Whitney v. Peay

24 Ark. 22
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 Ark. 22 (Whitney v. Peay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitney v. Peay, 24 Ark. 22 (Ark. 1862).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice English

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 1st of January, 1810, the state issued to the Beal Estate Bank, in pursuance of its charter, 500 bonds for $1000 each, bearing interest, etc., to be sold at par, for the purpose of procuring banking capital, etc.

On the Ytli of September, 1840, the cashier of the bank, witli the approval of two of the bond commissioners, entered into a contract with the North American Trust and Banking Company, of New York, by which that company agreed to loan to the Beal Estate Bank $250,000, upon a pledge or hypothecation of the bonds above referred to, which sum was to be advanced by installments..and. repaid at stipulated periods, with interest, etc.

. In pursuance of this contract the bonds were delivered to the North American Trust and Banking Company, and it is admitted that the Neal Estate Bank received, through its agents, and Appropriated to its use, the sum of $121,33(3.59. No further sum was advanced.

About the 1st of December, 1840, the North American Trust and Banking Company pledged the same bonds to James Hol-ford & Co., bankers of London, for a loan of $325,000. After-wards, Holford became the solo owner of the debt, and holder of the bonds so pledged, by transfer from his partner.

Afterwards, upon a bill filed in the chancery court of New York, by Ceorge Manning Tracy, a stockholder and creditor, against Thomas G. Talmage, president of the North American Trust and Banking Company, alleging its insolvency, etc., it was placed in liquidation ; and .David Leavitt was appointed by the court, a receiver in chancery, to settle its a/fairs.

Pending the administration of the trust, James Holford prayed the court, by petition, that the receiver might be ordered to unite with him in a reference, pursuant to the statute of New York, of six claims presented by him against the banking company; and the claims' were accordingly referred to three referees, appointed by the court (two counsellors at law and one merchant,) with instructions to ascertain and report, in case they found any thing due from the company upon the claims, what collateral securities had been legally assigned for the security of the sums so found due from the company, and the value thereof; and that the referees deduct from the amount so found due. to Holford, the ascertained value of all such collateral securities.

The referees, after a protracted and laborious investigation, reported that the company was indebted to the American administrators of Holford, (he having died pending the investigation,) upon the six claims referred to them, for principal and interest, to 1st October, 1857, in the sum of $895,896.42.

Included in this sum was the amount advanced by Holford to the company, upon the pledge of the 500 Arkansas bonds.

The referees further reported that certain collateral securities, particularly described by them, had been legally assigned by the company 'to Holford, to secure tlie payment of the sum found due to his estate, as above; the aggregate value thereof was ascertained to be $456,200 (the separate value of each collateral security being ascertained and stated,) which being deducted from the sum found to be due to his administrators from the company, left a balance in their favor of $439,696.42.

Among the collateral securities reported by tire referees as having been legally assigned to Ilolford, by the company, were the 500 Arkansas bonds, for $1000 each, -which they ascertained to be of the actual value of $425,000, on the 1st October, 1857.

The report of the referees was approved and confirmed by the court, and a decree entered in favor of Holford’s administrators for the balance found to be duo them upon their claims, after deducting the reported value of the collateral securities, to be paid by the receiver out of the assets of the company. And it was further decreed “ that the value of the said collateral securities having been duly ascertained and credited upon their said claim, pursuant to the directions contained in the order of reference, the administrators, etc., have become, and are the. legal owners of, and legally and equitably possessed of, and well entitled, as such administrators, to all and singular the following bonds, notes, stock, etc., etc., being the collateral securities in said report particularly mentioned and described, that is to say, 500 bonds of the state of Arkansas, numbered, etc., etc., issued to the Neal Estate Bank, etc., for $1000 each,” etc., etc.

In the meantime Benjamin D. Whitney made a proposition to David Leavitt, the receiver in chancery, etc., to give $2,500, for the debt of the Eeal Estate Bank to the North American Trust and Banking Company, for moneys advanced by the latter to the former, under the agreement of, 7th Sept. 1840, above stated-The proposition of Whitney was reported to the court superintending the administration of the trust, and the court directed the receiver to accept the proposition, and to assign the debt to Whitney upon his paying therefor the sum proposed. A written assignment was accordingly made by the receiver.

Afterwards, Whitney filed a bill in the Pulaski chancery ■court, against Peay, as receiver in chancery of the assets of the Real Estate Bank, and the English executors and American administrators of Holford, accompanied by voluminous exhibits, alleging and showing the facts above stated, praying a decree against the receiver for the amount of the debt, with interest, assigned to him as above, to be paid out of the assets of the bank; and that the administrators, etc., of Holford be required to assert and litigate their claim, etc., to the 500 Arkansas bonds, etc., and that they be compelled to produce and surrender them for cancellation, etc.

Hpon the answer of Peay, containing a demurrer to the bill, and a demurrer interposed for the representatives of Holfox-d, the bill was dismissed, and Whitney appealed to this court.

The 9th section of the charter of the Beal Estate Bank, prohibiting the sale of the bonds of the state at less than the par value thereof, it might be held, upon adjudications entitled to respect, that the disposition made of the 500 bonds, in question, by the agents of the bank, to the North American Trust and Banking Company, was a transaction illegal and void. See The State of Illinois vs. Delafield, 8 Paige, 527 — affirmed in Delafield vs. The State of Illinois, 2 Hill, 160; 26 Wend., 209, 221. But the bank having thought proper to receive and appropriate to its use the money advanced to its agents by the New York banking company, upon a pledge of the bonds, it is but just and reasonable to conclude that the bank thereby became bound in equity and good conscience to repay the money so advanced to it, with interest, upon a re-delivery of the bonds.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Ark. 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitney-v-peay-ark-1862.