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C O P Y

X-6954.

314

UNITED STATES CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS
EIGHTH CIRCUIT
No. 9073
John Hirning as Receiver of the
Farmers National Bank of Brookings
Appellant,
vs
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF MINNEAPOLIS
Minnesota, a corporation,
JSjppellee

)
)
)

!)

Appeal from the
District Court of
the United States
for the District
of Minnesota.

)
)

Mr, J. H. Colman (Mr. John Junell and Messrs. June 11, Oakley,
Driscoll & Fletcher were with him on the brief) for appellant.
Mr. A. Ueland (Mr. Sigurd Ueland was with him on the "brief) for appellee

Before KENYON and BOOTH, Circuit Judges, and

DEWEY, District Judge.

BOOTH, Circuit Judge, delivered the opinion of the Court,
An action at law was brought by appellant, plaintiff below, to recover from appellee the sum of $21,355,82,
being the amount of two remittances made by the Farmers
National Bank of Brookings, South Dakota, to the Federal
Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, on the ground that said remittances constituted unlawful preferences under Section
5242, R.S. (12 USCA Sec, 91.)




X-6954.
A jury was duly waived, and the case was tried to
the court*
At the close of the evidence, plaintiff moved for
judgment in his favor; defendant moved for judgment of
dismissal on the merits.

The latter motion was granted,

and judgment was entered for defendant.

This appeal fol-

lowed.
The relevant statute under which the action was
brought reads as follows:
"All transfers of the notes, bonds, bills of exchange, or other evidences of debt owing to any national
banking association, or of deposits to its credit; all
assignments of mortgages, sureties on real estate, or of
judgments gr decreos in its favor; all deposits of money,
bullion, or other valuable thing for its use, or for the
use of any of its shareholders or creditors; and all payments of money to either, made after the commission of an
act of insolvency, or in contemplation thereof, made with
a view to prevent the application of its assets in the
manner prescribed by this chapter, or with a view to the
preference of one creditor to another, except in payment
of its circulating notes, shall be utterly null and void;
and no attachment, injunction or execution, shall be issued
against such association or its property before final
judgment in any suit, action, or proceeding, in any State,
County or Municipal court." (U.S. Sec. 5242; 12 TJSCA
Sec. 91.)
From the findings, the admissions of the pleadings,
and the undisputed evidence, the following facts appear;
the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis (hereafter called
the Reserve Bank) on November 13, 1926 received from
certain of its member banks for collection checks on the
Farmers National Bank of Brookings, South Dakota (hereafter
called the Brookings Bank), amounting to $22,114.22.

On

the same day, the Reserve Bank, as agent of said member
banks, forwarded said checks to the Brookings Bank for



~3~
collection.

X-6954.

On November 15, 1926, the Reserve Bank, as

agent for certain member banks, received for collection
other checks on said Brookings Bank amounting to $15,020,88
and on the same day forwarded these checks to the Brookings
Bank for collection.

The Reserve Bank, as agent, had

authority to receive cash or drafts for the checks so sent.
On the 16th of November, the Brookings Bank accepted most
of said checks, and on that day sent to the Reserve Bank
two drafts drawn on the Reserve Bank and payable to its
order, one for $22,059.11 covering the checks accepted from
the first list, and one for $14,880.86 covering the checks
accepted from the second list.

The drafts were drawn by Mr

Haroldson, Cashier of the Brookings Bank,

In the usual

course of business, the drafts would have been drawn on
some bank other than the Roservo Bank, but in this instance
they were drawn on the Reserve Bank because the Brookings
Bank realized that it would not reopen the following day
and the drafts would not clear on November 17th if the
drawee banks received prior notice of the closing of the
Brookings Bank.

The checks were charged by the Brookings

Bank against the various drawers who were depositors in
said bank on November 18th,
At the time of sending the two drafts to the Reserve Bank, the Brookings Bank did not have in the Reserve
Bank sufficient reserve account to meet the drafts,

Accord

ingly, and in order to provide funds with which to meet
the drafts, the Brookings Bank, on November 16th, by its



X-6954.
Cashier, Mr. Haroldson, wrote a letter to the Reserve Bank
enclosing collection ifiiS&s belonging to the Brookings Bank
for collection by the Reserve Bank.

