The defendant relies upon two grounds for the reversal of the judgment; first, that there is no evidence that the defendant, when it received the securities in question, on the 12th of January, 1875, had reasonable cause to believe that Paddock Co. were insolvent; and second, that assuming the contrary, the transaction sought to be impeached in this action was an exchange of securities, and did not constitute an unlawful preference, within the thirty-fifth section of the bankrupt act. We are of opinion that the defendant cannot prevail, upon either of the grounds stated.
1. The actual insolvency of Paddock Co., on the 12th of January, 1875, is clearly established. Their banking house was then open, and they were conducting their business as usual; but the business was suspended on Saturday, the 16th of January, and on the 18th their bankruptcy was publicly known. On the 12th of January, Paddock, in settlement of the claim of the defendant, transferred to it three notes, amounting to about $1,500, which had been discounted by the bank, and fifty shares of stock of the insurance company, which was his individual property. The claim of the defendant was a claim against Paddock *Page 4 Co. The three notes, transferred to the defendant on this occasion, were long past due, and were, as is inferable from the evidence, the most available of any of the assets of the bank, and the only securities at hand which the bank could use in settling the claim of the defendant. The fact, however, that Paddock Co. were insolvent on the 12th of January, though essential to be proved, did not alone establish the plaintiff's case. It was necessary, before the transaction with the defendant could be disturbed, that evidence should be given, from which the jury would be authorized to find that the defendant had reasonable cause to believe that Paddock Co. were insolvent.
The dealings between Paddock Co. and the defendant commenced in the spring of 1874, by the discount by the defendant for Paddock Co. of paper indorsed by Paddock Co. The defendant from that time became the New York correspondent of Paddock Co. Paddock Co., under the arrangement with the defendant, drew drafts upon the latter, from time to time, and the defendant discounted paper for Paddock Co. indorsed by them. The indebtedness of Paddock Co. to the defendant, upon overdrafts and indorsed paper, continued to increase during the summer and fall of 1874; and their total indebtedness to the defendant, upon overdrafts and as indorsers, on the 12th of January, 1875, was between $60,000 and $70,000, the direct indebtedness upon overdrafts being about $25,000. As early as November, the defendant called upon Paddock Co. to make good their overdrafts, and urged them to reduce the indebtedness. Bowen, the vice-president of the defendant, says that several letters were written to Paddock Co. calling their attention to the overdrafts, and requesting Paddock Co. to make them good; but it does not appear that the defendant succeeded in procuring any reduction of the debt of Paddock Co.; on the contrary, the clear inference is that the debt was not reduced. The defendant, in December, 1874, or about that time, refused to pay checks of Paddock Co., and one or more drafts drawn by *Page 5 Paddock Co. were protested, and a note of Paddock Co. for $17,000, for a loan made to them in October, on a pledge of iron, went to protest. $7,000 was paid on this note soon after, and on the 31st of December the balance was paid from the proceeds of a call loan of $20,000, made by the defendant to Paddock Co., on that day, to take up the balance of the $17,000 note and other paper held by the defendant, maturing on that day. I think the inference from the evidence is that no fresh credit was extended by the defendant to Paddock Co. after November; and that frequent but unavailing efforts were made by the defendant, from time to time, for several months prior to the bankruptcy of Paddock Co., to secure the payment or reduction of the debt.
Coming more immediately to the transaction of the 12th of January, we are to inquire whether, in view of the circumstances above stated, and the nature of the transaction itself, the jury were authorized to find that the defendant had reasonable cause to believe that Paddock Co. were then insolvent. In June, 1874, Paddock Co. had deposited certain notes styled "requisition notes" with the defendant as collateral security. In the latter part of December, a part of these notes were sent by the defendant to Paddock Co., at their request, for collection and remittance, and upon the promise of Paddock Co. to remit as the notes were collected. Not receiving any remittance, Bowen, soon after the 1st of January, telegraphed Paddock Co. for "an account and remittance;" and in a few days, the defendant received from Paddock Co. a letter of January 8th, in which they stated that they had delivered to the Black River Insurance Company certain of the notes, a list of which was given, amounting at their face to $13,250, and crediting themselves with two drafts, amounting in the aggregate to $13,000, drawn, as we infer, upon Paddock Co., and paid, one December 28th, and the other January 3d. The defendant, on receipt of this letter, and on the 9th of January, wrote to *Page 6 Paddock Co. a letter repudiating their claim to apply the drafts as a credit on account of the notes sent for collection, and saying: "These notes were held by us as collateral, and were sent to you (at your request) for collection; and we shall expect you either to return them or remit for them at once. You have no right to dispose of them otherwise."
