Yesner v. Commissioner of Banks

252 Mass. 358
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 21, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 252 Mass. 358 (Yesner v. Commissioner of Banks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yesner v. Commissioner of Banks, 252 Mass. 358 (Mass. 1925).

Opinion

Rugg, C.J.

This is a suit in equity whereby the plaintiff seeks to establish a constructive trust respecting deposits [359]*359made in the Cosmopolitan Trust Company at a time when it was irretrievably insolvent to the knowledge of its officers. The plaintiff made a deposit of $1,000 on January 26, 1920, and another of $4,000 on August 3, 1920, in the trust company, receiving in each instance a certificate of deposit payable to his order in current funds upon surrender of the certificate. The case was referred to a master, whose report states in some detail the methods of business pursued by the trust company. Without narrating those methods, it is enough to say that the trust company continuously for several years made increasingly large loans to corporations and other persons engaged in new and hazardous business enterprises having little or no financial standing and to those promoting highly speculative real estate and other transactions. On January 1, 1920, more than $4,000,000 were due to the trust company from irresponsible borrowers.

Among findings made by the master are the following:— “ In connection with its business in 1917, the Cosmopolitan Trust Company had a Christmas Club, the funds of which were payable on December 15,1917. In that year, the bank had great difficulty in meeting its clearings. Deposits were being withdrawn in a very rapid manner, and these withdrawals continued during the latter part of December and, in January, 1918, settlements for the day’s work, we find, [were] delayed until certain sums of money were sent over to the clearing bank to enable the trust company,- day by day, to meet its clearings. A similar situation occurred in December, 1918, at which time the bank had still more difficulty in meeting its clearings, which was only accomplished by means of a check on the Irving National Bank, which would take three days to clear. In December, 1918, in order to clear its checks, the entire gold reserve of the bank, amounting to $40,000, was forwarded to the First National Bank before the latter would agree to clear checks for the trust company. The withdrawals greatly exceeded the deposits, and this continued late in January of 1919. In 1919 and 1920, deposits increased, and the foreign department of the trust company showed large profits, but during that year the Cosmopolitan Trust Company had difficulty in meeting [360]*360its clearings. I accordingly find that notwithstanding the possibility of return from these borrowers, which must have been a most remote and uncertain .expectation, that at each of the times when money was received from the plaintiff, the bank was insolvent to the knowledge of Max Mitchell, its president. In view of the complete control and intimate relation of the president of the bank with these borrowers, who were merely his pliant instruments or his creatures, I am impelled to 'find that at the time of the receipt of the several sums from the plaintiff, the situation of the bank was not merely that of simple insolvency but one in which there was no reasonable expectation of its ability to meet its obligations when demanded by its depositors and would, in that event, be obliged to suspend its ordinary operations. . . , The course of the remarkable transactions above outlined does indicate a reckless attempt to recoup other losses previously arising out of incautious loans and may not be inconsistent with the existence of a mere slender hope that extraordinary good fortune might result in the rehabilitation of the bank. Therefore I find that on the several days when the plaintiff purchased the certificates of deposit, the officers of the bank had no reasonable expectation of its being able to meet its obligations as they matured.”

The master also found that the deposits of the plaintiff or the proceeds thereof could not be traced further than that they went into the commercial department of the trust company.

It may be doubtful whether these findings amount to a decision that the officers of the trust company, although knowing of its insolvent condition, were without genuine and reasonable hope, expectation and intention to carry on its business and to recover sound financial standing. See Steele v. Commissioner of Banks in re Prudential Trust Co. 240 Mass. 394, 397. It is not necessary to pass upon that point because, for another reason, the plaintiff cannot recover.

It was said in Little v. Chadwick, 151 Mass. 109, 110, “When trust money becomes so mixed up with the trustee’s individual funds that it is impossible to trace and identify it as entering into some specific .property, the trust ceases. [361]*361The court will go as far as it can in thus tracing and following trust money; but when, as a matter of fact, it cannot be traced, the equitable right of the cestui que trust to follow it fails." In Lowe v. Jones, 192 Mass. 94, at page 101 are found these words: “ . . . by the great weight of authority, a trust cannot be established against the proceeds of trust property which has been disposed of, unless the proceeds can be identified and traced into some specific fund or property. . . . The rule in Massachusetts has always been held, with considerable strictness, to require the identification of the trust property as passing into some other specific property or fund, as distinguished from the general assets of one’s estate." This rule was reiterated in Hewitt v. Hayes, 205 Mass. 356, 361, 362, and applied against the existence of a trust in Old Colony Trust Co. v. Puritan Motors Corp. 244 Mass. 259.

It seems fairly inferable from all the facts set out in the master’s report that, from one angle of approach, every deposit received by the trust company during a long period of time before the commissioner took possession of its property and business, was accepted fraudulently because it was in truth insolvent and not in a condition to pay the depositors in ordinary course. The devices adopted by it to secure the clearing of the checks of its depositors show the straits to which it was put. Its entire gold reserve was used at one time to tide it along. In view of the exigencies constantly confronting the trust company in the last months of its doing business, it cannot be thought, that any particular sum of money was kept in any special fund. It is a fiction established by equity in order to work out justice to assume that in the fluctuations of a fund made up partly of money obtained by fraud and partly of money belonging to a wrongdoer, the latter’s purpose is to draw out his own rather than the other’s money, and that therefore the person defrauded can assert a lien on what remains. It would be pressing that fiction to an absurd extent to follow it in the circumstances disclosed on this record. Every equity in favor of this plaintiff would probably be found to exist in favor of every other ordinary depositor in the trust company during the period covered by the master’s investigations. The present [362]*362plaintiff shows no equity in his favor superior to that of great numbers of other ordinary depositors, who have suffered through the unsound banking methods of the trust company. The reasoning and conclusion in Cunningham v. Brown, 265 U. S. 1, 12, 13, although relating to different facts and to proceedings in bankruptcy, are pertinent to the conditions revealed on the present record.

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Bluebook (online)
252 Mass. 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yesner-v-commissioner-of-banks-mass-1925.