To constitute a preference under the Bankruptcy Act, it is not
necessary that the transfer be made directly to the creditor; it
may be made to another for his benefit, and, if preferential,
circuity of arrangement will not avail to save it.
Unless, however, the creditor takes by virtue of a disposition
by the insolvent debtor of his property for the benefit of the
creditor so that the estate is diminished, the creditor cannot be
charged with receiving a preference.
Where the endorser of the bankrupt's note, which is under
discount at a bank and secured by the endorser's own collateral,
pays the note, thereby recovering his collateral, and charges the
payment to the bankrupt to whom he is indebted in a larger sum on
open account, there is no preferential payment to the bank which
the trustee can recover from it as such, it not appearing that the
bank was concerned with, or had any knowledge of, the relation
between the endorser and the maker of the note.
172 F. 529 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the question of whether a payment was
an illegal preference under the Bankruptcy Act of 1898, are stated
in the opinion.
Page 225 U. S. 180
MR. JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought in the District Court of the United States
for the Northern District of New York by Charles B. Mason, as
trustee in bankruptcy of the Newport Knitting Company, to recover
the amount of an alleged preference. Decree for the complainant was
reversed by the circuit court of appeals, which remanded the cause
with instruction to dismiss the bill. 172 F. 529. Subsequently, the
trustee assigned the claim in suit to the National Bank of Newport,
New York, which was substituted as complainant and brought this
appeal.
The bankrupt, the Newport Knitting Company, was organized in
1900 by Titus Sheard and his associates, and was engaged in the
manufacture of knit goods at Newport, New York. Proceedings for its
voluntary dissolution were begun in October, 1903, and on December
30, 1903, a
Page 225 U. S. 181
petition in bankruptcy was filed against it. It was adjudged a
bankrupt on January 23, 1904.
Several of the officers and directors of this company were also
officers and directors of a corporation known as the Titus Sheard
Company, which manufactured knit goods at Little Falls. Titus
Sheard was the leading spirit in both corporations; in each, his
son-in law was the secretary and his nephew the general manager.
The books of the Newport Knitting Company were kept at the office
of the Titus Sheard Company. It does not appear that either company
held stock in the other, nor is it shown to what extent the same
persons had a stock interest in both. And, upon the record, the
conclusion must be that, while the management of the two concerns
was largely in the same hands, they were distinct organizations,
conducting separate businesses.
The Titus Sheard Company had a deposit account and discounted
its paper with the defendant, the National Herkimer County Bank of
Little Falls, of which Sheard was a director. The Newport Knitting
Company was not a customer of the defendant bank, but kept its
account with the National Bank of Newport.
The transaction which is alleged to constitute a preference was
as follows: on January 7, 1901, the Newport Knitting Company gave
its note for $5,773.05, at four months, to the Titus Sheard
Company, to pay for machinery and supplies. The Titus Sheard
Company indorsed the note and had it discounted by the defendant
bank, receiving the avails for its own use. The note was reduced by
part payment to $5,000, and for this sum it was renewed every four
months with like indorsement, the last renewal of this sort being
on May 11, 1903.
In August, 1903, the defendant bank held a large amount of paper
made or indorsed by the Titus Sheard Company, and insisted upon
security. Thereupon the Titus Sheard Company submitted to the bank
a statement of its affairs,
Page 225 U. S. 182
and on August 11, 1903, executed an instrument, also signed by
Mr. Sheard and certain other officers individually, by which, after
reciting the determination to liquidate its business, they
purported to pledge its
"mill property, all the machinery in the same, and the
warehouse, together with all our assets of our company, and also
the individual properties, as per list hereto attached, to secure
the National Herkimer County Bank for all notes of ours which they
now hold, or may hereafter hold, and for all paper indorsed by us,
now held by the bank, or that may be held by it in the future."
This agreement evidently contemplated that the Titus Sheard
Company should continue in possession of its property and should
have charge of the winding up of its affairs on the understanding
expressed, which was, in substance, that the property should be
speedily converted into money, that bills payable held by creditors
other than the bank should be renewed so far as possible, and that
"all surplus moneys, as fast as collected, not required to pay the
outstanding notes held by other creditors," should be applied in
payment of the indebtedness to the bank. It was declared to be the
intention to dispose of the property so that all the indebtedness
should be paid before January 1, 1904.
