Courts may go far in giving financial transactions between banks
and customers any form which will carry out the mutually understood
intent,
Sexton v. Kessler, 225 U. S.
90, but if the intent is doubtful or inconsistent with
the legal effect of dominant facts, it will fail.
An understanding that the proceeds of a loan made by a bank to a
customer and placed to the credit of his general account are to be
used to take up certain securities does not, in the absence of any
special agreement to that effect, create a lien upon those
securities, and the delivery of such securities to the bank with
notice of the customer's impending insolvency is an illegal
preference under the Bankruptcy Act.
A trust cannot be established in an aliquot share of a man's
whole property, as distinguished from a particular fund, by showing
that trust monies have gone into it.
Although a loan may be made for a specified purpose, if the
lender places it in the stream of the borrower's general property,
there is no right of subrogation.
A general creditor may increase the bankrupt's estate by his
advances and lose the right to take them back.
Time may sometimes be disregarded when it is insignificant, but
not where it has sufficed to materially change the financial
positions of the parties.
These cases arc distinguished from
Gorman v.
Littlefield, 229 U. S. 19, and
other cases in which there was a specific
res which
identified the fund and separated it from the general mass of the
estate.
A notice to a bank demanding securities for a loan made to the
bankrupt
Page 231 U. S. 51
that bankruptcy was impending and that it was receiving a
preference is sufficient to show that the bank had cause to believe
that it was obtaining a preference.
Under an agreement, made in a suit by a receiver against a bank
to recover securities in specie as an illegal preference, that the
bank should hold them pending the decision of the suit with a power
to sell in its discretion which had not been exercised,
held that the bank was only liable for the securities, and
not for their value at the time the agreement was made.
201 F. 664 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the determination of whether the
delivery of securities by a broker, immediately preceding his
bankruptcy, to a bank to secure its loan was an illegal preference,
are stated in the opinion.
Page 231 U. S. 54
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit by a trustee in bankruptcy to recover certain
securities alleged to have been transferred to the
Page 231 U. S. 55
defendant bank by way of preference. The plaintiff had a
judgment in the district court, 200 F. 287, 299, and in the circuit
court of appeals, 201 F. 664. Both parties appeal, the plaintiff
upon a subordinate question as to its right to elect damages
instead of a return of the securities.
The case arose upon what is known in New York as a clearance
loan. Brokers need large sums to clear or pay for the stocks that
they receive in the course of the day, and as the stocks must be
paid for before they are received and can be pledged to raise the
necessary funds, these sums are advanced by the banks. They are
returned later on the same day by making deposits to the borrower's
account and drawing a check to the order of the bank. Perhaps such
a general course of dealing might be arranged so as to give a lien
on the loan or its proceeds until payment, but the question whether
such a lien has been created rarely, if ever, has arisen, the whole
business being finished in a few hours. It is, however, the main
issue in this case.
The bankrupts were brokers in partnership, and at 10 o'clock on
January 19, 1910, had assets exceeding their liabilities by nearly
half a million dollars. These assets consisted largely in the stock
of a coal and iron company in which there was a pool. Before
twelve, there was a break in the market, the stock went down, and
at about noon the suspension of the firm was announced. A petition
in involuntary bankruptcy was filed at ten minutes after four on
the same day. At about ten, the bank made a clearance loan to the
bankrupts of $500,000 in the usual way, to enable them to meet
their current obligations and to get the stocks deliverable on that
day, the bank receiving demand notes, and both parties acting in
good faith. The sum was credited in the deposit account of the
firm, in addition to $54,319.98 already there, and soon after the
bank certified and subsequently paid checks amounting
Page 231 U. S. 56
to $535,920.74. During the day, the firm made deposits which are
not in question, but there remained due upon the loan $166,166.69.
Officers of the bank, noticing the drop in the stock, went to the
firm, demanded payment or securities to make good the obligations
to the bank, and were told of the suspension and that a petition in
bankruptcy would be filed. After two hours' discussion, the
securities in question were delivered between 2 and 3 P.M., but the
officers were told that the delivery was a preference. Some of the
securities bore no relation to the loan; others, and it may be
assumed for purposes of argument, most, had been released by the
money thus obtained.
In dealing with transactions of this kind, we may go far in
giving them any form that will carry out the mutually understood
intent.
Sexton v. Kessler, 225 U. S.
90,
225 U. S. 96-97.
But if the intent was doubtful or inconsistent with the legal
effect of dominant facts, it must fail. For instance, apart from
possible exceptions, a man cannot retain a domicil in one place
when he has moved to another, and intends to reside there for the
rest of his life, by any wish, declaration, or intent inconsistent
with the dominant facts of where he actually lives and what he
actually means to do.
Dickinson v. Brookline, 181 Mass.
