Andrew v. Peoples Savings Bank

222 N.W. 8, 207 Iowa 948
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 20, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 222 N.W. 8 (Andrew v. Peoples 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. Peoples Savings Bank, 222 N.W. 8, 207 Iowa 948 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

Faville, J.

— On or about December 31, 1926, the claimant shipped a-carload of poultry from Eagle Grove, Iowa, consigned to.the Nevada Poultry Company, Ideated at Nevada, Iowa. On

die 2d 'day- of January, 1927, the Security Saving's Bánk at Eagle Grove, acting for and in be^e claimant, forwarded to the Peoples ■. Savings ’ Bank of Nevada a sight draft .for the amount due for said poultry, drawn by the claimant upon the Nevada Poultry Company, and accompanied by a bill of lading. The evidence shows that the bill of lading and sight draft were-so forwarded “for collection.” The record is silent with regard to any instructions that were given the collecting bank as to what should be done with the proceeds when collected. The collecting bank presented the sight draft and bill of lading to the consignee. The stipulation entered into in the trial of the ease recites that the consignee “honored said draft, and paid to.the Peoples Savings Bank of Nevada, Iowa, by check drawn upon their account in the Peoples Savings Bank, of Nevada, Iowa; that payment by the Nevada Poultry Company to the Peoples Savings Bank of the .sum of $2,328.96 was made on January 5, *950 1927. ” • It appears that, after said payment was made, for some reason which is in no way explained in the record, the Peoples Savings Bank drew a draft for the amount of said collection on the First National Bank of Chicago, made payable to the Continental & Commercial Bank of Chicago, and forwarded same to said Continental & Commercial National Bank. In due course, said draft was presented to the First National Bank of Chicago for payment, and payment was refused, because of the closing of the said Peoples Savings Bank before presentation. The claim is against the receiver of said bank for a preference for the amount represented by said draft. There was no authority shown to remit either to the forwarding bank or the Continental & Commercial National Bank by draft. The only authority shown was that the sight draft was sent “for collection.”

Under the record, there can be no question but that the relation of principal and agent was created between the claimant and the Nevada bank. The sight draft and bill of lading were sent “for collection.” Did the Nevada bank collect? Was payment made to it? The stipulation of the parties is that payment was made “by check drawn upon their account in the Peoples Savings Bank,” and further, the stipulation recites: “That payment, by the Nevada Poultry Company to the Peoples Savings Bank of the sum of $2,328.96 was made on January 5, 1927.” The l-eeord did not stop there, however. The claimant offered in evidence a check for said amount, payable to said bank, and drawn thereupon, which cheek was signed by the Nevada Poultry Company, and bore the cancellation stamp: “Paid 1-5-’27.” The books of the bank were not offered in evidence. Neither the receiver nor any officer of the bank was called to testify. The claimant offered a witness who testified:

“I am in the poultry business in Nevada, Iowa; we do business under the name of the Nevada Poultry business. Exhibit 33 was drawn to pay the sight draft of J. T. Enterline and Co. ’s sight draft on üs for a. car of poultry. We must have had that amount of money at the time in the Peoples Savings Bank of Nevada, else they would not have taken it out. The bank took that amount out of our funds.”

On cross-examination, he testified that:

“We operated under' three names: The Nevada Poultry *951 Company, the Boone County Produce Company, and Webster City account. We carried three accounts in the Peoples Savings Bank, under the above names. At the time the sight draft reached Nevada, I think the Boone County Produce had about $687 to its credit, and the other account had somewhere between $225 and $250. This was known also as the H. W. Meyer account. A sight draft drawn on the Nevada Poultry Company would be'.paid from the funds standing in the ñame of the Nevada Poultry Company, and likewise the other two accounts: that is, one drawn on the Meyer account, being the Webster City account, would be paid from that fund. There was not enough money in the three combined accounts, the day the sight draft reached Nevada, to pay the same. This sight draft in question was drawn by Enterline & Sons against the Nevada Poultry Company. There was only about $500 in that account at that time; or, in other words, by paying the sight draft out of the Nevada Poultry Company’s account left an overdraft in that account of $1,821.05, which amount the Nevada Poultry Company, nor anyone for it, or the individual members of said company, have paid said overdraft to the Peoples Savings Bank or its receiver. We are waiting the outcome of these claims. I said, on direct examination, that the cheek which the Nevada Poultry Company gave to the Peoples Savings Bank in payment of the Enterline sight draft was canceled and marked paid by the bank, but we did not have sufficient money in the bank, at that time nor since, to pay it.”

Whether an overdraft was in fact entered upon the books of the bank is not shown in the record.

The appellant contends that, upon this record, the appellee was not entitled to a preference. Appellee contends that no issue was made in the trial court that the amount claimed was not paid to the Nevada bank. Appellee filed a claim for preference, apparently predicated upon the draft issued by the Nevada bank to the Continental & Commercial National Bank. The allegations of the claim for preference and of the objections to the receiver’s classification denying a preference are rather broad, and we think they are sufficient to support appellee’s claim for a preference.

In cases of this character, we have not required the tender *952 ing of issues by pleadings in conformity with .ordinary = actions between adversary, parties. - The receiver is an officer of the court, and makes a report to the court in regard to various claims filed with him. The appellee had filed such a claim, seeking preference, which.the receiver had denied.- -The appellee thereupon filed objections to the receiver’s report. Under such circumstances, we treat the situation as though a general denial had been interposed to the claim. The burden rested upon the .appellee to-establish its right to a preference. In so doing, it undertook to prove that the Nevada bank was its agent for the purpose- of collecting the amount of the sight draft that was forwarded to it, and also that said bank, as its agent, received payment of said sight draft, and had not remitted the same to it or under its direction. The appellee established the fact that the Nevada bank was its agent, and that it received the sight draft as its agent, for collection. It undertook to prove that the sight draft was paid to the Nevada bank. The stipulation tended to establish the fact that payment was so made; but after the stipulation had been entered into,, an officer of the appellee identified the. check by which said payment was claimed to have been made, and on cross-examination, it appeared that the claimant had in the account in said bank upon which said check was drawn- an amount much less than the face .of said check. As before stated, the.books of the bank were not produced.

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Related

Gillett v. American Savings Bank
258 N.W. 99 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1935)
Andrew v. Helmer & Gortner State Bank
251 N.W. 860 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1933)
State ex rel. Sorensen v. Nebraska State Bank
234 N.W. 82 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1931)
J.T. Enterline Son v. Andrew
221 N.W. 416 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
222 N.W. 8, 207 Iowa 948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrew-v-peoples-savings-bank-iowa-1928.