These items on their

face amounted to $10,029.07, but the Reserve Bank collected
thereon only $8,355.82.

This letter enclosing the collec-

tion items was not mailed until late in the evening of
November 16th, and until after a resolution had been passed
by the Board of Directors suspending the operation of the
bank. (Resolution in the margin.)

On the afternoon of

the 16th, the Brookings Bank also made up a bundle of
currency amounting to $13,000, and this was sent to the
Reserve Bank on the morning of November 17th.

On the

morning of November 17th, the Reserve Bank was notified by
"Farmers National Bank
Capital and Surplus $65,000.00.
Brookings, So. Dale.
November 16, 1926.
W.
0.
1.
H.
J.
J.
A.
P.

A. Caldwell, President
J. Otternes, Vice Prest.
A. Otternes, Vice Prest.
P. Haroldson, Cashier
Clevan, Asst. Cashier
L. Murphy, Asst. Cashier,
E. Johnson, Asst. Cashier.
M. Story, Asst. Cashier.

Special Meeting of Board of Directqrs.
Due to heavy withdrawals of deposits, a special
meeting of the Board of Directors was held this 16th day
of November to discuss plans of raising funds to meet the
withdrawals, and after a general discussion it was unanimously decided that the Directors were unable to raise sufficient funds for this purpose. Also due to the fact
that it is impossible at this time to estimate the amount
that would likely be withdrawn, owing to general conditions
and rumors that have been carried for some time. Therefore
a motion was made by L. A. Otternes and seconded by H. P.




X-6954.
Haroldson that the following resolution be passed:
Resolved That due to the depletion of our reserve,
the heavy withdrawals of deposits, and our inability to
raise sufficient funds to moet these demands, and considering it to "be for the best interest of the depositors and
creditors, it was the unanimous vote of all the Board of
Directors to suspend operation ponding reorganization and
tho Chief National Bank Examiner of Minneapolis, Minn, bo
notified immediately.
w. A. CALDT7ELL
0. J, OTTERHES
A. M. WOLD
C. D. KENDALL
H. F. HAROLDSON
0. G. OYLAR
Li. R. STAVEN
L. A. 0TTER2IES
AEffHJS R. JOHNSON
the Brookings Bank by telephone that the Brookings Bank had
suspended operations.

On the same morning, the Reserve

Bank received the collection items which the Brookings Bank
had mailed on tho 16th.

The Reserve Bank made the collec-

tions and credited the proceeds to tho reserve account of
the Brookings Bank, provisionally on the 17th, and finally
on the 22nd.

On November 18th, the Reserve Bank received

the $13,000 currency sent by the Brookings Bank, and credited that amount to the reserve account of the Brookings
Bank.
These remittances by the Brookings Bank to the
Reserve Bank of the collection items and of the currency
were made by the Brookings Bank in contemplation of insolvency, and after the Brookings Bank was in fact insolvent,
Mr, Haroldson had been in Minneapolis on November 15th and
had had a conference with Mr. Young of the Reserve Bank




3 1 8

-?6—

X-6954|

there, with a view to borrowing money to help the financial
situation of the Brookings Bank.

The condition of the

Brookings Bank was gone into, the depletion of its reserve,
and the decrease in its deposits. Mr. Haroldson testified
that as a result of this conference, he reached the conclusion as managing officer of the Brookings Bank that the
only thing to do was to closo tho "bank, and that he returned
homo, reaching Brookings on tho morning of November 16th,
and took steps to close the bank; that one of the steps taken
was to call the meeting of the Board of Directors; that the
cash letter with the collection items and the $13,000 currency
were sent after ho had stated to the Board of Directors the
condition, after the resolution above mentioned was passed, and
in tho execution of his plan of closing tho bank.
The Bank Examiner took possession of tho bonk on
November 18th, and a Receiver was appointed Docomber 3rd.
Tho Ho servo Bank, on rocoiving from its momber
banks on November 13th and November 15th the checks on the
Brookings Bank, had credited those checks to the member banks.
On receiving word on November 17th of the failure of the Brookings
Bank, these credits to the member banks were reversed.
On Docember 17, 1926, the Reserve Bank wrote to
the member banks which had sent the checks tin the Brookings
Bank for collection as follows:




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X-6954.

