In the administration, in the court below, of the bankrupt estate of R. B. Drum, the People’s Bank of California filed its proof of a secured debt of $6,000, based upon a mortgage given to it September 27, 1915, by the said Drum on certain of his real estate. *85The claim was challenged as an alleged illegal preference given within four months of the mortgagor’s bankruptcy. On hearing, the referee held the bank had cause to believe Drum was insolvent when it accepted the mortgage, and rejected the claim. On certificate, the court below, in an opinion 1 printed in the margin, held the contrary, and reversed the referee. Thereupon the trustee took this appeal.
*86Aided by a full discussion .of the case by counsel, we have carefully examined the testimony and duly considered the report of the referee and the opinion of the court. On final analysis, the case turns on questions of fact, and as these questions are fully discussed by the court below in the marginal opinion, and a repetition by us would serve no useful purpose, we restrict ourselves to saying that we agree with *87the conclusion, reached by it, that the bank took this mortgage in good faith; and we go a step further, and find the fact to be that Weaver, the alleged agent of the bank, as well as the bank itself, then had no reasonable cause to believe that the enforcement of such mortgage would effect a preference.
The decree below will therefore be affirmed.