A state bank, holding a secured note, the maker of which became
a bankrupt, itself went into insolvency proceedings under the state
law after it had accepted, with knowledge of the bankruptcy,
deposits of funds of the bankrupt estate made by the trustees in
bankruptcy, who were not shown to have known of the note at the
time.
Held that the bankruptcy court should allow the bank's
claim for the amount due on the note, above the value of the
security, but withhold dividends until the debt due the trustees
had been paid. P.
261 U. S.
56.
278 F. 509 reversed.
Certiorari to an order of the circuit court of appeals directing
dismissal of a petition for set-off made by a trustee in
bankruptcy.
Page 261 U. S. 455
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case arises in the matter of O'Gara Coal Company, bankrupt,
upon a petition for a set-off presented by the trustee of the
bankrupt estate. The respondent is the receiver of the La Salle
Street Trust & Savings Bank. When the Coal Company became
bankrupt in 1913, the Bank held its note for $15,000, with
security. Between November 11, 1913, and June 11, 1914, the
trustees of the Coal Company in bankruptcy deposited in the Bank,
an authorized depositary, and were credited as such trustees with
funds of their estate, which amounted to nearly $20,000 on June 12,
1914, when the Bank suspended business, insolvent. A receiver was
appointed by a state Court a few days later. The trustees of the
Coal Company filed a claim for the amount of their deposit in 1916,
and in 1916 and again in 1918 received dividends upon it. On the
other side, the receiver of the bank filed a proof of the bank's
claim as unsecured in 1914, but amended it to proof of a secured
claim in 1917. The petition
Page 261 U. S. 456
before us seeks to set off the claim of the petitioner for the
deposit in the Bank, less the dividends received, against the claim
of the Bank upon the note. The circuit court of appeals denied the
set-off and ordered the petition to be dismissed.
Chicago Title
& Trust Co. v. Gardner, 278 F. 509.
We assume that, when money is deposited in a designated bank
under § 61 of the Bankruptcy Law of July 1, 1898, c. 541, 30
Stat. 562, it is deposited as other money is, and becomes the
property of the bank, leaving the bank a debtor for the amount. But
when this money was deposited with this Bank, it seems that the
Bank had notice that it was part of a fund appropriated to paying
the Coal Company's debts, of which the note held by the Bank was
one. We think that it would be inequitable to allow the Bank to
proceed to diminish that fund without accounting for the portion
that it had received. When the Bank accepted deposits from a fund
against which it had a credit, it must be taken to have known that
it could not profit by the fact at the expense of other claimants.
The Bank knew the whole situation. There is nothing to show that
the Trustees of the Coal Company, when they made their deposits,
knew that the Bank held the Coal Company's note. If they had known
this fact, it would be going far to say that they altered or could
alter the position of their
cestuis que trust for the
worse. On the other hand, the creditors of the Bank can stand no
better than the Bank.
The Bankruptcy Court may allow the Bank's claim for such sum
only as may seem to the Court to be owing above the value of the
security, § 57e, and may withhold dividends upon that sum
until the debt due to the trustee has been paid.
Western Tie
& Timber Co. v. Brown, 196 U. S. 502,
196 U. S. 511.
Decree reversed.