"Federal Reserve,Bank
Chicago, I l l i n d *
Gentlemen:
"Referring to the transit items listed
"below on the Farmers National Bank of Brookings, South
Dakota, received from you November 15, 1926, and charged
back for non-remittance and for no return of the items,
we write to say that we will endeaver to have the item
made chargeable against the reserve account with us of the
Brookings bank. If we succeed, wo will remit to you in
full for your item, but should we fail, tho charging of
tho itoms back to you will havo to stand.n
The Reserve Bank did not enter on its books the
two drafts from the Brookings Bank until January 37, 1927,
as will be noted later.
Following the appointment of the Receiver for the
Brookings Bank, correspondence was had between tho Reserve
Bank and tho Recoiver relative to tho state of tho accounts
botweon the two banks and relative to cortain items not
here involved.

In a letter from the Receiver of tho Brook-

ings Bank dated January 3, 1926, the following appears:
"Federal Reserve Bank,
Minneapolis, Minn.
Gentlemen:
"I am enclosing copy of letter received
today from the Comptroller of Currency regarding the account of the Farmers National Bank with you.
£ * * * * * * * * * *
"You will also note regarding the unpaid drafts
which is being loft to your wishes in the matter. Personally as Receiver I would not raiso any objection to you
charging tho account with those drafts and believe that it
would simplify matters if you would do so."
The letter referred to in the Receiver's letter,
was from J. B. Fouts, Assistant Supervising Receiver, and
sofar as here material, read as follows:




X-6954,
"AS to the un$teil| drafts held by the reserve "bank
which represent aa atteteptitt remittance by the Brookings
"bank to the reserve bank of the proceeds of the cash collection letters, you are advised that if the reserve bank
desires and elects to assert ownership of the items involved, it has the right to do so, and if it takes this
position it is believed that you cannot prevent it from
charging the unpaid drafts to the account of your trust."
In answer to the Receiver's lotter, counsel for
the Reserve Bank wrote as follows:
"January 17, 1927
"1. C. Kranhold, Receiver
Farmers National Bank
Brookings, So. Dak.
Dear Sir:
"This bank has directed me to write you
in answer to your letter of the 3rd inst. accompanied by
copy of letter to you of December 29th from the Assistant
Supervising Receiver, Division of Insolvent National Banks.
"Acting upon the statements in your
letter and in that of Mr. Pouts, the assistant supervising
receive , the Inderal Reserve Bank has charged up against
the reserve account of the Farmers National Bank of Brookings the two drafts for respectively $22,114.22 and $15,020.88
described in my letter to you of December 16th.11
On January 27, 1927, the Reserve Bank charged the
two drafts which the Brookings Bank had sent on November
16, 1926, against the reserve account of the latter bank;
and on January 27, 1927, also, the Reserve Bank again credited the member banks with the amounts of the checks on
the Brookings Bank which they had sent in to the Reserve
Bank on November 13th and November 15th.
From the foregoing facts it seems clear: (l) that
the passage of the resolution by the Board of Directors
of the Brookings Bank on the evening of November 16th was




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X-6954.

