White v. Pacific Southwest Trust & Savings Bank

9 F.2d 650, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1369
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedDecember 11, 1925
DocketNos. 121, 122
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 9 F.2d 650 (White v. Pacific Southwest Trust & Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Pacific Southwest Trust & Savings Bank, 9 F.2d 650, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1369 (S.D. Cal. 1925).

Opinion

McCORMICK, District Judge.

By these suits in equity the trustee of the bankrupt estates of E. Y. Foley and E. Y. Foley, Inc., a corporation, seeks to recover from the two defendant banks certain money for the benefit of said estates. Action was brought by the trustee against each bank separately, but for expedition and by stipulation of all parties the causes were heard simultaneously, inasmuch as the paramount issues were the same in each case. However, there was no consolidation of the cases, and each cause has received separate consideration, as some issues are not common to both defendants.

The main question is the right of the banks to retain, in the case of the Pacific [652]*652Southwest Trust & Savings Bank $127,433.76, and in the ease of the United Bank & Trust Company of California $41,171.03, to the exclusion of the estates and the creditors in general thereof. Incidentally there has been brought into the case in which- the Pacific Southwest Trust & Savings Bank is defendant issues between one Lynes, as trustee^ of certain Eastern creditors of E. Y. Foley and E. Y. Foley, Inc., a corporation, and the plaintiff, as to the money sued for in the event that it is held that the defendant Pacific Southwest Trust & Savings Bank withholds the same without right.

In the same ease there are also collateral issues, raised by one Pruner and one Tarpey, who have filed answers and counterclaims in said action, ¿sserting rights so to do as parties , interested in said action and in the funds in suit therein; each of said parties claiming to have been sued under a fictitious name, as is also the contention of Lynes. Plaintiff has made no objections to the right of Lynes, Pruner, or Tarpey to appear in said action in the manner stated. In fact, he has invited the submission of their claims for consideration and adjudication in this action to avoid a multiplicity of suits.

The defendant Pacific Southwest Trust & Savings Bank, which will be referred to herein. as the Pacific Southwest Bank-, has filed answers to the pleadings of Lynes, Pruner, and Tarpey, joining issue with each as to the enforceability of their respective claims against the bank, but raising no question as to the right to have such'issues determined in this suit.

The United Bank & Trust Company of California, a corporation, which for brevity will be called the United Bank, is the sole defendant in the other suit, and the collateral issues between plaintiff and Lynes, Pruner, and Tarpey, in so far, as the right of said United Bank to offset is concerned, are not, involved in the ease in which said United Bank is sole defendant; but, if it is held that said United Bank has no exclusive right to the money in its possession,, then the same question arises between Lynes, as trustee, and plaintiff, as in the ease in which the Pacific. Southwest Bank is a defendant.

The ■ allegations in the bill in/ each ease ' are substantially the same, and may be epitomized as a claim that the moneys sued for in each ease constitutes part of a trust fund, which the two banks knew was created for the benefit of all of the creditors of E. Y. Foiey and E. Y. Foley, Inc., a corporation, and which the banks, respectively, have no right to retain as against the trustee in bankruptcy. Each bank, in its answer, after admitting that it withholds and claims the money in suit, denies that the money which it withholds is a trust fund, or is impressed with any trust whatever, and each bank affirmatively claims that the money sued for respectively came into its possession respectively in the ordinary and usual course of business and created, as between E. Y. Foley, or E. Y. Foley, Inc., a corporation, and the respective bank wherein the money was deposited, the relation of debtor and creditor, and that the respective bank, by retaining the money, does so under its right of set-off, pursuant to section 68 of the National Bankruptcy Act (Comp. St. § 9652) and the banker’s lien right under the laws of California (section 3054, California Civil Code).

The solution of the questions in this ease has not been an easy task. The evidence is voluminous and complex, and has required close analysis and deliberation. It is not without conflict. Some of the questions of law are close, as well as novel. However, I am persuaded, after,careful study, to conclude that a trust, substantially as alleged by the plaintiff in his complaints, has been established, and that the banks, respectively, have no right, under the evidence and the law applicable to these eases, to retain such moneys to the exclusion of the general creditors of E. Y. Foley and E. Y. Foley, Inc., a corporation.

Preliminarily it should be noted that this court, as well as the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Ninth Circuit, has held that E. Y. Foley and E. Y. Foley, Inc., a corporation, are, in so far as the present litigated issues in these suits are concerned, one and the same. In re Foley, 4 F.(2d) 152, 154..

The bankrupt, Foley, was in the year 1922 extensively engaged in buying, producing, packing, and selling green and dried fruits, and was in that period the owner of and in the personal conduct of a great business organization, operating as E. Y. Foley. His principal office and place of business was at Fresno, Cal., although his operations and activities extended throughout the United States. He had encountered unsatisfactory market and transportation conditions in that year to such an extent that in November thereof he was 'so financially embarrassed that failure and bankruptcy were imminent, unless he could effect some new arrangement with his many creditors. He was heavily indebted to three groups: The growers in San Joaquin Valley, California, from whom he [653]*653bought his merchandise; the Eastern produce and commission firms and brokers, to and through whom he sold his merchandise; and the California hanks and materialmen, from whom he obtained credits and supplies with whieh to carry on his business. His largest single creditor was the defendant Pacific Southwest Bank with whom he transacted most of his banking business, and which institution was thoroughly conversant with his financial and business condition at all times.

The growers and other creditors were demanding immediate payments on their accounts, and some of them were threatening attachment and other litigation. Foley, in ex-tremis went East in November, 1922, 'and informed his creditors there of his financial depletion, and endeavored to obtain a loan from them, so as to give him additional working capital and save his business from disaster. His principal concern was to he able to satisfy the growers, by making some immediate payments on their accounts, in order that he might continue to receive fruit during the forthcoming season. He was unsuccessful in procuring the loan, but induced two of his principal Eastern creditors, F. E. Nelli? and one Andrews," who were really a committee representing his Eastern creditors, to return with him to Fresno in order that they might study his affairs, confer with the banks and other Western creditors, and if possible effect a plan wherein Eastern and Western creditors, other than growers, would advance money so as to settle pressing claims and satisfy the growers, in order that Foley’s busi-. ness could be continued as a going concern, to the primary end that all of his creditors would he paid or satisfied, and ultimately that Foley would be rehabilitated in business.

This committee, on arrival in Fresno, Cal., in December, 1922, frequently met with managing officers of the two defendant banks, to wit, W. A.

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Bluebook (online)
9 F.2d 650, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-pacific-southwest-trust-savings-bank-casd-1925.