To constitute a preferential transfer within the meaning of the
Bankruptcy Act of 1898, there must be a parting with the bankrupts'
property for the benefit of the creditor and a consequent
diminution of the bankrupt's estate.
Newport Bank v. Herkimer
Bank, 225 U. S. 178.
In determining whether there has been a preferential payment,
the
Page 229 U. S. 436
nature of the property transferred is not as essential as the
facts showing exactly what transpired between the parties.
The arrangement involved in this action, made between a bank and
a grain broker in regard to transfering certificate of deposit held
as collateral for dealings in rain on the Chicago Board of Trade,
do not appear to have in any way diminished the estate, and
held not to have amounted to an illegal preference.
The purpose of § 68 of the Bankruptcy Act is to prevent
debtors of the bankrupt from acquiring claims against him for use
by way of setoff and reduction of their indebtedness by way of
setoff; but the transaction in this case does not come under §
68a.
Western Tie & Timber Co. v. Brown, 196 U.
S. 502, distinguished.
The facts, which involve the construction of certain provisions
of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898 relating to preferential payments,
are stated in the opinion.
Page 229 U. S. 438
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a controversy arising in a bankruptcy proceeding, and
involves questions of the right to certain property, as between the
appellant, the Continental & Commercial Trust & Savings
Bank, and the Chicago Title & Trust Company, as trustee in
bankruptcy of Earl H. Prince, bankrupt. Two items are involved:
first, the sum of $4,250, the amount of certain margin certificates
issued by the predecessor of the appellant bank to the bankrupt
Prince, and second, a balance of $575.79 remaining in Prince's
checking account with the bank of the predecessor of the appellant,
therein deposited by the bankrupt. The trustee brought the suit to
recover the amount of the margin certificates and the bank balance
as having been preferentially transferred within the terms of the
Bankruptcy Act. The district court held the trustee entitled to
recover, and this decree was affirmed by the circuit court of
appeals (199 F. 704), and the case comes here.
There is no controversy as to the facts. A petition in
bankruptcy was filed against Prince February 15, 1905. He had been
for several years a member of the Board of Trade of Chicago, buying
and selling on the Board and subject to its rules. The Federal
Trust & Savings Bank, the predecessor of the appellant, was
engaged in the general
Page 229 U. S. 439
banking business in the city of Chicago, and Prince did his
banking business at that bank, and had a general deposit and
checking account therein. By the rules of the Board of Trade,
purchasers and sellers might require of the other party to the
trade a deposit of ten percent of the contract price of the
property bought or sold, and further security from time to time as
the margin might require. Certain banks, of which the Federal Trust
& Savings Bank was one, were authorized to issue margin
certificates, which were in the following form:
"Federal Trust and Savings Bank"
"Chicago, No. ___"
"Deposited by E. H. Prince, $______ Dollars. As security on a
contract or contracts between the depositor and __________, which
amount is payable on the return of this certificate, or the
duplicate of the same (one of which being paid, the other shall
become void), duly indorsed by both of the above-named parties, or
on the order of the president of the Board of Trade of the City of
Chicago, indorsed on either of the original or duplicate hereof, as
provided by the rules of said Board of Trade under which the
above-named deposit has been made."
"Original."
"Not negotiable or transferable."
"______________________"
"Cashier"
Margin certificates on various days from September 15, 1904, to
February 9, 1905, in the form above set forth, had been issued to
Prince, to procure which he had drawn his check against his
checking account with the bank, or deposited with it the requisite
sum of money. Each of the said certificates evidenced a liability
of the bank to Prince for the amount stated in the certificate
unless, because of the default by Prince on the contract for
which
Page 229 U. S. 440
the certificate was held by the other party as security, it was
paid to such other party. The record of certificates was kept in
the margin register of the bank.
On the fourteenth of February, 1905, the vice-president of the
bank and Prince had a conference concerning the financial troubles
of Prince, and one W. P. Anderson, of W. P. Anderson & Company,
was called to the bank. A conference was had as to the best way of
closing out Prince's open trades, with the result that Anderson
agreed to act in the premises, and on the same day, February 14,
and the day following, Prince transferred all his open trades in
accordance with the rules of the board to Anderson, for his
company, and the latter agreed to carry out Prince's contracts, and
proceeded to do so. Anderson & Company, on February 15, 1905,
substituted its own securities for Prince's trades, and thereby
recovered the certificates deposited by Prince, which were turned
over to the Federal Trust & Savings Bank. Prince was at that
time indebted to the bank in the sum of about $37,000, and the
bank, upon the return of the certificates from Anderson &
Company, applied the money secured by the certificates to Prince's
indebtedness to the Bank. The master found:
"That taking the said open trades so transferred as a whole, the
condition of the market at the time of the transfer was such that
the aggregate sum of the amounts due thereon to Earl H. Prince from
members of the Board of Trade, if he had then settled the trades,
would have been greater than the aggregate sums of the amount then
due thereon from Prince to others of said members of the Board;
that among the open trades so transferred and settled were trades
with the said members of the Board who held securities or margin
certificates furnished by the said Prince."