This letter was mailed at New York, on the evening of January 9th, directed to Paddock Co. at Watertown; and on the 11th of January, the defendant sent a special messenger to Watertown, bearing a letter to Paddock Co., as follows: "New York,January 11, 1876. G.F. Paddock Co. Dear Sirs. — Not hearing from you, and Mr. Paddock not being here on Saturday, as promised, we send Mr. Schreiner to your city, for the purpose of receiving the money due on notes sent you for collection. We must insist upon this, or the return to him of the paper. Yours respectfully. H.J. Hubbard, Secretary."
Schreiner, on reaching Watertown, seeks an interview with Paddock, presents the letter, and demands the notes, or the equivalent in money; and after considerable negotiation, Paddock procures from the bank the three notes in question, and takes from his pocket the insurance scrip, and delivers them, with such of the notes sent to him by the defendant as were still under his control, to Schreiner, who receipts them on the back of the letter presented by him to Paddock Co. as "securities in return of the within mentioned." The new securities received by Schreiner in place of the notes delivered by Paddock Co. to the insurance company were, as may be inferred, of considerable less value than the securities they were given to replace. The claim of Paddock Co., in their letter of January 8th, to credit the two drafts on the collection account, was, as it would seem, wholly unwarranted.
The transaction of the 12th of January was out of the ordinary course; and it is difficult to account for it on the assumption that the officers of the defendant believed, at the time, that Paddock Co. were solvent. Paddock Co. had parted *Page 7 with the notes sent them by the defendant, without authority and in violation of their duty. The company were apprised of this by the letter of January 8th. It does not await a reply to the letter of January 9th, but sends a special messenger with a demand for the notes or the money; and on reaching Watertown, the agent takes, in part, past due paper, and, in part, insurance scrip, the private property of one of the banking company, of less value than the diverted notes, in satisfaction of the wrong committed by Paddock Co.
We cannot say, upon the evidence, that there is no ground for an inference that the defendant's agents and officers had cause to believe that Paddock Co. were insolvent, at this time. The officers of the defendant deny that they so believed. It is true also that mere suspicion of insolvency, on their part, would not invalidate the transaction. In order to invalidate a security taken by a creditor from an insolvent debtor, something more than mere suspicion, on his part, of the insolvency must be shown. This has recently been adjudged by the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Grant, Assignee, etc. v. Miller (reported in 17 N.B. Reg., 498). Our province in this case, in dealing with the facts, is to determine simply whether the conclusion of the jury, that the officers of the defendant believed, or had cause to believe, when the securities in question were taken, that Paddock Co. were insolvent, could legitimately be reached upon the evidence. The condition of mind, under which they acted, whether it was one of conviction, or merely of doubt, was a matter, upon the evidence, peculiarly for the jury; and we think that question was properly submitted to them.
2. The transaction was not an exchange of securities. The defendant had a claim against Paddock Co. for the conversion of the notes. The notes had not been collected, but had been delivered by Paddock Co. to the insurance company, under a claim by the insurance company that they belonged to the company. This acquiescence in the claim concluded Paddock Co. in respect to the right of the insurance *Page 8 company. Paddock Co. had not received any proceeds from the notes, and the securities obtained by the defendant had no relation to or connection with them. The misappropriation of the notes by Paddock Co. was a gross breach of trust. They owed a duty, to protect the defendant from loss resulting from their act. But it was a duty which they could not discharge at the expense of their other creditors; and having taken the securities with knowledge, as the jury have found, of the insolvency of Paddock Co., it was an unlawful preference within the provisions of the bankrupt act. The cases of Cook v. Tullis (18 Wall., 332), and Clark v. Iselin (21 id., 360), apply the principle that a bona fide exchange of securities made by an insolvent with his creditor is not a violation of the act. This case is not, we think, within the principle upon which those cases were decided.
These views lead to an affirmance of the judgment.
All concur, except HAND, J., dissenting; CHURCH, Ch. J., not voting; MILLER, J., absent at argument.
Judgment affirmed. *Page 9