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Bills And Notes - What Constitutes A Reasonable Time In Presenting A Check For Payment Dec 1932

Bills And Notes - What Constitutes A Reasonable Time In Presenting A Check For Payment

Michigan Law Review

Defendant delivered to the plaintiff, at about 10 o'clock A. M., a check drawn on the B bank. The next morning at 10:30 o'clock the plaintiff's agent went to drawee to cash the check. As there was "a run" being made on the bank that day, the agent was forced to stand in line. After waiting from 10:30 o'clock in the morning to 1 o'clock in the afternoon, he left without cashing the check. The next day the bank failed to open its doors. In an action by the plaintiff to recover the debt covered by the check, the defendant …


Contracts-Assignment-Liability Of Assignee For Non-Performance Of Delegated Duties Nov 1932

Contracts-Assignment-Liability Of Assignee For Non-Performance Of Delegated Duties

Michigan Law Review

Plaintiff bank extended credit to cover checks drawn by X, a cattle buyer, who agreed that the proceeds of the sale of the cattle would be deposited to the bank's credit in A bank. X gave an order to the defendant, his commission broker, to retain the proceeds of the sale of the cattle and deposit them in A bank to the credit of the plaintiff. Defendant deposited the proceeds in its own name in B bank and sent its check to A bank. B bank became insolvent and the check was never paid. Held, in Wallowa Nat. …


Receivers - Extraterritorial Powers Jun 1932

Receivers - Extraterritorial Powers

Michigan Law Review

In these days of financial stress, the question of the extraterritorial powers of a receiver becomes especially acute. Though to the business man state lines have lost their significance, the lawyer is still confronted with independent sovereignties, both federal and state, each jealously safeguarding its own particular province. Receivers, appointed for an insolvent corporation or for a judgment debtor, seek to recover assets situated in foreign jurisdictions. Economy and expediency dictate the prevention of a dismemberment of the estates and the saving of expensive ancillary receiverships by a personal pursual on the part of the home receivers of those outlying …


Corporations - Obligation To Refund Dividends Paid Out Of Capital May 1932

Corporations - Obligation To Refund Dividends Paid Out Of Capital

Michigan Law Review

The general rule is fairly well established that, where dividends are paid, in whole or in part, out of the capital stock, corporate creditors, being such when the dividend was declared, or becoming such at any subsequent time, may, to the extent of their claims, if such claims are not otherwise paid, compel the stockholders to whom the dividend has been paid to refund whatever portion of the dividend was taken out of the capital stock. This, however, has been modified in the federal courts to the extent that where the dividend, although paid entirely out of capital, was received …


When Is A Corporation Insolvent?, Floyd Mathew Rett May 1932

When Is A Corporation Insolvent?, Floyd Mathew Rett

Michigan Law Review

There is general unanimity that as to real persons "insolvency" means the inability of a debtor to pay his obligations as .they fall due in the usual course of business - even though the value of his assets exceeds the aggregate of his liabilities. But the question - when is a corporation insolvent - the question to which this paper is devoted, is one with very varied answers. The answers may vary both with the nature of the corporation concerned and with the type of transaction involved. There are, however, two conventional definitions of corporate "insolvency," with occasional variations and …


Receivers -Liability For Corporate Franchise Taxes Accruing After Appointment May 1932

Receivers -Liability For Corporate Franchise Taxes Accruing After Appointment

Michigan Law Review

General business conditions of the last three years have made the field of receivership law an extremely interesting and important one to that portion of the bar which has been picking up the pieces left by the debacle of 1929. The widespread liquidation and dissolution of great business organizations has been effected in large part through the medium of the receivership. One of the more difficult problems arising in connection with such receiverships has been the liability of the receiver for franchise taxes. Such taxes have been held to be not property levies but excises on the privilege to carry …


Corporations - Rights Of Bondholder Under A Trust Indenture Apr 1932

Corporations - Rights Of Bondholder Under A Trust Indenture

Michigan Law Review

Plaintiff was the owner of bonds issued by the defendant real estate corporation which were secured by real estate mortgages in the control of a trustee under a trust indenture to which reference was made in the bonds. The indenture provided, "no holder . . . shall have any right to institute any suit, action or proceeding at law or in equity or take any other steps or proceedings for any remedy hereunder," unless 25 per cent of the holders shall have requested the trustee to exercise the powers granted and the trustee thereafter fails or refuses to proceed. Plaintiff, …


Trusts -- Self-Dealing Of The Trustee -- Right To Look Through The Corporate Entity Apr 1932

Trusts -- Self-Dealing Of The Trustee -- Right To Look Through The Corporate Entity

Michigan Law Review

One Northrop was appointed by the court as guardian, receiving $2,500 which he deposited in defendant bank of which he was the president, the general manager, and of which he was in complete control. Subsequently he exchanged this deposit for a mortgage owned by the bank. The bank became insolvent, and plaintiff, as substituted trustee, brought this action to have a preference adjudged out of the bank's assets in favor of the ward. Held, plaintiff could ignore the mortgage transaction but could only claim as a general creditor of the bank. Ottawa Banking and Trust Co. v. Crookston State …


Trusts - Tracing Of Assets - Preference Apr 1932

Trusts - Tracing Of Assets - Preference

Michigan Law Review

Public funds were unlawfully deposited in the insolvent bank. At the time the bank closed the cash in its own vault was less than the amount of public funds deposited but it did have, at the time of closing and at all times before, deposits in correspondent banks which, taken with the cash in its own vault, exceeded the amount of the public funds unlawfully deposited. Held, that the unlawful deposit of the public funds, the bank knowing them to be public funds, created a trust of those funds in the hands of the bank, which trust was impressed …


Equity- Constitutional Law - Power Of Legislature To Change Equitable Doctrines Mar 1932

Equity- Constitutional Law - Power Of Legislature To Change Equitable Doctrines

Michigan Law Review

A Nebraska statute provided that in case of insolvency of a state bank the general depositors, subject to prior liens for taxes, have a first lien on all assets of the bank. A bank converted a note deposited for a special purpose, and indistinguishably mingled the proceeds with the general assets of the bank before insolvency. The deposit was held to have created a trust and the cestui was allowed to recover the amount of the note (trust fund) as a preferred claim upon the general assets of the bank. To the argument that this statute prohibited the imposition of …


Trusts -Tracing Of Assets - Preference Jan 1932

Trusts -Tracing Of Assets - Preference

Michigan Law Review

In State ex rel Sorenson v. Farmers' State Bank of Polk (Lindquist, Intervenor) the beneficiary of a trust fund converted by the bank, subsequently becoming insolvent, was allowed to resort to equity and recover the trust fund as a preferred claim against the general assets of the bank. The beneficiary deposited a promissory note in the sum of $4,500 in the bank for a special purpose and the bank, without authority, indistinguishably mingled the proceeds of this note with the general mass of bank assets. The amount of actual cash on hand when the insolvent bank was taken over by …