"That, on February 15, 1905, the market was constantly changing.
If the trades with the members holding Prince's
Page 229 U. S. 441
margin certificates had been closed at the opening of the Board
on that day by the members holding them, there would have been due
from them to Prince in the aggregate a balance of approximately
one-third of the amount of the certificates after deducting
therefrom the amount that would have been due to them from Prince.
If the trades had been closed later in the day, the balance coming
to Prince would have been considerably less. However, if Prince had
carried out all of these contracts, the profits which he would have
made upon some of them would have been about balanced by the losses
which he would have sustained on others."
Furthermore:
"That the plan adopted at the conference between Mr. Prince, Mr.
Anderson, and Mr. Castle was doubtless the best plan that could
have been adopted to avoid serious loss to Prince or to his
creditors. The condition of the market was such at that time that,
had Anderson & Company not taken charge of Prince's trades and
carried them through, a panic might have ensued on the Board, and
the market so fluctuated that the amount of all of the margin
certificates, and quite likely a considerable more, would have been
lost to Prince and his creditors."
The facts with respect to the bank balance of $575.79 are: on
February 10, 1905, the bank called the loans of Prince, and, such
loans not being paid, the bank applied to them the sum of $3,095
then on deposit in Prince's checking account, leaving the sum of
$3.25 in that account. On the same day, the bank agreed with Prince
that, if he would thereafter make deposits for such purpose, it
would pay certain salary and payroll checks of Prince and checks
issued to the Board of Trade Clearing House. Checks were paid on
divers days between the fourth and the fourteenth of February,
1905, to the amount of $2,506.46, and Prince deposited with the
bank between the 10th and 14th of February a total of $3,079,
Page 229 U. S. 442
all such items being entered upon the books of the bank as of
February 14, 1905. The amount deposited exceeded the amount checked
out by $572.54, and this amount, with the $3.25 remaining to the
credit of Prince, as above set forth, left a balance of $575.79,
which the bank, on February 14th, applied to Prince's general
indebtedness to it.
The bank had reasonable cause to believe that Prince was
insolvent from and after February 10th, and during the transactions
from that date to and including February 15th.
The trustee relies upon certain sections of the Bankruptcy Act,
which he claims make the transaction with Prince by which the bank
acquired the certificates and the bank deposit a preferential one,
and therefore void within the terms of the act. The act
provides:
"SEC. 60a. A person shall be deemed to have given a preference
if, being insolvent, he has . . . made a transfer of any of his
property, and the effect of the enforcement of . . . such . . .
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."
"SEC. 60b. If a bankrupt shall have given a preference, and the
person receiving it . . . 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. . . ."
On the other hand, the bank claims the right to set off the
amount of the certificates and bank balance against the
indebtedness of Prince to it by reason of § 68a of the
Bankruptcy Act:
"SEC. 68a. In all cases of mutual debts or mutual credits
between the estate of a bankrupt and a creditor, the account shall
be stated, and one debt shall be set off against the other, and the
balance only shall be allowed or paid. "
Page 229 U. S. 443
This case must be dealt with in the light of certain principles,
established by decisions of this Court, in determining the
applicable provisions of the Bankruptcy Act. To constitute a
preferential transfer within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Act,
there must be a parting with the bankrupt's property for the
benefit of the creditor and a consequent diminution of the
bankrupt's estate.
New York County National Bank v.
Massey, 192 U. S. 138,
192 U. S. 147;
National Bank v. National Herkimer County Bank,
225 U. S. 178,
225 U. S.
184.
Much discussion appears in the briefs of counsel as to whether
the deposits evidenced by the margin certificates were general
deposits, creating between the bank and the depositor the relation
of debtor and creditor, or were special deposits which the bank had
no authority to mingle with its general funds. We do not deem it
necessary to enter into a discussion of this question with a view
to determining the technical question as to the nature of the
relation thus created between the bank and the depositor. In cases
of this character, it is essential to learn just what has taken
place between the parties, with a view to ascertaining whether a
preferential transfer of property to a creditor has resulted.
The statement of facts already made shows that these
certificates were payable to Prince unless they were required to be
paid to the party holding them as security for Prince's dealings
upon the Board of Trade. It is further evident from the facts
stated that, without the cooperation of Anderson & Company, who
took the place of Prince upon the Board of Trade, substituted their
securities for those of Prince, and carried out his obligations,
the certificates would have had no value to the estate. By the
arrangement made, Anderson & Company took hold of the situation
and, carrying out the deals upon which Prince was bound, cleared
the certificates of any obligation to others, and they thereby
became
Page 229 U. S. 444
payable to Prince. What was done did not in fact diminish the
estate of Prince otherwise available to the creditors in the
bankruptcy administration, for the traders holding them would have
had the benefit of the deposits under the terms of the certificates
and the rules of the Board of Trade. It therefore appears that this
essential element of a preferential transfer within the meaning of
the Bankruptcy Act -- diminution of the bankrupt estate -- is
wanting. The fact that what was done worked to the benefit of the
creditor, and in a sense gave him a preference, is not enough
unless the estate of the bankrupt was thereby diminished.
