1. Where a bank, before the filing of a petition in bankruptcy
against it, received deposits of checks, the proceeds of which were
later collected by its trustee in bankruptcy, the depositor is
entitled to claim the proceeds of the deposit only if the bank
received the checks as an agent for collection, but must stand as
an ordinary creditor if ownership of the paper passed to the bank.
P.
275 U. S.
252.
2. Respondents, who were bankers of Frankfort-on-Main, desired
in the course of their international business, to arrange a credit
at New York. Pursuant to instructions issued at their request by
London connections, New York banks delivered to a New York banking
firm (afterwards bankrupt) their cashier's checks drawn payable to
the order of that firm "for account of" respondents. On the same
day, the firm, in following a course of dealing previously
established with respondents, credited the checks to respondents'
account, made book entries indicating that respondents were
entitled to interest on the amount from that date, and deposited
them to its own credit in other banks. Before collection of the
checks, the petition in bankruptcy was filed.
Held, that
the
Page 275 U. S. 249
word "for account of" were not necessarily to be taken a
constituting the payee an agent for collection, but were to be
construed in the light of the intention of the parties as revealed
by all the circumstances, and in this instance their purpose was to
advise the bankrupt of the account to which the checks were to be
credited, and not make it an agent for collection, or restrict its
rights as purchase. P.
275 U. S.
253.
10 F.2d 935 reversed.
Certiorari, 271 U.S. 653, to a judgment of the circuit court of
appeals, which reversed an order of the district court dismissing a
petition of the respondents for reclamation of the proceeds of
checks collected by the above named trustee in bankruptcy.
Page 275 U. S. 251
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Respondents, bankers of Frankfort-on-Main, maintained a general
deposit account with the bankrupts, who were private bankers in New
York City. On instruction of Lloyds Bank, Limited, London, which
was requested by respondents "to procure this amount for us" on
June 15, 1923, "at Knauth, Nachod & Kuhne, New York," the
National Bank of Commerce in New York on that day delivered to
Knauth, Nachod & Kuhne, the bankrupts, its cashier's check for
$30,000, payable to them "for account of Rochling Bank, Gebr.
Frankfort-on-Main," and took from them their receipt for the check
"for account of Rochling Bank." On instruction of the Swiss Bank,
London, the National City Bank, New York, on the same date
delivered its cashier's chock for $30,000, payable to the order of
Knauth, Nachod & Kuhne, "A/C Gebr. Rochling, Frankfort A/M,"
taking from them a receipt in like form. On that day too, the
bankrupts credited the account of respondents with the two checks
and made an entry on their books indicating that respondents were
entitled to interest on the amount of the checks from that date.
The checks were deposited by Knauth, Nachod & Kuhne in their
own deposit accounts in other banks, and were there credited to
those accounts. On the following day, June 16, 1923, before the
collection of the checks, the petition in bankruptcy was filed.
In receiving these checks, forthwith crediting respondents with
them, and in crediting interest from the date of their receipt, the
bankrupts followed the established course of their business with
respondent which had extended over a period of more than two years.
Periodic statements of the account rendered to respondents showed
that interest was credited from the day of deposit, and that, on
occasion, drafts were made against deposits before they had been
collected.
Page 275 U. S. 252
Respondents' petition, filed in the District Court for Southern
New York for reclamation of the proceeds of checks was dismissed.
The order of the district court was reversed by the Circuit Court
of Appeals for the Second Circuit. 10 F.2d 935. This Court granted
certiorari. 271 U.S. 653.
The proceeds of the two checks concededly have come into the
hands of the petitioner, the bankrupts' trustee, and the sole
question presented is whether the bankrupts, on receipt of the
check and before the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, became
the owners of them, or whether, as the court of appeals held,
Knauth, Nachod & Kuhne were respondents' agents to collect
them. If the former, respondents were creditors of the bankrupts,
Douglas v. Federal Reserve Bank, 271 U.
S. 489;
Burton v. United States, 196 U.
S. 283, entitled to share only on an equal footing with
other creditors. If the latter, respondents were entitled to
reclamation from the petitioner, since the checks had not been
collected at the time of the petition in bankruptcy.
St. Louis
& San Francisco Ry. v. Johnston, 133 U.
S. 566;
White v. Stump, 266 U.
S. 310,
266 U. S. 313;
Bankruptcy Act, § 70(a), c. 541, 30 Stat. 565, as amended,
§ 16, c. 487, 32 Stat. 800.
Ordinarily, where paper is indorsed without restriction by a
depositor and is at once placed to his credit by the bank, the
inference is that the bank has become the purchaser of the paper,
and, in making the collection, is not acting as the agent of the
depositor.
Douglas v. Federal Reserve Bank, supra; Burton v.
United States, supra; In re Jarmulowsky, 249 F. 319, 321. But
the court below thought, and respondents argue here, that the form
of the check directing payment to be made to the bankrupts "for
account of" the respondents operated to make them agents to collect
the paper. The point is made that this is the effect of these or
equivalent words where the payee of negotiable paper indorses it
"for
Page 275 U. S. 253
account of" the indorser. It may be conceded that such an
indorsement indicates that the transaction is not a purchase and
sale of the paper, and, at least when not otherwise explained or
limited, may fairly be taken to mean that the interest gained by
the indorsee is that of an agent for collection.
White v.
National Bank, 102 U. S. 658;
Evansville Bank v. German-American Bank, 155 U.
S. 556;
Commercial Bank of Penn. v. Armstrong,
148 U. S. 50,
148 U. S.
57.
Here, however, the words were used not by a payee in his
indorsement, but by a third person making a deposit for
respondents' benefit. They are thus of much less significance than
in the usual case as data in determining the relation between
respondents and the bankrupts, and the course of conduct of the
parties becomes correspondingly more important. Moreover, the words
themselves, despite their wide commercial use and the importance of
giving them, as far as practicable, a uniform effect, have no rigid
and unchangeable significance. Their purpose is to express
intention. They are not an incantation which unfailingly invokes an
agency. And the circumstances in this case indicate that they were
here used with a different object.
The dominant purpose of the entire transaction, as far as
respondents were concerned, was to arrange that a credit with the
bankrupts should be available on June 15, and this they
accomplished as soon as the checks were delivered to the bankrupts.
While we need not stress the point, the added facts that
respondents were international bankers requiring the credit, in the
course of their business, and that the credit was effected by the
deposit of cashier's checks, which pass among bankers as current
funds, are not without their significance. Nothing in the previous
course of dealing or in the actions of respondents indicates that
they intended or had any reason for intending that Knauth, Nachod
& Kuhne should take the paper
Page 275 U. S. 254
as their agents for collection, or that any restriction should
be placed on the use of the checks by Knauth, Nachod & Kuhne
once they had credited respondents.
Nor was there anything in the relationship to the transaction of
the New York banks whose checks established the credit to suggest
any reason or purpose so to restrict it. The duty of these banks
was performed, and their interest in the paper, apart from their
liability to pay it, ceases as soon as they had delivered it to the
bankrupts. But it was indispensable to the completion of the
transaction that the bankrupts should be advised to what account
the checks were to be credited. And it was apparently the function
of the words in question to tell them. That alone, we think, was
their purpose. To assign them any other would be to ignore the
course of business followed here and banking usage in general, and
to give them a strained and unnatural construction. We think the
district court was right, and the judgment of the circuit court of
appeals is
Reversed.