an act of insolvency; that, therefore the Brookings Bank
was involvent at the time it sent the currency and the
collection items to the Reserve Bank, and that these transfers wero mado in contemplation of insolvonco (Mat. Sac,
Bank v. Butler, 129 U.S. 223; Federal Res. Bank v. Omaha
Bat. Bank 45 Pod. (2) 511 (CCA 8); Ball v. Gorman Bank 187
Fed. 750 (CCA 8); (2) that on ITovember 16th, when the Brookings Bank accepted the checks of the member "banks and sent
to their agent, the Reserve Bank, the two drafts, it "became
a debtor to the member "banks, and they "became its creditors;
(3) the transfers of the currency and the collection items
"by the Brookings Bank were void as within the statute.
$hey were made after an act of Insolvency and in contemplation of insolvency; they were made with a view to prevent the application of the assets of the Brookings Bank
in the manner prescribed "by the statute; they were made
with a view to the preference of one creditor to another.
If the transfers stood, some creditors of the Brookings
Bank would receive a preference over other creditors; the
member "banks which had owned the checks,, wer© the creditors,
and they would receive a preference "by having their claims
paid in full.
It is contended by the appellee that the checks
sent "by the Reserve Bank to the Brookings Bank constituted
a trust fund, and that this trust fund has "been traced into
the currency and collection items sent "by the Brookings
Bank to the Reserve Bank.



,

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X-6954.

;

3 2 3

The trial court seems to have adopted this view
as one of the grounds of its decision in ordering judgment
for defendant.
We do not agree with this contention.

It mast "be

remembered that the checks sent to the Brookings Bank by
the Be serve Bank were all of them checks drawn on the
Brookings Bank.

When the Brookings Bank accepted the

checks, this produced no additional funds in its hands.
Its assets were not augmented.

Ho trust fund was created.

If there was no trust fund, there could, of course, be no
tracing of the trust fund into any assets of the Brookings Bank.
The doctrine that a trust fund is created when checks drawn on
bank A by a depositor therein are sent to bank A by bank B for
collection, i.e., for payment has been disapproved by the decisions
in this Circuit; as has also the doctrine that the forwarding bank
or its principal has a general lien on the asse*6; of the drawee bank
for the payment of such checks.

Bo rebeck v. Benedict, etc. Co.,

26 F. (2d) 440; Farmers National Bank v. Pribble, 15 P. (2d) 175;
larabee Flour Mills v. First ITat. Bank, 13 F. (2d) 330; Macy v.
Boedenbeck, 227 F. 346 , 352; Beard v. Independent Dist., 88 F. 375.
But even if it should be conceded that the Brookings Bank
was an agent for the collection of the checks drawn on itself, and
that the checks constituted trust property, yet the owners of the
checks would have no preference over other creditors of the Brookings
Bank unless there was a specific identification of the trust fund and
a clear tracing of the same into the assets of the insolvent Brookings
Bank.



Farmers Mat. Bank v. Pribble, supra, and cases cited; Dickson

-11-

X-6954.

v. First National Bank, 26 F. (2d) 43.1 (C.6.A. 8); Macy v. Roederibeck,
supra.
In the Fribble case, this court, speaking by Judge Walter H.
Sanborn, said (p. 176):
It is indispensable to the maintenance by a cestui que
trust of a claim to preferential payment (by a receiver) out of the
proceeds of the estate of an insolvent that clear proof be made that
the trust property or its proceeds went into a specific fund or into
a specific identified piece of property which came to the hands of
the receiver, and then the claim can be sustained to that fund or
property only, and only to the extent that the trust property or its
proceeds went into it. It is not sufficient to prove that the trust
property or its proceeds went into the general assets of the insolvent estate and increased the amount and value thereof which came to
the hands of the receiver.' * * *
"The doctrine that a cestui que trust, whose property had
helped to swell the general assets of a corporation which was or
became insolvent, has a prior right to or interest in those general
assets, without specific identification and tracing of such claimant's
property, was again expressly repudiated by this court in the case last
cited. The fact that the claimant's property paid or reduced the
indebtedness or liability of the insolvent corporation, so that it
will pay a larger percentage of its debts, justifies no lien on its
assets by or preference in payment to the cestui que trust (l) because
such a reduction of indebtedness does not increase the property or the
value of the property of tho insolvent; and (2) "bocause the property
of the claimant so used to pay a part of the insolvent's general indebtedness or liability never goes into, and therefore cannot be
traced into, the property or assets of the insolvent which subsequently
come into the possession of the receiver*"
That there has been no such tracing here, we think too clear
for argument.
But it is contended that there was a segregation by the Brookings Bank in sending the currency and the collection items to the
Reserve Bank.