New
York County National Bank v. Massey, supra.
It is contended, however, that the setoff cannot be allowed
because of the provisions of § 68b of the Bankruptcy Act,
which provides:
"Section 68b. A setoff or counterclaim shall not be allowed in
favor of any debtor of the bankrupt which (1) is not provable
against the estate; or (2) was purchased by or transferred to him
after the filing of the petition or within four months before such
filing, with a view to such use, and with knowledge or notice that
such bankrupt was insolvent or had committed an act of
bankruptcy."
It is the main purpose of this statute, as its terms show, to
prevent debtors of the bankrupt from acquiring claims against the
bankrupt for use by way of setoff and reduction of their
indebtedness to the estate. There is no question of the solvency of
Prince when he deposited the money to secure the certificates, and
what was done was not the acquisition of a claim against Prince
with a view to setting it off against the bank's indebtedness on
the certificates, but was the satisfaction, without diminution of
the estate of the bankrupt, of possible claims of others who, in
the event of Prince's default, would have been entitled to the
deposits represented by the certificates.
Page 229 U. S. 445
We do not think such transaction comes within the language or
reason of § 68b.
It is said, however, that the case of
Western Tie &
Timber Co. v. Brown, 196 U. S. 502,
holds to the contrary. In that case, it appears, one Harrison, a
bankrupt, was a debtor of the tie company, which presented a claim
against the bankrupt estate of $24,358; that, for some years prior
to the bankruptcy, it had been engaged with Harrison in removing
timber from certain lands of the tie company and converting it into
ties. Harrison had conducted stores in the vicinity, and gave
laborers groceries and other supplies. The tie company received a
payroll on which the name of each laborer was entered, together
with the amount he earned and the value of the supplies he had
received from Harrison, and it deducted from the earnings of the
laborer the value of the supplies, a check for which was sent to
Harrison, and a check for the balance was sent to the laborer. Four
months before the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, Harrison
owed the tie company $20,000 and more. Within that time, the
company refused to pay Harrison, and retained and credited on its
claim against him $2,210.73, which was due him for supplies he had
furnished the laborers subsequent to November 30, 1902. Harrison
was then insolvent, as the tie company knew, and it was found that
it intended, by retaining the amounts, to secure to itself a
preference over other creditors; but Harrison had no such
intention. This Court found that the application of the amounts
advanced to the laborers did not amount to a voidable preference,
since the agreement mentioned brought about no preference whatever,
and upon the question as to whether the tie company was entitled to
set off the deductions from the payroll due Harrison, held that,
from the facts found, it appeared that the tie company was
obligated to remit to Harrison the amount of such deductions
irrespective of the condition of the
Page 229 U. S. 446
account between itself and Harrison, and that therefore the
company stood to Harrison in the relation of trustee, and the case
was not one of mutual credits and debts within the provisions of
§ 68a. And furthermore, that to allow the setoff would be in
violation of § 68b because, whether a trust relation existed
or not, the result would be the same, for the company's knowledge
of Harrison's insolvency when it acquired the claims of the latter
against the laborers, with a view to using them by way of setoff,
was to enable it thus to obtain an advantage over the other
creditors, which it could not lawfully do.
In that case, there was a specific finding that the tie company
had appropriated money which it really held in trust for Harrison,
and that it had acquired the claims of Harrison against the
laborers with a view to the prohibited setoff. In the case at bar,
there was no finding that the bank held the money in trust for a
specific purpose so as to deny it the right of setoff, or that it
acquired any claim against the bankrupt with a view to making it a
setoff. It is not shown that, when Prince made the deposits for the
margin certificates, he was insolvent, and the deposits created no
preference. What was done here, as we have said, consisted in
procuring a broker to take up the trades of Prince, so that the
certificates became clear of the rights of any third persons, and
to do this without any diminution of the bankrupt estate. We think
such a case as this is distinguishable from the case of
Western
Tie & Timber Co. v. Brown, supra, and does not come within
the obvious reason and purposes of the prohibitions against
acquiring setoffs contained in § 68b.
As to the $575.79, we think the right to set off this deposit is
established by the principles laid down in
New York County
National Bank v. Massey, supra. Here, there was a deposit
subject to be checked out by the bankrupt for specific purposes.
The money was not placed
Page 229 U. S. 447
in the bank with a view to giving it a benefit, except
indirectly, because of the deposit. It was subject to Prince's
check, and all of it might have been checked out for the purposes
intended.
The decrees of the circuit court of appeals and of the
district court are reversed, and the case remanded to the district
court for further proceedings in conformity with this
opinion.