Bannock County v. Citizens Bank & Trust Co.

22 P.2d 674, 53 Idaho 159, 1933 Ida. LEXIS 119
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1933
DocketNo. 5919.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 22 P.2d 674 (Bannock County v. Citizens Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bannock County v. Citizens Bank & Trust Co., 22 P.2d 674, 53 Idaho 159, 1933 Ida. LEXIS 119 (Idaho 1933).

Opinion

HOLDEN, J.

This is a suit to have certain public moneys deposited by the Treasurer, Public Administratrix, Tax Collector and Sheriff of Bannock county, Idaho, in the *162 now defunct Citizens Bank and Trust Company, adjudged to be trust funds, and as such entitled to preference in the liquidation of that bank, and to impress the assets of the bank with such trust. The Citizens Bank and Trust Company was engaged in a general banking business at Pocatello, Idaho, and was a lawfully designated and qualified depository of public funds. These officials deposited certain public funds in that bank on general deposit. September 22, 1931, the bank failed and the Commissioner of Finance of the (State of Idaho took charge of its assets and affairs for the purpose of liquidating the bank. Thereafter claims for the amounts on deposit on that date to the credit of such officials were presented by them, respectively, demanding that the claims be classified as trust funds and allowed and paid as such, in the order provided by chapter 133', 1925 Session Laws, section 77, subdivision 2 (see. 25-915, I. C. A.). January 22, 1932, the Aetna Casualty and Surety Company, pursuant to demand and under the obligation of a depository bond theretofore given by it in the penal sum of $15,000, paid Bannock county and took an assignment for the amount so paid, to wit, $15,000. February 2, 1932, the said claims were disallowed. In addition to that bond, the deposits were protected by various securities. February 14, 1932, this suit was commenced. By the complaint the appellants by appropriate allegations sought to have all public moneys on general deposit by the above-named officials on the day the Citizens Bank failed adjudged and held to be trust funds, and to have all the assets of the bank impressed with such trust. The respondents demurred to the complaint generally upon the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and also specially. The demurrer was argued by counsel for the respective parties, submitted to the court for decision, sustained and appellants given ten days within which to amend. The appellants declined to plead further, and on May 5, 1932, judgment was entered dismissing the complaint. This appeal is from the judgment.

*163 The real and controlling question for determination in the instant case goes to the constitutionality of our Public Depository Law. We deem that question to be decisive, and that appears to be the view of both appellants and respondents, and each have filed very able and exhaustive briefs.

From territorial days down through statehood until 1905, the law did not authorize the depositing of public moneys in any bank, otherwise than on special deposit. In that year the first public depository law was enacted making provision for and regulating the depositing of public moneys on general deposit in banks by county treasurers. That statute has been amended to include counties, municipal corporations of every kind and class, school districts, irrigation districts, stumpage, highway, drainage and good road districts, and all gwsi-munieipal districts.

During the period depositing public moneys in any bank, except on special deposit, was prohibited by law, State Treasurer Storer deposited public moneys with C. Bunting and Company, bankers, on general deposit. The bank failed with a large amount of state money in its vaults. Then followed the suit of the First National Bank of Pocatello against C. Bunting and Company, bankers, in the district court of Bingham county, in which C. E. Thum was appointed receiver. The State ex rel. State Auditor and Attorney General filed a petition claiming a trust as to all the public moneys on general deposit in that bank at the time of its failure. On the trial, a motion for a nonsuit was granted against the state and judgment entered dismissing the petition. On appeal to this court (State v. Thum, Receiver, 6 Ida. 323, 55 Pac. 858) the respondent contended that a general deposit created the relation of debtor and creditor, and was, in legal effect, a loan to the bank, which could be made only by legislative authority, if at all, and that public money deposited in a bank on general deposit became the estate and property of the bank. The record shows that the opinion of this court was based solely on the construction of sections 6975, 6976 and 6977 of the *164 1887- Revised Statutes, which prohibited the depositing of public moneys in any bank, otherwise than on special deposit, and made a violation of the statute a felony. The only legislative authority the State Treasurer had was to deposit public moneys in his custody on special deposit. Concerning the matter of making deposits of public moneys, this court expressed itself as follows: “Now, it must necessarily follow that the State Treasurer, having no authority to deposit public money with a bank on general deposit, but he being authorized to deposit such money with a bank on special deposit, the instant that C. Bunting and Company received public money from the state treasurer, it did so on special deposit, and that if the officers or any officer of said bank thereafter used said money, or commingled it with the money of the bank, or loaned it, such officers, or officer, by such act, committed a felony” (emphasis ours), and held that “public money deposited by a public officer in a bank, becomes a trust fund, and not part of the estate of the bank, and, in case of the insolvency of the bank, its receiver must treat such fund as the property of the true owner, and not of the bank.”

From which it appears that the opinion of this court was based upon three grounds: 1. No legislative authority to deposit public moneys in banks on general deposit. 2. Legislative authority to make special deposits of public moneys in banks. 3'. Unlawful to deposit public moneys in any bank except upon special deposit. Thus largely making no legislative authority to place public moneys on general deposit in banks, on the one hand, and on the other hand, legislative authority to make special deposits of public moneys in banks, the decisive factors of the opinion. And in First Nat. Bank v. C. Bunting & Co., 7 Ida. 27, 59 Pac. 929, 1106, decided in January, 1900, and before the enactment of our Public Depository Law, State v. Thum, supra, was affirmed.

So that we do not understand the opinions rendered by this court in those cases to hold, as contended by the appellants, that depositing public 'funds on general deposit creates *165 the relation of creditor and debtor, and, therefore, constitutes a lending of credit in violation of article 8, section 4, and article 12, section 4, of the Constitution of Idaho. We think this court made it rather clear that the public moneys deposited by the State Treasurer on general deposit in the Bunting bank were held in trust, because the State Treasurer was not authorized by law to so deposit those funds, the law having authorized him merely to make special deposits, and made it a felony to deposit public moneys in a bank otherwise than by special deposit.

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Bluebook (online)
22 P.2d 674, 53 Idaho 159, 1933 Ida. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bannock-county-v-citizens-bank-trust-co-idaho-1933.