The answer is that such segregation was made after the

insolvency of the Brookings Bank and at a. time when it had no authority
to make such a segregation.

The segregation items were not tho proceeds

of the collection of the checks.




Indeed, no such proceeds of collection

V

X-6954

came into the hands of the Brookings $ank<

'

0 2 5

There was simply a "bookkeep-

ing transaction - a shifting of credits.
Another contention of appellee is that the Reserve Bank was not
a creditor of the Brookings Bank, but merely an agent of the member "banks
in forwarding their checks for collection; and hence that the Reserve Bank
cannot "be held liable for a preference.

This view also was taken by the

trial courto
We agree with the contention that the Reserve Bank was not a
creditor of the Brookings Bank but an Agent of the member banks.

We are

of the opinion, however, that the question of liability of the Reserve
Bank in this case is not necessarily disposed of by the finding that it
was not a creditor.
If we are correct in what we have previously said, there was a
preference in favor of some of the creditors of the Brookings Bank growing out of the transfers of the currency and the collection items to the
Reserve Bank.

The Reserve Bank participated in those transfers.

It re-

ceived the property transferred and it, in turn, transferred it to the
creditors of the Brookings Bank.

The action of the Reserve Bank as agent

helped bring about the preference.

What the Reserve Bank did, it did with

full knowledge of the insolvency of the Brookings Bank.
Under these circumstances, we think the Reserve Bank can and
should be held liable to the Receiver of the Brookings Bank.

Ordinarily,

where an agent receives money paid to him for his principal, to which his
principal is not entitled, and without knowledge of the mistake pays the
money to his principal, the agent is not liable.
case.

But that is not this

The Reserve Bank had full knowledge of all the essential facts.




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X-6954.

. 826

Under such circumstance^ it could not rightfully pay ovet to its
principals the money which had come into its hands from the insolvent
Brookings Bank.
In Larkin v. Hapgood, 56 Vt. 597, one, Sawyer, paid certain
moneys to the defendant who was acting as agent for his sister, and the
defendant paid the moneys over to his sister.

The payment to the

defendant was illegal, as it was made when Sawyer was insolvent to the
knowledge of the defendant and was made with the intent to prefer the
defendant's sister, a creditor of Sawyer.

The court held that the

plaintiff, Sawyer's assignee in insolvency, could recover from the
defendant, saying (p. 600)j
"Where an agent received money which the law prohibits him
from taking, it is no defence to a suit brought by the party from whom
it was unlawfully taken, or one who has acquired the right to sue for
the benefit of his estate to show that he has paid the money over to
his principal."
In Ex parte Edwards, 13 Q. B. Div. 747, in which somewhat
similar circumstances existed, it was said (p. 751)j
"* • * if a person is employed as an agent to do a particular thing, and receive a money for his principal in the course of his
agency, still, if the person who employs him has no right to the money,
the agent is not entitled to hand it over to him, and is liable for it
to the true owner if he does so hand it over."
In the case of Vann, as Receiver, v. Federal Reserve Bank of
Richmond, 47 F. (2d) 786, facts existed which, in many respects, were
quite similar to those in the case at bar.

The Federal Reserve Bank

of Richmond had forwarded certain items for collection to a bank at
St. George©

Under facts which clearly showed insolvency and contem-

plation thereof, the St. George bank delivered a draft to the Federal
Reserve Bank for certain of the items.

Before notice of any claim on

the part of the receiver of the St. George Bank, the Federal Reserve



~14~

£-6954. '

5 3 7
$

Bank paid over the amount of such draft to its depositing banks.

The

court held the Federal Reserve Bank liable notwithstanding such payment,
since the payment was made in violation of Sec. 5342, Revised Statutes,
and was void, and the Federal Reserve Bank having participated in an
illegal act, it could not exonerate itself by showing it was acting for
others.

