This case presents exactly the same situation, with a single exception, to be noted, as existed in respect of the second check in Re Gubelman, ex parte Latzko & Popper, 10 F.(2d) 926, decided by this court on December 7, 1925. There the cheek read, “Pay to the order of Knauth, Nachod & Kuhne, favor of N. Latzko & Popper.” Here one cheek read, “for account of Roeehling Bank,” and the other “a/c Gebt. Roechling.” We held that “favor of” was equivalent to “collect for,” and it seems to us even plainer that “for account of” is as broad. Indeed, this was the form of the check in White v. National Bank, 102 U. S. 658, 26 L. Ed. 250. If the drawer chooses to make the payee a fiduciary, he establishes that relation when the payee accepts it, at least until the beneficiary repudiates it, or unless his arrangements with the payee forbid. There can be no question that the drawer has limited the payee’s free disposal of the cheek in the interest of another, and that is enough.
However, as we have just said, there is one difference between the ease at bar and Ex parte Latzko & Popper. There the proof was that, although the depositors’ checks were always at once credited to their account, their practice had been never to draw upon them until collection. Here the cheeks were also credited at once, but it does not appear what the practice was as to drawing against them. As there- was no agreement shown in either case to wait or not to wait until collection, we regard any distinction as immaterial. In addition, not only were the items themselves at once credited, but interest upon them as well from the time of their receipt. This, too, we think immaterial. The immediate credit of. such paper is itself evidence of the creation of a debt from the bank to its depositor, and on its face presupposes a purchase of the check. But such an entry will not control the form of the paper. We do not see that it adds anything of substance that interest has also been credited. Such entries are not kept in suspense, or entered “short,” 'but axe reversed if the item be dishonored. The trustee must, indeed, go so far, and does, as to say that, if these cheeks had been stopped, the claimants could notwithstanding have insisted upon drawing down their amount, because they were not indorsers. Yet this could not have been done, if their face had been merely credited to the account. It appears to us that to make the added credit of interest so important is to deal in unrealities. When an account bears interest, it is as natural to begin to credit interest at once as to credit the item at all. Any distinction seems to us gratuitous.
The cases do not help very much. In Beal v. Somerville, 50 F. 647, 1 C. C. A. 598, 17 L. R. A. 291 (C. C. A. 1), no interest was credited, nor was there an agreement that the depositor might draw at once. In Fifth National Bank v. Armstrong (C. C.) 40 F. 46, interest was indeed credited, but the credit was entered “subject to payment.” National Butchers’ Bank v. Hubbell, 117 N. Y. 384, 22 N. E. 1031, 7 L. R. A. 852, 15 Am. St. Rep. 515, is closer, because, although the bank did not credit interest, it remitted weekly, regardless - of collections, relying upon its ability to reverse the entries, if any item were dishonored. That seems a stronger case for *937the assignee than this at bar is for the trustee.
In general, we are disposed to make the form of the paper the test. We do not, of course, mean that an express agreement will not change what would otherwise be a trust into a debt. But it seems to us unreasonable to build up agreements, almost certainly factitious, upon the basis of the bank’s bookkeeping, even when this on its face contradicts the legal results ascribed to the transactions. There must be better evidence of an agreement to change the intent otherwise imputed.
Order reversed; cause remanded, with instruction to award the claimants a preferred claim on both cheeks.