Baker v. Orme

6 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 289
CourtGuernsey Circuit Court
DecidedApril 15, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 289 (Baker v. Orme) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Guernsey Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Orme, 6 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 289 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

This action is for the purpose of charging the claim of plaintiff upon the funds in the hands of defendants, as receivers of the Commercial Bank Company, and to order the same paid out of the fund as a preferred claim.

The Commercial Bank Company is a corporation organized under the general corporation act of the state.

[293]*293There is very little, if any, dispute about the facts in the case which are substantially as follows: On June 13, 1904, pi aintiff, who for a long time had been a customer of the bank, deposited money in the sum of $99 and two checks obtained from his customers, one for the sum of $169, drawn on the old Citizens Bank of Zanesville, and the other for the sum of $15 on the National Bank of Cambridge. The money and checks were credited as one item in the pass book of plaintiff and passed to his credit in the bank, he -at that time having a credit in the bank of $100, which made a balance in his account of $383. This deposit was made in the usual course of business of depositors, nothing be-, ing said about collecting the checks for plaintiff and no doubt it was a general deposit and the relation of debtor and creditor immediately took place.

The deposit was received by an employe of the bank w&o was authorized to receive the same. lie had been acting as assistant cashier for about a year, but was never elected as such by the board of directors.

In less than an -hour after the deposit was made the’.bank failed and closed its doors. The money was immediately'placed among the other money of the bank and became indistinguishably mingled with the same. The check on the old Citizens Bank of Zanesville was placed to the credit of the Commercial Bank Company by it, making a balance in favor of the same of $583.-55, which was paid over to the receivers by said old Citizens Bank and by them placed in the fund in their hands. The check for $15 was collected by the receivers from the National Bank of Cambridge and placed in the fund in their hands. There was on hand in money in the bank at the time of its failure, including the deposit of $99 made by plaintiff, the sum of $3,026.16 which went into the hands of the receivers.

The evidence further shows that at the time of said deposit and of the failure, the bank was hopelessly insolvent and had been for at least several months previously and that the cashier and vice-president had full knowledge of such insolvency, and that plaintiff had no knowledge of such insolvency whatever.

[294]*294PI. C. Patterson was cashier of the bank at the time of its failure and had been- such cashier from, the time of its organization some three years previously. He was not only the cashier but had the general managment of the bank; conducting all its business; making all loans -and discounts and doing all its business. IP. O. .Barber-was the vice-president. ITe was the brother-in-law of Patterson, but gave the affairs of the bank practically no attention whatever, as was the case with the president, and all the directors except Patterson.

Patterson, the cashier,. and Barber, the vice-president, were largely engaged in outside enterprises, organizing and building street railways, electric plants, shoe manufactories and other concerns and were also largely interested in two other banks which were tributary to the Commercial Bank Company.

The failure of the bank was entirely through the overdrafts of Patterson and Barber, the money being used in bolstering up their outside enterprises. The money was drawn out upon their checks or obtained on debit slips all of which were charged up in their accounts and the books of the bank showed the condition of their accounts open to any one of the officers or directors desiring to examine the accounts. The overdrawing of their accounts had been going on almost from the organization of the bank. Neither Patterson nor Barber informed the president or any of the directors of the insolvency of the bank and they had no knowledge of such insolvency whatever.

Under these facts is the claim of plaintiff preferred and entitled to be paid out of the fund in the hands of the receivers in preference to the general creditors ?

Two reasons are strenuously urged by the attorneys for the receivers, why the same should not be so ordered;

First.. That the insolvency of the bank was due to the act of the cashier and vice-president in using the funds of the bank in bolstering up their outside enterprises which was a fraud upon the bank, and therefore their knowledge of the insolvency arising from such cause was knowledge obtained in a fraudulent act óf their own and such knowledge being withheld from the other [295]*295officers and directors of the bank, then the bank is not chargeable with such knowledge.

Second. The money having been mingled with the other moneys of the bank before the bank failed and closed its doors and not being distinguishable, and one of the checks having gone to the credit of the bank and the other being collected by the receivers and also indistinguishably mingled with the funds of the bank, the same can not be recovered back in kind, and therefore the same can not be charged upon the fund in the hands of the receivers.

As to the first reason. There seems to exist an exception to the general rule that knowledge to the agent is knowledge to the principal, in this, that when an agent has in the course' of his employment been guilty of an actual fraud against his principal, contrived and carried out for his own benefit, and he intentionally conceals such fraud from his principal, then his' principal is not chargeable with such knowledge, even though the agent at the same time intended to defraud another party. The rule is most strongly stated in Pomeroy’s Equity, Section 675. It reads as follows:

“The second exception is much more important and of far wider application. It is now settled by a series of decisions, possessing the highest authority, that when an agent or attorney has, in the course of his employment, been guilty of an actual fraud, contrived and carried out for his own benefit, by which he intended to defraud and did defraud his own principal or client, as well as, perhaps, the other party, and the very perpetration of such fraud involved the necessity of his concealing the facts from his own client, then, under such circumstances, the principal is not charged with constructive notice of facts known by the attorney and thus fraudulently concealed. In other words, if in the course of the same transaction in which he is employed, the agent commits an independent fraud for his own benefit, and designedly against his principal, and it is essential in the very existence or possibility of such fraud that he should conceal the real facts -from his principal, then the ordinary presumption of a communication from the agent to his principal fails; on the contrary, a presumption arises that no communication was made, and consequently the principal is not affected with constructive notice. The courts have carefully confined the [296]*296operation of this exception to the condition described where a presumption necessarily arises that the agent did not disclose the real facts to his principal, because he was committing such an independent fraud that concealment was essential to its perpetration; it has never been extended beyond these circumstances.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-orme-ohcirctguernsey-1905.