Nothing in the Bankruptcy Act deprives a bank with which the
insolvent is doing business of the rights of any other creditor
taking money without reasonable cause to believe that a preference
will result.
In this case, it having been found that the deposits and
payments of notes were not made to enable the bank to secure a
preference by the right of setoff, the bank had a right under its
agreement to set off the deposits against the notes within four
months of the bankruptcy.
New York County Bank v. Massey,
192 U. S. 138.
Section 68a of the Bankruptcy Act did not create the right of
setoff, but recognized its existence and provided a method for its
enforcement even after bankruptcy.
The right of setoff is recognized by the Bankruptcy Act, and it
cannot be taken away by construction because of possibility of its
abuse; nor will the act be so construed by denying such right as to
make banks hesitate to carry on business, and thus produce evils of
serious consequence.
200 F. 249 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the right of a bank to accept in good
faith payments from an insolvent, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE LAMAR delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Collver Tours Company was engaged in the business of
conducting touring parties around the world, charging
Page 229 U. S. 524
a lump sum for the tickets, which were paid for in advance. It
had expended about $40,000 in advertising, which it carried on its
books as an asset, and since the character of its business did not
involve the possession of tangible property, it had nothing except
cash on hand, goodwill and its earning capacity as a means of
paying debts.
In 1907, the company opened an account with the Boylston
National Bank, with which it subsequently did all of its banking
business of depositing, checking, and borrowing. It notified the
bank in 1909 that it had no other liabilities except what was due
to the bank, and it was given a line of credit of $25,000. It
borrowed that sum on the promise to repay it that year; but as it
used a part of its funds to open a letter of credit account in the
bank, it was permitted to renew the notes. In December, 1909, it
made a statement to the Massachusetts Corporation Commission which
showed that the company did not have assets sufficient to pay its
liabilities, and an officer of the bank saw this statement, but the
representative of the Collver Company went over the matter with the
bank officers, made an explanation, and borrowed an additional sum
of $5,000 in the spring or summer of 1910. During the year 1910,
the debt of $25,000 was reduced to $10,000 went back to $25,000,
was reduced again to $15,000, and increased to $30,000, the Collver
Company making to the bank encouraging statements of its prospects
and of an anticipated large sale of tickets for round-the-world
tours. One note for $5,000 was paid, and the then debt of $25,000
was represented by five notes for $5,000 each, maturing September
12, 20, 30, October 3 and 14th.
The balances in bank to the credit of the Collver Company
fluctuated greatly from time to time, varying from almost nothing
up to as high as $54,000. As a result of sales of tickets, the
company deposited large sums in August and September and smaller
sums in October and November. During that period, $22,500 was paid
to the
Page 229 U. S. 525
bank, the three notes due September 12, 20, and 30 being paid by
checks on the Boylston National Bank. The note for $5,000, due
October 3, was charged to the company's account, and on the same
day a renewal note for $2,500 was discounted. The note for $5,000
which fell due on October 14, was also charged to the deposit
account, according to the custom of the bank of which the Collver
Company had notice, and to which it assented. On the date of the
payment by such charging of the last note to the account, the
company had $19,000 left to its credit. The Collver Company
continued to make deposits and to draw checks, and applied for a
new loan, which was refused by the bank. On December 16, 1910, a
petition in bankruptcy was filed against the company, and, after
his election, the trustee brought suit against the bank to recover
the $22,500, claiming that it had notice of the Collver Company's
insolvency and that the payments of $22,500 were transfers which
had operated to give the Boylston Bank a preference within four
months of filing the petition.
In its answer, the bank alleged that it was informed and
believed that the company was doing a large and constantly
increasing business and was in every way responsible; that the
company for a long time kept its general deposit with the bank, and
was constantly making deposits therein, some large, some small,
upon all of which the bank had a lien and a right of setoff, and
that
"this right of setoff was not affected by the fact, if it be a
fact, that the company was at any of the times of the exercise of
said right of setoff insolvent,"
and it claimed that the exercise of its right of setoff did not
and could not constitute a preference within the meaning of the
Bankruptcy Act or any amendment thereto.
The case was tried by the referee, who sustained the bank's
claim of setoff, holding that the payments were not transfers, or,
if transfers, that the trustee could not
Page 229 U. S. 526
recover the money because the bank had no reasonable cause to
believe that the payment of the notes would operate as a
preference. On exceptions to the report, it was sustained on the
ground that the deposits had been honestly made in due course of
business and that the defendant, by virtue of its banker's lien and
right of setoff, could retain the money. That judgment was affirmed
on the same ground by the circuit court of appeals. 200 F. 249. The
case was then brought here by the trustee, who insists that all the
payments were transfers; that, if the notes charged to the account
are not transfers, certainly the giving of the three checks for
$5,000 were transfers, and that, in receiving the same, the bank
necessarily knew that it was obtaining a preference.
