Andrew v. Northwest Davenport Savings Bank

253 N.W. 133, 217 Iowa 780
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 6, 1934
DocketNo. 42371.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 253 N.W. 133 (Andrew v. Northwest Davenport Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrew v. Northwest Davenport Savings Bank, 253 N.W. 133, 217 Iowa 780 (iowa 1934).

Opinion

*782 Evans, J.-

There is no substantial conflict in the evidence. That the claimants were the owners of the proceeds of their respective items of property is conceded. That they never consented to, or knew of, the exchange of those proceeds for a cashier’s check of the bank is clear upon the record. The conversion of the proceeds into a cashier’s check payable to Eggert and signed by him as cashier was accomplished by the joint action of Eggert and of the teller of the bank. There can be no doubt under the authorities that an agent, who collects the funds of his principal, holds such funds as a trustee and that the title thereof rests in the principal and not in the agent. It is equally true that an unauthorized disposition of the funds by the agent does not divest them of their trust character except where the rights of third parties without notice become involved. Under the record in this case the duty of the agent to turn over the proceeds to his principal had fully matured long prior to December 26, the date of the receivership. The general rule applicable to such cases is cited by us in Cable v. Iowa State Savings Bank, 197 Iowa 393, 194 N. W. 957, 197 N. W. 434, 31 A. L. R. 748, as follows:

“The law is well settled that the title to property consigned to a factor or commission merchant for sale remains in the consignor, and that such factor or commission merchant holds the proceeds derived from the sale of such property in a fiduciary or trust capacity, and that its character is not changed by being placed to his credit in the bank * * * that the owner may maintain an action in equity against a bank to impress a trust upon any portion of the funds deposited therein by such factor or commission merchant to his own credit and remaining in said bank, unless it has acquired an equitable right thereto without notice of the true claims of the owner.”

In 2 C. J. 881 and 882, the rule of the authorities is summarized as follows:

“The general rule is that the principal may recover his property or its value from a third person, where it has been wrongfully transferred by his agent contrary to his authority. Thus where an agent without apparent authority uses property of his principal to liquidate his own indebtedness to a third person, or otherwise disposes of it, such property or its value may ordinarily be re *783 covered: by the principal by an action of replevin or other appropriate action. It is no defense to the third person that the agent is liable to the principal for his wrongful act, or that the third person has promised to pay the agent for an indebtedness owing to the principal. * * *

“Money or property intrusted to an agent for a particular purpose is impressed by the law with a trust in favor of the principal until it has been devoted to such purpose; and where it has been wrongfully diverted by the agent such trust generally follows the fund or property in the hands of a third person, and the principal is ordinarily entitled to pursue and recover it as long as it can be traced and identified.”

In an annotation to. the case of Cable v. Iowa State Savings Bank, above cited, in 31 A. L. R. 756, the rule is summarized as follows:

“The universally accepted rule that knowledge upon the part of a bank that deposits made by a debtor in his own name belong to a third person absolutely precludes the bank from applying such funds to the individual indebtedness of the depositor to it is recognized in the following recent cases.”

In Andrew v. State Bank of New Hampton, 205 Iowa 1068, 217 N. W. 250, we said:

“Fundamentally, the remedy in actions of this kind is based upon an interest in or ownership of the particular property or fund claimed, rather than the relationship of debtor and creditor. 26 R. C. L. 1351, section 216, contains this text:

« «* * * The true owner of a trust fund traced to the possession of another has the right to .have it restored, not as a debt due and owing, but because it is his property wrongfully withheld from him. * * * ’ -

“First State Bank v. Oelke, 149 Iowa 662, 129 N. W. 70, expresses the same thought in this language:

“ ‘The right to a preference is based on a right in the particular property or fund, and the manner of acquiring such property or fund is not material, that being only an incident thereto.’

“Leach v. Iowa State Sav. Bank, 204 Iowa 497, 215 N. W. 728. *. * *

“Returning now to the precise point involved, we pause to note *784 that controversies of this nature include at least two steps: First, the establishment of the ‘trust’; and, second, the tracing into the custody of the receiver the deposit, payment, or ‘property’ previously made or delivered in or to the bank, which said receipts are asserted as the basis for the ‘trust’.”

Literally scores of our own cases could be cited in support of the foregoing rule; and quite as many could be cited from other jurisdictions.

II. The response of the appellee to the foregoing discussion is affirmative and by way of avoidance. These affirmative grounds are in substance as follows: He contends that Eggert became the agent for the claimants in his functions as clerk of the sale; that he was not thereby acting as agent of the bank; that the bank was not chargeable with his acts or with notice thereof; that the bank did ndt thereby become a trustee for the claimants; that Eggert had implied authority to make a temporary deposit of the funds as a means of projecting the safety thereof; that the deposit therefore was rightful and that the bank had a right to receive the same as a general deposit; that such deposit or purchase of cashier’s check was duly ratified by the claimants and that such ratification operated as authority to make the same.

It is clearly true that in performing his functions as clerk of the sale Eggert was acting as agent for the claimants and not otherwise. It was by reason of such relation he became a trustee. Granting that the bank was not chargeable with his acts as sole agent for the claimants, it does not follow that it might not be deemed chargeable with notice of his wrongful acts in making the deposit or issuing the cashier’s check. The deposit was made by the joint action of Eggert, the cashier, and Thoem, as teller of the bank. The cashier’s check was written on December 9. The body thereof was written by the teller, Thoem. It named “Eggert, Clerk” as payee. The check was signed by Eggert on December 10, and signed by him as cashier as follows: “Albert Eggert, Cashier.” It is plain therefore that Eggert purported to act, both as agent for the claimants and as cashier for the bank. He acted for the interest of his bank in receiving the deposit; and acted against the interest of the claimants in that he deposited their funds in an unsafe place. The rule of implied authority invoked by the plaintiff has been stated by us as follows:

*785

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Bluebook (online)
253 N.W. 133, 217 Iowa 780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrew-v-northwest-davenport-savings-bank-iowa-1934.