American Nat. Bank v. E. W. Adams & Co.

1914 OK 425, 143 P. 508, 44 Okla. 129, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 655
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 22, 1914
Docket3789
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1914 OK 425 (American Nat. Bank v. E. W. Adams & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Nat. Bank v. E. W. Adams & Co., 1914 OK 425, 143 P. 508, 44 Okla. 129, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 655 (Okla. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

HARRISON, C.

This action was instituted by E. W. Adams & Co. against the American National Bank and F. E. Adams, the cashier, for possession of a stock of shoes of the alleged value of $493.49. E. W. Adams & Co. had at some time previous thereto been in the mercantile business in Kansas. They left Kansas and opened up a store in Oklahoma. Soon thereafter the stock of shoes in question was attached by the Elliot-Kendall Shoe Company, the shoes being of the Elliot-Kendall brand and having been purchased from such company by Adams & Co. When the order of attachment was served, Adams & Co. and the Elliot-Kendall Shoe Company, and their attorneys, entered into a stipulation wherein it was agreed that the stock of shoes should be stored in the back end of the American National Bank, to be turned over to, the Elliot-Kendall Shoe Company on or before a certain date, provided such Shoe Company delivered to E. W. Adams & Co. a warranty deed to certain lots or tracts of land situated in Hamilton county, Kan.; but, in the event such deed was not furnished within the time specified, then the stock of shoes should be turned back to E. W. Adams & Co. The bank, through its cashier, F. E. Adams, accepted an indemnity *131 bond from the Elliot-Kendall Shoe Company, and agreed to permit the stock of shoes to be stored in the back end of the bank, and guaranteed that delivery of same should be made to the party entitled thereto according to the terms in the stipulation signed by the Elliot-Kendall Shoe Company and by E. W. Adams & Co. A deed to the land in question was received through the mail by the American National Bank in-due time, and the parties and their attorneys notified of the receipt of same, pursuant to which notice E. W. Adams & Co. and the attorney for the Elliot-Kendall Shoe Company appeared at the bank, examined the deed, and held a conference as to what should be done in the premises in reference to the acceptance of the deed by Adams & Co. and the turning over of the stock of shoes to the Elliot-Kendall Company.

It is claimed by the bank, and so testified to by the cashier, Adams, and some of the other bank employees, that the deed was turned over to Adams & Co. and was accepted by it and retained possession of by such company. On the other hand, it is claimed by Adams & .Co. that such deed was unsatisfactory and not according to the stipulations, being a quitclaim instead of a warranty deed, and was not accepted, but was left in the bank. PurT suant to such conference, however, the stock of shoes was turned over to J. M. Humphreys, attorney for the Elliot-Kendall Shoe-Company. Subsequently E. W. Adams & Co., claiming to have rejected the deed on the ground that it was not according to stipr ulations, and on the ground that they had left same with said bank, or the cashier thereof, demanded return of the stock of shoes. This being refused, suit was brought against the bank and F. E. Adams, the cashier, for possession of the shoes, or the valu.e thereof. The cause was tried, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of E. W. Adams & Co. for the return of the stock of shoes, or the value thereof, and from such judgment the bank and F. E. Adams appeal to this court for review.

A number of assignments are urged for reversal, the decisive one being that the guaranty that the stock of shoes would be turned over to the proper party according to the stipulation between the parties was signed by the cashier of the bank; that sucia *132 a contract of guaranty was out of the line of the bank’s regular business under its charter,, and-outside of the line of authority of the cashier, and therefore ultra vires, and not binding on the bank.

A great number of authorities are cited by plaintiffs in error in support of the contention that a corporation cannot be bound by acts of its officers outside of their scope of authority. The authorities cited seem to be well in point and to overwhelmingly support this contention. We have examined them, but find that none of them pass on the exact question whether the bank, in accepting the stock of shoes as a special deposit under the circumstances of this case, was exceeding the powers contemplated in the national banking act, or whether it was acting within the margin allowed to a national bank under the provisions of its charter and the provisions of the national banking act in carrying on its regular business.

On the other hand, it is contended by defendant in error that this was in the nature of a special deposit, and as such came within the line of the bank’s regular business, at least, within the scope allowed banks in carrying on their regular business, and',' being a special deposit in line with the bank’s regular business, its cashier had authority to accept such as a special deposit, and that the bank was bound by his acts. The rule that a bank is bound by the acts of its cashier in accepting deposits which come within the scope and meaning of the term “special deposits,” has become so well settled as to admit of but little question. See Case v. Bank, 100 U. S. 446, 25 L. Ed. 695; 4 Thompson on Cor., section 4765. But the exact question in the case at bar is whether an agreement that a stock of goods should be stored in the back end of a bank building is such a transaction as comes within the general scope and meaning of the term “special deposits.” A number of very strong and able decisions are cited by defendant in error in support of the contention that this was a special deposit. But from an examination of the authorities cited, and of many others touching upon the question, we find that in each case the courts were dealing with, and had in contemplation, such deposits *133 as notes, stocks, bonds, securities, etc., the handling of which, in their very nature, comes, at least partially, within the regular line of banking business. One of the strongest cases cited is the case of First National Bank v. Graham, 100 U. S. 699, 25 L. Ed. 750, in which the court said:

“The forty-sixth section of the banking act of 1864,” which authorizes “a national bank * * * to deliver special deposits, * * * implies clearly that a national bank, as a part of its legitimate business, may receive such special deposits.”
“Conceding for the moment that the contract was illegal and void, for the reason alleged in behalf of the bank, the consequence insisted upon would by no means follow. There was no moral turpitude on either side — certainly none on the part of the depositor. She was entitled, at any time, to reclaim the securities. The bank was bound in good faith and in law to return them, or to keep them, without gross negligence, until they were called for.”

This language might be taken to mean that, although the contract between the bank and the depositor was illegal, yet the bank would be hel,d.liable for negligence, in the loss of the deposits.

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Bluebook (online)
1914 OK 425, 143 P. 508, 44 Okla. 129, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-nat-bank-v-e-w-adams-co-okla-1914.