Teutonia Bank & Trust Co. v. Kirn
Teutonia Bank & Trust Co. v. Kirn
Opinion of the Court
This cause is submitted to us on the pleadings and the following statement of facts:
It is admitted that the Teutonia Bank & Trust Company, a banking corporation, was, on April 15th, 1912, declared insolvent, ánd closed by the State Bank Examiner; that it is now in charge of and being liquidated by
The question presented for decision is, can the debtors of the bank, under the circumstances recited, compensate against the amount of their indebtedness on the note,
Appellant’s argument against the right to compensate is three fold:
1st. That compensation does not take place in confidental contracts arising from irregular deposits when the rights of third persons would be prejudiced thereby.
2nd. That the debts are not of equal dignity, the obligation of Kirn to the bank being liquidated and that of the bank to Kim being unliquidated.
3rd. That Kirn’s obligation is the property of the bank, and is therefore the common pledge of its creditors.
The general rule of law, as found in the code, is that compensation takes place, even unknown- to the debtors by mere operation of law and simultaneously existing debts are reciprocally extinguished to the amount of their respective sums. Art. 2208.
But it does not take place in case of a demand of restitution of a deposit or of a loan for use. Art. 2210.
In construing the last named article, the Supreme Court has repeatedly held that, under its terms, compensation does not take place- in the confidental contracts arising from irregular deposits, such as the deposit of money with a banker, and the depository is not authorized to apply the funds on deposit in his hands to the payment of the depositor, except there is a special mandate from him.
Bludworth vs. Jacobs, 2 An., 25;
Breed vs. Purvis, 7 An., 53;
Bogert vs. Egerton, 11 An., 73;
Morgan vs. Lathrop, 12 An., 57;
Murdock vs. Bank, 23 An., 116;
Hancock vs. Bank, 32 An., 592;
Gordon vs. Muchler.
13 Baudry-Lacantinerie, No. 1856, p. 183.
4 Marcade, p. 626.
It is argued by appellant that compensation must exist as to both sides or it cannot exist at all, and that, if banks cannot plead the debts due them.by their depositors, depositors cannot plead their deposits in compensation of their debts to the bank.
This argument is not forcible.
Compensation is of civil law origin and is “founded on a natural equity which permitted th,e reciprocal acquittal of mutual debts;” it was enforced by Courts of Equity prior to and independent of any statute law on the subject. At Law it was enforceible only as allowed by statute.
34 Cyc. 632, 633.
In Louisiana the matter is, of course, merely statutory. The right to compensate is a g’eneral one and the exceptions are specific; the right of the depositor to plead compensation is not within the exceptions, hence he may exercise it. The right of the depository is within the exceptions, hence he may not plead compensation in answer to the depositor’s demand of restitution of his deposit.
R. C. C., 2210.
In the absence of the prohibition of the article, the depository could also invoke compensation.
In Dalloz, Codes Annotes, p. 249, Article 1293, we find
“La regie nest cependant pas nutile quant au depot irregulier, o’est a dire ún depot d’une somme d’argent, fait avere 1’intent que le depositaire puiese se servir des choses deposies, et soit te-nu de les rendre qu’en meme qualite et valeur; les choses, etant alors fongibles avec d’autres de meme espece, pourraient faire l’object de la compensation, si l’article 1293 n’y mettait obstacle.”
. Considerations • of equity and equality among creditors would be potent in the Absence of law, but they cannot be heeded' in the face of the positive text of the statute.
In Beatty vs. Scudday, 10 A. 404, the plaintiff, as syndic of the creditors of Marcháis, a private banker who had absconded sued the defendant on his note which fell due after the ascertained insolvency. The latter had at the time money on deposit with ■ Marcháis and, when sued, píead the sum in compensation. In that case, which appears to have closely resembled the one at bar, the same objections as are now made were urged, yet the Court sustained the plea.
A reading of the' Court’s opinion, in connection with the concurring one of Mr. Justice Spofford, shows the view of the Court to have been that, even if for any reason the debts were not extinguished by operation of law, they were cancelled by compensation by. way of exception.
This doctrine is liberally interpreted by the Courts and it follows that, if the insolvent fiduciary could not have recovered on the note, neither can its representative in behalf of the creditors.
See also, .16 A., 181.
The Beatty case has been approvingly cited and followed in Martin vs. Creditors, 15 A. 165, Kennedy vs. Bank, 36 A., 13 and Grant vs. Buckner, 49 A., 676, with the sole qualification that claims acquired by a debtor against his creditor, with full knowledge of the latter’s, insolvency and for the purpose of obtaining an undue preference cannot be set up in compensation.
We see no reason why the endorser may not plead his own deposit in compensation to the extent for which he is condemned; he is decreed to; pay in solido with the maker the balance uncompensated by the latter’s deposit. It is his own debt.
The joint tender by both maker and endorser having been timely for the full amount, no interest can be exacted after that date.
We find it conducive to clearness to recast the judgment.
It is ordered, adjudged and decreed that there be judgment declaring Jacob T. Kim’s indebtedness on his note compensated pro tanto by the amount of his deposit, and that the balance due thereafter be declared compensated pro tanto by the amount of Lawrence T. Kirn’s deposit, without interest on said note from date o-f tender, and as amended judgment affirmed, the Teutonia Bank & Trust Company to pay costs of both Courts.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.