On August 22, 1903, there was substituted for the
above-mentioned note of the Newport Knitting Company, indorsed by
the Titus Sheard Company and held by the bank, a new three months'
note of the Newport Knitting Company for the same amount, similarly
indorsed, and the Titus Sheard Company secured this note by the
delivery to the bank of specific assignments of its bills
receivable, amounting to $6,300. On September 26, 1903, before
maturity, the Titus Sheard Company paid to the bank the amount of
this note, less accrued interest, $4,953.33, and took up the note
and collateral. This payment was made by the Titus Sheard Company,
acting in its own behalf, by a check drawn against the funds to
Page 225 U. S. 183
its credit in the bank. The amount so paid was then charged by
that company to the Newport Knitting Company, to which it was
indebted on open account in a larger sum, and on the books of the
Newport Knitting Company a corresponding credit was given to the
Titus Sheard Company. So far as appears, this charge of the sum
paid on the note against the amount owing to the Newport Knitting
Company was not known to the bank.
It is insisted that this transaction amounted to a preference of
the bank by the Newport Knitting Company. It is said that "the
bankrupt parted with property to the amount of the note, and the
bank received it and was benefited to that amount," of the
detriment of the other creditors of the Newport Knitting Company,
then insolvent, or, as the district court put it, that
"a short-cut was taken by common consent, and the check was
passed to the bank and the amount charged to the Knitting Company,
so that it, in fact paid the note."
The pertinent provisions of the Bankruptcy Act, as they stood at
the time the transaction occurred, were as follows:
"Sec. 60. Preferred Creditors. --
a. A person shall be
deemed to have given a preference, if, being insolvent, he has,
within four months before the filing of the petition, or after the
filing of the petition and before the adjudication, procured or
suffered a judgment to be entered against himself in favor of any
person, or made a transfer of any of his property, and the effect
of the enforcement of such judgment or transfer will be to enable
any one of his creditors to obtain a greater percentage of his debt
than any other of such creditors of the same class. . . ."
"
b. If a bankrupt shall have given a preference, and
the person receiving it, or to be benefited thereby, or his agent
acting therein, shall have had reasonable cause to believe that it
was intended thereby to give a preference, it shall be voidable by
the trustee, and he may recover the property or its value from such
person. "
Page 225 U. S. 184
To constitute a preference, it is not necessary that the
transfer be made directly to the creditor. It may be made to
another for his benefit. If the bankrupt has made a transfer of his
property the effect of which is to enable one of his creditors to
obtain a greater percentage of his debt than another creditor of
the same class, circuity of arrangement will not avail to save it.
A "transfer" includes
"the sale and every other and different mode of disposing of or
parting with property, or the possession of property, absolutely or
conditionally, as a payment, pledge, mortgage, gift, or
security."
Sec. 1 (25). It is not the mere from or method of the
transaction that the act condemns, but the appropriation by the
insolvent debtor of a portion of his property to the payment of a
creditor's claim, so that thereby the estate is depleted and the
creditor obtains an advantage over other creditors. The "accounts
receivable" of the debtor -- that is, the amounts owing to him on
open account, are, of course, as susceptible of preferential
disposition as other property, and if an insolvent debtor arranges
to pay a favored creditor through the disposition of such an
account, to the depletion of his estate, it must be regarded as
equally a preference whether he procures the payment to be made on
his behalf by the debtor in the account -- the same to constitute a
payment in whole or part of the latter's debt -- or be collects the
amount and pays it over to his creditor directly. This implies
that, in the former case, the debtor in the account, for the
purpose of the preferential payment, is acting as the
representative of the insolvent, and is simply complying with the
directions of the latter in paying the money to his creditor.
But, unless the creditor takes by virtue of a disposition by the
insolvent debtor of his property for the creditor's benefit, so
that the estate of the debtor is thereby diminished, the creditor
cannot be charged with receiving a preference by transfer.
Western Tie & Timber
Co.