195. In the present case, it is agreed that it was expected and
understood that no portion of the clearance loan was to be used for
any purpose other than to clear securities. But, on the other hand,
by consent of the bank, as it seems, the loan was put into the
general deposit account, which was drawn upon for general purposes,
at least, to the extent of the balance above the loan; the
securities released were not kept separate, but were used like any
other, and no separate account was kept of money received from
deliveries of stock so released. What happened as between these
parties was simply that all moneys received in the course of the
day, from whatever source, went into the firm's
Page 231 U. S. 57
deposit account with the bank. So that, even if we take it, as a
corollary of what was understood, that the use of the clearance
loan was expected to enable the firm to repay the loan, it does not
appear to have been expected that the proceeds should be
appropriated specifically to that end, but simply that the addition
of such proceeds to the general funds of the firm would enable the
latter to pay within the time allowed. This is the view of the
facts taken by the master and both of the courts below. They also
found that an attempt to give the matter a different complexion by
custom had failed, and if we went behind their findings, we should
take the same view.
A trust cannot be established in an aliquot share of a man's
whole property, as distinguished from a particular fund, by showing
that trust moneys have gone into it. On similar principles, a lien
cannot be asserted upon a fund in a borrower's hands which at an
earlier stage might have been subject to it if, by consent of the
claimant, it has become a part of the borrower's general estate.
But that was the result of the dealings between these parties, and
it cannot be done away with by a wish or intention, if such there
was, that alongside of this permitted freedom of dealing on the
part of the bankrupts, the security of the bank should persist. It
is not like the case of property wrongfully mingled with general
funds and afterwards traced. All that the parties agreed, either
expressly or by implication, was that the debt incurred at 10
o'clock should be paid by 3. Some banks seem to have required the
dealing to be conducted on the footing of a fund identified and
subject to a trust at every step; but between these parties there
was no attempt to follow a specific fund through a series of
changes until it was returned.
See Dillon v.
Barnard, 21 Wall. 430.
As all trace of the bank's money was lost when it entered the
stream of the firm's general property, there can be no right of
subrogation. Neither can a claim be upheld on
Page 231 U. S. 58
the ground that there was no diminution of the bankrupt's
assets, or that the transaction should be regarded as instantaneous
and one. The consent to become a general creditor for an hour, that
was imported, even if not intended to have that effect, by the
liberty allowed to the firm, broke the continuity and established
the loan as part of the assets. No doubt many general creditors
have increased a bankrupt's estate by their advances, but they have
lost the right to take them back. Time sometimes can be disregarded
when it is insignificant. But, in this case, half the time between
the loan and the transfer of securities sufficed to change the
position of the borrowers from a fortune of half a million to a
deficit of double that amount.
In both
Gorman v. Littlefield, 229 U. S.
19, and
Richardson v. Shaw, 209 U.
S. 365, in addition to the personalty of the holder,
there was also a specific stock which identified the fund relied
upon and separated it from the general mass of the estate,
Hurley v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co.,
213 U. S. 126,
stood on the peculiar facts of the case, which were held to point
to an identified
res and give an immediate claim against
it. The case established no general proposition contrary to what we
now decide.
The suggestions that it does not appear that the bankrupts
intended to give a preference, or that the bank had reasonable
cause to believe that it was obtaining one, hardly need answer. The
bank did not confine its demand to proceeds of the loan, but asked
for and obtained securities without regard to their source. It was
notified in terms that it was receiving a preference and that the
firm was going into bankruptcy. If this was not sufficient notice,
it is hard to imagine what would be enough.
The cross-appeal depends upon the frame of the bill and effect
of an agreement between the parties. On April 5, 1910, it was
agreed that the securities in question might be sold by the bank
"at the best price obtainable at such
Page 231 U. S. 59
times as may seem best to the officers of" the bank; that the
rights of both parties "shall attach to the proceeds realized from
the sale," and "the amount realized from the sale of the said
securities shall stand in lieu of the securities, and shall
represent the amount of the liability" of the bank to the trustee
in bankruptcy in case of judgment against it.
"The making of this stipulation shall not alter the rights or
claims of any of the parties, nor change the jurisdiction of any
court . . . , it being the intention of the stipulation that the
securities in the possession of the National City Bank shall be
converted into money at the best prices obtainable, and that all
rights of the parties shall remain as against the proceeds of the
sale of the said securities the same as they existed against the
securities themselves at the time of making this stipulation."
It seems that no sale took place. The decree was for a delivery
of the securities with all interest and dividends thereon received,
and in default thereof for $161,740.62, with interest from the date
of the master's report. But as the securities have declined a good
deal below their value at the time of conversion, and again below
their value at the date of the foregoing agreement, the trustee
claims the right to take the sum named, with corrections. This was
answered sufficiently by Judge Hand in the district court. As he
observed, the suit was in equity to recover the securities
in
specie. After the agreement, the bank was authorized to hold
them until it thought it wise to sell. If it had sold, there can be
no doubt that the plaintiff's claim would have been limited to the
proceeds by the words of the contract. Its judgment not to sell,
exercised for the benefit of both parties, cannot have been
intended to put it in a worse position. Such an understanding would
have deprived the plaintiff of the judgment of the bank.
Decree affirmed.