Taylor v. Bankers' Trust Company

STATEMENT BY THE COURT

This appeal challenges the correctness of a decree holding the amount of money on deposit in a failed bank in the name of the guardian of an insane world war veteran entitled to priority of payment over the claims of other depositors and common creditors.

On March 22, 1927, John A. Beazley was declared insane, and on the same day Sidney L. Graham was appointed guardian by the Pulaski Probate Court, and bond was executed by him with a surety company on condition that he deposit all moneys received by him as guardian in the American Southern Trust Company, to be withdrawn upon the counter signature of John Collins, trust officer.

The name of the bank was afterwards changed to the American Exchange Trust Company, and Collins continued as an officer of the bank to act as joint agent with the guardian of said trust funds. The said trust company closed on November 17, 1930, and Taylor, Bank Commissioner, took charge of same for liquidation and *Page 1110 still continues in charge thereof. When the bank closed, said Graham, as guardian of the insane veteran, had on deposit with the bank $2,076.68, the fund in controversy here.

The guardian filed a claim for said deposit on a blank form furnished by the Commissioner, which did not specify whether the claim was a common or preferred one, although Graham stated that at the time of filing the claim he took the matter up with the receiver for the bank requesting it be allowed as a preferred claim.

On December 13, 1930, Graham resigned as guardian, and the Bankers' Trust Company, appellee, was appointed guardian in succession on December 24, 1930, and demanded that said claim be allowed as a preferred claim at the time of its appointment as guardian.

On May 15, 1931, appellant paid the Bankers' Trust Company as such guardian a dividend on said claim, and subsequently paid other dividends thereon. Shortly after its appointment as guardian, it made demands upon the Bank Commissioner for allowance of the claim as a preferred claim, and the matter was referred to the attorney for the Bank Commissioner, who asked for further time and referred it to additional counsel. After a lapse of some time it was suggested by the attorneys that all intervention should be filed in the chancery court and have the court determine the classification on the claim.

The decree herein is the result of the court's classification. (after stating the facts.) Appellant insists that the United States Government has no lien and is not entitled to priority of payment of the funds paid to the guardian of the incompetent world war veteran by the Government under its laws and by him deposited in the failed bank. No claim was first made for priority of payment under the provisions of 3466 of the Revised *Page 1111 Statutes of the United States (31 U.S. Code, 191), nor could any valid claim have been made thereunder. The facts are undisputed: the payments were made to the guardian of the veteran under the provisions of the statute, the funds were received for the ward by the guardian and by him deposited as such guardian in the failed bank, and such funds were on deposit in the amount of $2,078.68 on November 15, 1930, when the depository bank became insolvent.

Priority of payment of this fund is claimed under subdivision 3, 1, act 107 of 1927, which reads:

"A prior creditor shall be: * * * (3) a prior creditor who is such by virtue of an act of Congress applicable to the said bank and as to the extent as provided by said act * * *."

The Federal statutes granting bonuses and veterans' relief (U.S. Code, title 38, 450) does not grant priority of payment to any such funds, and 3466 of the Revised Statutes (31 U.S. Code, 191) cannot apply in this case, because the American Exchange Trust Company, the failed bank, was not indebted to the United States on account of the deposit of the compensation money paid by the Government to the guardian of the incompetent world war veteran and by him deposited in the failed bank.

Section 3466 of the Revised Statutes reads as follows: "Whenever any person indebted to the United States is insolvent, or whenever the estate of any deceased debtor, in the hands of the executors or administrators is insufficient to pay all the debts due from the deceased, the debts due to the United States shall be first satisfied and the priority established shall extend as well to cases in which a debtor, not having sufficient property to pay all his debts, makes a voluntary assignment thereof or in which the estate and effects of an absconding, concealed, or absent debtor are attached by process of law as to cases in which an act of bankruptcy is committed."

In Wilson v. Sawyer, 177 Ark. 495, 6 S.W.2d 834, this court held that money paid to a disabled soldier *Page 1112 under guardianship by virtue of the World War Veteran's Act (38 USCA 421 et seq.) was not subject to garnishment whether in the hands of the soldier or his guardian; 22 of the act providing that the compensation paid shall not be subject to the claims of creditors. 38 USCA, 454.

Commenting on the declaration of the law made by the trial court therein, this court said:

"The court was correct in the declaration of law made except that the funds were not subject to seizure, even after they had come into the hands of the ward."

It was further held therein that the funds involved were exempt from garnishment by the statute under which they were allowed and paid to the veteran. After stating the terms of the act and citing cases from other jurisdictions construing it, the court said: "The World War Veterans' Act of 1924 contains substantially the same exemption from seizure as is found in the War Risk Insurance Act, and the cases cited which construe the latter act are applicable here." And further: "we think the manifest purpose of the legislation making provision for World War Veterans was to devote the benefactions there provided to the sole use of the beneficiaries, and that the same should not be subject to the demands of creditors, even after the money came into their hands or was held by another for their benefit."

These funds were paid over by the agency of the Government and had come into his hands, being delivered to his duly appointed guardian by whom they were held for his benefit. The guardian deposited said funds in the bank, and had drawn against the account along with the trust officer, who was required by the guardian's bond to also sign the checks, and the title to the fund was in the ward, the guardian's possession being the possession of the ward. 28 C.J. page 1128, and 12 R.C.L. *page 1123.

The government may attach restrictions on its bounty to disabled veterans, has the power to prescribe when, how and to whom such payment shall be made. *Page 1113 It can also punish embezzlement or conversion of funds by those in a fiduciary capacity, and it may even withhold or suspend payment thereof, but when it has made payment to the beneficiary or to a duly appointed guardian, or other person authorized to receive same, the funds so paid lose their character as government funds, and the bank in which they are deposited by the guardian does not become indebted to the United States within the meaning of said 3466 of the Revised Statutes, entitling the United States to priority of payment thereunder, and, neither the government nor the recipient of its bounty being a prior creditor by virtue of any act of Congress applicable to the bank, no priority of payment of such funds is provided under subdivision 3, 1, of act 107 of 1927.

It follows that the court erred in decreeing otherwise, and the decree is accordingly reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to allow the claim as a common claim.