But if, as found by the referee, the bank had no reasonable
cause to believe such transfers would effect a preference, the
payments by checks for $15,000, drawn on the deposit account, are
as much protected as if on the same dates similar checks had been
given in payment of like amounts due another bank with which the
Collver Company kept no account. For there is nothing in the
statute which deprives a bank, with whom an insolvent is doing
business, of the rights of any other creditor taking money without
reasonable cause to believe that a preference will result from the
payment. The Bankruptcy Act contemplates that, by remaining in
business and at work, an insolvent may become able to pay off his
debts. It does not prevent him from continuing in trade, depositing
money in bank, drawing checks and paying debts as they mature,
either to his own bank or any other creditor. It does provide,
however, that, if bankruptcy ensues, all payments thus made within
the four-months period may be recovered by the trustee if the
creditor had reasonable cause to believe that a preference would be
thereby effected.
In this case, the referee found as a fact that the bank
Page 229 U. S. 527
had no reasonable cause to believe that a preference would
result. The district judge made no finding of fact, though in his
opinion, which cannot be considered as a finding of fact, he did
state that the bank had a right to examine the company's books, and
could have discovered that a preference would result. The circuit
court of appeals made no ruling on this subject, and we therefore
pass to the consideration of the right of setoff in the light of
the finding by the referee, by the district judge, and by the court
of appeals that the deposits were honestly made in due course of
business and without any intent to prefer the bank.
The money so deposited was the proceeds of the sale of tickets
to a large party of round-the-world tourists, and was put in bank
not for the purpose of preferring it, but in the expectation of
being used for carrying on the business in the future as in the
past. Indeed, the payments were made with the statement that the
company would expect the bank to discount other notes. We find
nothing in the record to indicate that the deposits were made for
the purpose of enabling the bank to secure a preference by the
exercise of the right of setoff. The case therefore comes directly
within the decision in
New York County National Bank v.
Massey, 192 U. S. 138,
where $3,884 deposited by an insolvent customer, in good faith,
four days before the filing of the petition against him was allowed
to the bank by way of setoff on notes of the bankrupt held by
it.
An effort is made to distinguish that case from this, by calling
attention to the fact that here, by checks drawn on the account or
notes charged to the account, the parties themselves voluntarily
made the setoff before the petition was filed, while, in the
Massey case, the trustee, under the supervision of the
referee, stated an account and allowed the setoff as permitted by
§ 68a, which provides
"that in all cases of mutual debt, or mutual credits between
Page 229 U. S. 528
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."
That section did not create the right of setoff, but recognized
its existence and provided a method by which it could be enforced
even after bankruptcy. What the old books called a right of
stoppage -- what business men call setoff -- is a right given or
recognized by the commercial law of each of the states, and is
protected by the Bankruptcy Act if the petition is filed before the
parties have themselves given checks, charged notes, made book
entries, or stated an account whereby the smaller obligation is
applied on the larger.
The banker's lien on deposits, the right of retention and setoff
of mutual debts, are frequently spoken of as though they were
synonymous, while, in strictness, a setoff is a counterclaim which
the defendant may interpose by way of cross-action against the
plaintiff. But, broadly speaking, it represents the right which one
party has against another to use his claim in full or partial
satisfaction of what he owes to the other. That right is constantly
exercised by businessmen in making book entries whereby one mutual
debt is applied against another. If the parties have not
voluntarily made the entries, and suit is brought by one against
the other, the defendant, to avoid a circuity of action, may
interpose his mutual claim by way of defense, and if it exceeds
that of the plaintiff, may recover for the difference. Such
counterclaim can be asserted as a defense or by the voluntary act
of the parties, because it is grounded on the absurdity of making A
pay B when B owes A. If this setoff of mutual debts has been
lawfully made by the parties before the petition is filed, there is
no necessity of the trustee's doing so. If it has not been done by
the parties, then, under command of the statute, it must be done by
the trustee. But there is nothing in 68a which prevents the parties
from voluntarily doing, before the petition is filed, what the law
itself requires to be done after proceedings in bankruptcy are
instituted.
The bank was indebted to the Collver Company as a depositor some
$54,000 for money deposited in good faith in the usual course of
business, and with no purpose of enabling the bank to secure the
right of setoff. The Collver Company, on the other hand, was
indebted to the bank $25,000 on notes maturing at various dates.
These were mutual debts, and if, on the date the first note became
due, the Collver Company had failed to pay it, the bank could have
enforced its banker's lien or its right of setoff by applying
$5,000 of the deposits in payment of the note which matured that
day, and so on as each of the other notes became due. It cannot
have been illegal for the parties on September 12, 20, 30, October
3 and 14, to do what the law would have required the trustee to do
in stating the account after the petition was filed on December 16,
1910. No money passed in either instance, for whether the checks
for $5,000 were paid or notes for $5,000 was charged was, in either
event, a book entry equivalent to the voluntary exercise by the
parties of the right of setoff.
The Bankruptcy Act recognizes this right, and it cannot be taken
away by construction because of the possibility that it may be
abused. The remedy against that evil is found in the fact that the
trustee is authorized to sue and recover if it is shown that, after
insolvency, the money was deposited for the purpose of enabling a
bank or other creditor to secure a preference. But to deny the
right of setoff in cases like this would in many cases make banks
hesitate to honor checks given to third persons, would precipitate
bankruptcy, and so interfere with the course of business as to
produce evils of serious and far-reaching consequence.
Affirmed.