Boone County v. Cantley

51 S.W.2d 56, 330 Mo. 911, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 473
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 13, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 51 S.W.2d 56 (Boone County v. Cantley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boone County v. Cantley, 51 S.W.2d 56, 330 Mo. 911, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 473 (Mo. 1932).

Opinion

*914 KAGrLAND, J.

The Bank of Centralia, which had theretofore been designated a county depositary by the County Court of Boone County, closed its doors on March 22, 1930, and was taken in charge by the State Commissioner of Finance for liquidation. On that date Boone County had on deposit to its credit with the bank a balance of $16,000. The county, following- the procedure prescribed by the statute, sought to have its claim therefor given priority of payment out of the assets of the Bank. It was denied a preference by the circuit court, and this appeal followed.

As it is one of appellant’s contentions that the Bank of Centralia at the time of the deposit of county funds with it had not been lawfully created a county depositary, w'e will briefly outline the proceedings whereby it was selected and designated' as such.

On April 19, 1929, the county court by order entered of record directed the county clerk to publish notice that at its May Term, 1929, it would receive proposals from banks and banking corporations, or individual bankers, in said county “for the deposit of the county and capital school funds of said county for the two years next ensuing the date of said bids.”

According to the records of the county court, the court on May 6, 1929, a day of the May Term of that year, opened the bids which had been received and filed by the county clerk. There Were ten of them. Bach of nine of them, including the Bank of Centralia, recited that it was made pursuant to the notice which had been published, and each was a bid for one-tenth or more of the funds to be let. The tenth bank’s bid, which according to evidence dehors the record was not received until May 7th, was for “the same proportion of the county funds as we have handled for the past two years.” Bach of the ten bidders offered to pay three per cent on daily balances.

On the same day on which the bids were opened, the county court, as its records recite, “selected each of the following banks (naming each of the ten who had submitted bids, including the Bank of Cen-tralia) as a depositary for the county fund, district school funds and capital funds not otherwise invested according to law . . . at their bids of three per cent, respectively, selecting the Boone County Trust Company to act as clearance house for the banks.”

The county court’s record of May 29, 1929, discloses the further action of the court as follows:

“Now on this .day the court finds that the ten banks heretofore, on May 6, 1929', selected as depositaries of the county funds have filed their bonds in the sum of $40,000 each; which bonds are now examined and approved by the court, and the court doth now designate each of said banks (again naming them, including the *915 Bank of Centraba) a depositary for the county and capital school funds of the county until sixty-five days after the first day of the May Term 6f 1931, of this court. The court further orders that the Boone County Trust Company be and the same is hereby selected as clearing house for the others . . .”

The county court made no order as to the amount or proportion of the funds which should be deposited with each of the designated depositaries, but the county treasurer distributed the funds equally among them, except that she allotted to the one selected as the clearing house a somewhat larger portion than to the others.

The bond executed by the bank to secure the faithful performance of its obligation as a county depositary contained, among others, the following recital:

“Whereas, the bid offered by the said Bank of Centraba . . . to the County Court of said County on the-day of May, 1929, to become depositary of one-tenth (1-10) per cent of the funds of said county was accepted by said Court, etc.”

The bond was in conventional form and, aside from the misrecital just noted, was regular in all respects, embodying in terms the obligations prescribed by the statute.

The bond was signed by R. P. Price, E. A. Early, R. L. Hope, J. R. Brown, C. H. Early and W. I. Keene, as sureties. Appellant’s challenge of the solvency of some of them at the time the bond was executed requires a brief summary of the facts which the evidence offered touching that matter tends to show.

All six of the sureties were directors of the Bank. Previous to the execution of the bond in question, they, with one Starr, had formed a pool to buy stock in the Bank which had been owned by a stockholder then deceased. In the purchase of the stock they executed a note, or notes, for $42,000, — outstanding and unpaid when they executed the depositary bond. No question is raised as to the solvency of either Brown or Keene at the time of the execution of the bond. Both were farmers and stockmen of large means and both owned unencumbered real estate in Boone or in Boone and Audrain Counties. Such real estate holdings of the former were valued at $50,000 and that of the latter at $100,000. If the stock they had in the bank be counted a part of their assets and their several liability on the $42,000 indebtedness be limited to one-seventh thereof, Price, E. A. Early, Hope and C. H. Early were solvent. On the basis just noted Price’s net worth was approximately $25,000; E. A. Early’s $10,000; Hope’s $15,000; and C. H. Early’s, $25,000. If the bank stock which they owned be withdrawn from consideration in determining their solvency for the purpose of qualifying as sureties on the depositary bond, and/or if each be charged as of the *916 date of the bond with liability for the entire indebtedness of $42,000 none of the four last mentioned sureties was solvent at the time the bond as accepted by the county court. Starr who was one of the makers of the $42,000 note was solvent, a man of considerable wealth.

The foregoing sufficiently outlines the facts.

Appellant advances two propositions. If either be sound, it is entitled to the preference which it claims. It states them as follows: (1) '‘The tax moneys of the County as a political subdivision of the State when deposited in a bank give rise to a preferred claim in favor of the public entitling to priority of payment over other creditors of the bank;” and (2) “The provisions of the depository law were not complied with in the selection of defendant bank; therefore the bank received the funds sued for unlawfully and became trustee ex maleficio and the claim is preferred.”

I. By statute (Sec. 3152, R. S. 192'9), and at common law, the State is entitled to priority of payment out of the assets of an insolvent debtor. [In re Holland Banking Co., 313 Mo. 307, 281 S. W. 702.] But the statute is without application where the debt is owing by the insolvent debtor to a county or township. [State v. Ruby, 77 Mo. 610.] And, according to the great weight of authority, the common law prerogative right of the State is not available to its political subdivisions. [51 A. L. R. 1339.] “In the absence of a statute or of special facts creating a trust, a claim for public funds deposited is not preferred.” [22 R. C. L. 230; Compton Company v. Trust Company, 220 Mo. App. 1081, 1087, 279 S. W. 746.] On its first ground appellant is not entitled to a preference.

II.

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Bluebook (online)
51 S.W.2d 56, 330 Mo. 911, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boone-county-v-cantley-mo-1932.