Stucky v. Masonic Savings Bank
Decision Date | 05 March 1883 |
Parties | STUCKY, Assignee, etc., v. MASONIC SAVINGS BANK and another |
Court | U.S. Supreme Court |
D. W. Armstrong and L. N. Dembitz, for appellant.
W. O. Dodd and I. P. Helm, for appellee.
This suit originated in a bill in equity brought in the district court by Stucky, as assignee of Melter, a bankrupt, against the bank and against Jacob Krieger, Sr., for the purpose of having two mortgages made by the bankrupt declared void, and the real estate covered by them sold free of the lien of those mortgages. The ground of this relief is the allegation that the mortgages were made by Melter when insolvent, and were preferences in contemplation of bankruptcy, void by the bankrupt law, and that, by virtue of the bankrupt proceedings commenced within two months after they were made, they are void. The case was decided in favor of the assignee in the district court, but on appeal the circuit court reversed this decree and dismissed the bill. It is shown that both mortgages were taken to secure renewal notes for pre-existing debts, one note and mortgage being made to the bank directly, and the other to Mr. Krieger, who was president of the bank, the note being indorsed by him to the bank. They were for $6,000 each.
The whole matter turns upon the question whether Krieger, who acted almost alone for the bank, had reasonable ground to believe that Melter was insolvent at the time the mortgages were made. The district judge, who decided that he had such reasonable ground, does not seem to have given due weight to the principles of the case of Grant v. National Bank, decided by this court, and reported in 97 U. S. 80, a case which was fully considered, and which has since been followed by us as a leading one on the subject. That case establishes the doctrine that a creditor dealing with a debtor whom he map suspect to be in failing circumstances, but of which he has no sufficient evidence, may receive payment or security without violating the bankrupt law.
In the case before us the testimony of Krieger himself, as the one who best knows the strength of the suspicion (if any) on which he acted, and what evidence was before him, must chiefly control. We...
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