Page 225 U. S. 185
v. Brown, 196 U. S. 502,
196 U. S. 509;
Rector v. City Deposit Bank, 200 U.
S. 405,
200 U. S.
419.
"These transfers of property amounting to preferences
contemplate the parting with the bankrupt's property for the
benefit of the creditor, and the consequent diminution of the
bankrupt's estate."
N.Y. County Bank v. Massey, 192 U.
S. 138,
192 U. S.
147.
Here, the payment to the bank did not proceed from the bankrupt,
the Newport Knitting Company. The Titus Sheard Company had a
standing quite apart from its relation to the Newport Knitting
Company as a debtor in the account. In the transaction with the
bank, the Titus Sheard Company acted on its own behalf. As the
holder of the original note, that company had indorsed it to the
bank, taking for its own benefit the proceeds of the discount. Its
obligation as indorser was continued by the renewals, and, to
secure the bank on the last renewal, it had deposited its own
collateral. It took up the note with its own funds and received
back the security. Neither directly nor indirectly was this payment
to the bank made by the Newport Knitting Company, and the property
of that company was not thereby depleted.
The fact, then, is not, as it is contended, that "the bankrupt
parted with property to the amount of the note, and the bank
received it," but rather that the bankrupt parted with nothing, and
the bank received the money of the indorser, and redelivered to the
indorser the paper and collateral. When the Titus Sheard Company
took up the note, it was credited with the amount of the payment in
its account with the Newport Knitting Company. But the question, in
the circumstances disclosed, of the right of the Titus Sheard
Company to a set-off against its indebtedness on the account is
distinct from the question whether the bank received a preference.
Western Tie & Timber Co. v. Brown, supra. It would be
only by the allowance of such a set-off that the bankrupt estate
would be diminished. And, as was said by the circuit
Page 225 U. S. 186
court of appeals,
"if the Sheard Company, knowing the Newport Company to be
insolvent, acquired the note with a view to using it as a set-off
or counterclaim against its debt, it could not legally do so.
(Bankruptcy Law, § 68
b.)"
The amount of the indebtedness of the Titus Sheard Company could
still be collected by the trustee.
It is urged that, by virtue of the instrument already mentioned,
which was executed by the Titus Sheard Company on August 11, 1903,
all the assets of that company had been assigned to the bank, and
hence that the security placed with the bank of the last renewal of
the note was already held under this instrument, and continued to
be so held after the note was taken up, despite the surrender of
the specific assignment. It is said further that, as a result of
the execution of this instrument, the bank "stepped into the place
of the Sheard Company," and knew the condition of the account with
the Newport Knitting Company and the charge that was made to
it.
The argument attributes to the instrument undue importance, and
an effect which it did not accomplish. It was far from being an
adequate legal security. Apparently the Titus Sheard Company was
left in the possession of the property, and its officers continued
its management with freedom to sell, to collect accounts, to pay
outstanding notes held by others than the bank (so far as they
could not be renewed), and generally to liquidate the business in
accordance with the expressed intention to convert the assets into
money as speedily as possible, and thus to meet all the obligations
to the bank. To this end, the company and its officers were to
"work faithfully," and the surplus moneys as fast as realized were
to be devoted to the payment of the indebtedness. It was natural
that the bank should require security for the note of a more
definite and satisfactory character -- that is, proper collateral.
And when the bank received the specific collateral deposited by the
Titus Sheard Company on the
Page 225 U. S. 187
renewal, the bank obtained a control over it which otherwise it
did not possess, and this control is surrendered on the redelivery.
In view of the effort that was being made to reduce the obligation
of the company held by the bank, it cannot be thought surprising
that the note with the collateral was taken up before maturity. It
was not shown that the bank had nothing to do with the credit to
the Titus Sheard Company in its account with the Newport Knitting
Company. Nor does it appear that the bank knew of the condition of
this account, or had any reason to believe that it was proposed to
set off the payment against an indebtedness to the bankrupt.
The bank dealt with the Titus Sheard Company as the indorser of
the paper, and the trustee failed to establish any right to recover
the moneys it received.
Decree affirmed.