In its opinion the court said (p. 788):

"If the collection of the money by the bank was a violation of
the statute, and I have reached the conclusion that it was, and if the
Reserve Bank knew that the effect of the payment would be to violate
the statute and create a preference though it did not itself profit
thereby, the act was obviously wrong, and the party participating in
such a wrong may not exonerate himself by showing that he was acting
for another,"
See also Elliott v. Swartwout, 10 Pat. 137; United States v. Pinover, 3
P. 305, 309; Wright v. Baton, 7 Wis# 595, followed in Blizzard v. Brown,
139 M ,

737 (Wis.); Motes, Ann. Cas. 1912D 721; 20 A.L.R. 123; see

Mechem on Agency (2nd Ed.) sees. 1440, 1441; 1 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of law
(2nd Ed.) p. 1131; 2 C.J., p. 823, sec. 497.
It is farther contended by appellee that the correspondence above
set out, and the fact that no answer was made by the receiver of the
Brookings Bank to the letter of counsel for the Reserve Bank dated January
17, 1927, estopped the receiver of the Brookings Bank from claiming that
the Reserve Bank could not rightfully charge the drafts which the Brookings
Bank had sent against the reserve account of the Brookings Bank, including
therein the currency and the collection items, and pay over to the member
banks the amounts of the several checks which they had sent to the Reserve
Bank on ITovember 13th and 15th.
Assuming, but without deciding, that the receiver of a national
bank may be subject to an estoppel which would prevent him from carrying
out the purposes of the national Banking Act, yet we think this conten


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X-6954.

tion of estoppel is without merit, for several reasons: first, we think
the letters of the receiver of the Brookings Bank and the letter of
Mr. Pouts do not, by fair construction, refer to the paying over of money
by the Be serve Bank to the member banks, but simply to a disposition of
the drafts; second, the statement in the Pouts letter was conditional on
the Reserve Bank's electing to assert ownership of the checks which it
had sent to the Brookings Bank.

This condition was not fulfilled by the

Reserve Bank, but, on the contrary, the Reserve Bank has at all times
maintained that the member-banks were the owners of the checks and that
it was a mere agent; third, the Reserve Bank apparently did not rely on
failure of the receiver of the Brookings Bank to reply to the letter of
January 17, 1927, because that letter states that the Reserve Bank had
already charged up the two drafts against the reserve account of the
Brookings Bank; fourth, the Reserve Bank is not in a position to set up
an estoppel.

All of the essential facts in the situation were known to

the Reserve Bank as fully as they were to the receiver of the Brookings
Bank or to Mr. Pouts, and probably even more fully.
stances, estoppel would not arise.

Under such circum-

21 C. J., p. 1129, sec. 131, p. 1131,

sec. 132; 11 An. & Eng. Bncyc. of law, p. 434; Pomeroy's Eq. juris. (3rd
Ed.) sec. 810; Bailey v. Lisle Mfg. Co. 238 P. 257 , 268 (CCA 8); Pel lows
v. National Can Co., 257 P. 970, 977, and cases cited; First Bfat. Bank v.
Hoyes, 257 P. 593; Andrew Jergens Co. v. Woodbury, Inc., 273 P. 952, 965,
affirmed 279 P. 1016; Murphy v. Paine, 15 F (2d) 570 , 572; see Sturm v.
Boker, 150 XT. S. 312, 335.
What the Reserve Bank apparently tried to do was to build up the
reserve account of the Brookings Bank after the latter's insolvency; and




329
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X-6954.

then exercise the right of set-off, not in its own "behalf, but in behalf
of the member "banks, against this reserve account so "built up.

We think

neither of these things could legally "be done.
In view of the facts that this action was brought to recover from
the Reserve Bank on the theory that it was a creditor of the Brookings
Bank, and the evidence has failed to show this; and in view of the facts
disclosed by the present record which, in our opinion, point to liability
on the part of the Reserve Bank, we think the ends of justice will be
best served by reversing the judgment and remanding the cause with instructions to grant a new trial, first granting leave to the parties to
amend their pleadings so as to cover issues suggested in this opinion.
It is so ordered.

Filed August 34, 1931.