred or conveyed to it, with its consent, upon any terms.”

In Lamb v. Abendroth, 268 Mich. 73, 79, the court commented upon the statute as follows:

“The conclusion reached renders it unnecessary to decide whether a trust company in this State is authorized and empowered by the statute to issue certificates of deposit. The attention of the legislature is respectfully called to the uncertainty existing relative thereto, and it may very properly amend the sections quoted (3 Comp. Laws 1929, §§ 12016, 12018,12024) so as expressly to grant such power or deny its existence, as to it shall seem meet.”

In an opinion by Attorney General Fellows, Report of Attorney General, Michigan 1913, p. 170, it was maintained that a trust company, under the statutes mentioned above, had the right to accept deposits and issue certificates of deposit therefor. In the opinion, it was stated that while the issuance of certificates of deposit was a function ordinarily performed by banks, it was not peculiar to banks alone, nor was it one of their primary functions. .With regard to the right to issue certificates of deposit, it was held that such certificates are to be considered promissory notes.

The rule that a certificate of deposit, payable on the return thereof properly indorsed, is, in legal effect, a promissory note, payable on demand, and that the principles applicable to such notes should be *403 applied to certificates of deposit, lias been repeatedly reaffirmed by this court. Tripp v. Curtenius, 36 Mich. 494 (24 Am. Rep. 610); City of Lansing v. Wood, 57 Mich. 201; Beardsley v. Webber, 104 Mich. 88; Wolfe v. A. E. Kusterer & Co., 269 Mich. 424. It lias been held that a trust company’s right to issue certificates of deposit in the course of its business, and as an incident thereto, is not to be doubted. Bank of Saginaw v. Title & Trust Co. of Western Pennsylvania, 105 Fed. 491.

Under the statutes in effect at the time of the issuance of the certificates of deposit in the instant case, there was no apparent intention of the legislature to limit the authority of trust companies to receiving and holding property merely as trustee. As was further said in the opinion of the attorney general, supra:

“The practical construction which has been given to the statute in question should be given , some weight. It is claimed that the act in question has been construed by those operating under it as permitting the receiving of moneys for safe keeping, and the issuance of certificates of deposits therefor, and that this practice has been followed without successful opposition or objection, from the passage of the act in 1889, until the present time. Where the language of the act is doubtful, the long continued practice under it is often permitted to turn the scale in favor of the construction evidenced by the practice under it, and this, we think, is an influence to be considered in determining' that trust companies may receive deposits and issue evidence thereof. ’ ’

It appears that the practice of a trust company in issuing certificates of deposit has been followed without opposition or question by the State and has been recognized as a proper function of such companies for the past 50 years. However, the former statutes with relation to trust companies have been repealed *404 since Lamb v. Abendroth, supra, and the transactions in this case, and superseded by Act No. 341, chap. 5, Pub. Acts 1937, which in turn was amended by Act No. 289, Pub. Acts 1939 (Comp. Laws Supp. 1940, § 11897-191 et seq.), and uncertainty with respect thereto is not likely in the future.

But in any event it does not necessarily follow, although it be assumed that the receipt of deposits and issuance of certificates therefor was ultra vires, that such transactions were constructively fraudulent. Constructive fraud has been defined as a term applied to a great variety of transactions which equity regards as wrongful, to which it attaches the same or similar effects as those that follow from actual fraud, and for which it gives the same or similar relief as that granted in cases of actual fraud. 2 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence (4th Ed.), p. 1932, § 922.

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Bluebook (online)
290 N.W. 841, 292 Mich. 394, 1940 Mich. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-guardian-trust-co-v-emery-mich-1940.