Lort-Williams, J.@mdashThe petitioner asks that he may be treated as a preferential creditor in the liquidation of this company. He was appointed cashier of the Calcutta branch at a monthly salary of Rs. 60 on condition that he furnished security to the extent of Rs. 2,500 in cash. It was agreed on behalf of the company that as the petitioner would be deprived of the use of the money for the period during which it was held as security by the Bank, the Bank would indemnify him by paying interest on the money at the rate of 5 per cent. per annum. Further it was agreed that the money should be held by the Bank distinct and separate from other deposits and that the position of the Bank in respect of the security was to be that of trustee and not that of debtor and creditor.
2. These facts have not been denied by the liquidator nor has any affidavit been filed by the individual who, in fact, appointed the petitioner as cashier denying that these were the terms. I see no reason to doubt the truth of the statements made by the petitioner. Prima facie they are the kind of terms and conditions that I should have expected the petitioner would endeavour to obtain from the Bank. This is an application based on the specific terms of the agreement made with the Bank. If it had not been for these specific terms, the fact that the Bank had agreed to pay interest upon the security might have militated against the position taken up by the petitioner, because, in the ordinary way, if the Bank had to pay interest upon the security it might be assumed that it was intended that it should use the money in the banking business like any other deposit, so as to enable it to earn the interest which it had to pay to the cashier on his security deposit. In Official Assignee of Madras v. G. Smith (1909) 32 Mad 68 it was held that a trust exists when the Banker is to collect and remit but not where he is to use and repay. But in a case heard by the Calcutta High Court,