Brady v. American Nat. Bank of Oklahoma City

1926 OK 484, 250 P. 1006, 120 Okla. 159, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 411
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 25, 1926
Docket16659
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1926 OK 484 (Brady v. American Nat. Bank of Oklahoma City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brady v. American Nat. Bank of Oklahoma City, 1926 OK 484, 250 P. 1006, 120 Okla. 159, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 411 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

DICKSON, C.

The parties will be referred to as plaintiff and defendant, as they were designated in the trial court.

The plaintiff commenced this .action in the district court of Oklahoma county, for the purpose of recovering a judgment in the sum of $2,011.67, alleged toy her to be a trust fund belonging toi her and deposited in said balnk by the F. B. Collins Investment Company. The case was submitted to the court upon an agreed statement of facts, which is substantially as follows: On the 12th day of May, 1923, and for ' number of years prick thereto, the defendant was a banking cor-pojnaltion, organized under the laws of the United States, doing business in Oklahoma City.. On said date, and several years prior thereto, the F. B. Collins Investment Company, a corporation, was engaged in the farm loan business, with its principal office in Oklahoma City; was a depositor of said defendant bank, and was indebted to said defendant in the sum of money in excess of its deposit.

On April 4, 1919, Fred JRienner and Nettie Renner, his wife, borrowed from the F. B. Collins Investment Company $2,000, for which they gave their secured note upon certain 'real estate. This note and mortgage was afterwards sold and assigned to the plaintiff. On -the 26th day of April, 1923, and while the plaintiff was the owner of said note and mortgage, the makers 'hereof, desiring to pay off and discharge said indebtedness, and believing that the sam¡e was still held by che F. B. Collins Investment Oclmpany, transmitted by bank drait to said company $2,-130.601, toeing the principal and interest then due on said note ¡atad mortgage. The investment company had already paid $118.83 by way of an installment oif interest due on said note, so that rhe amount duo the plaintiff on April 26, 1923, was $2,011.67.! On April 26, 1923, the said investment company deposited said $2,130.50' draft to its credit in the bank, and on the same day drew its check against said deposit in favor of the plaintiff’s agent for $2,011.67, and transmitted the same to the plaintiff’s agent at Rochester, N. Y. Upon receipt of this check the plaintiff’s note was canceled and the mortgage released. The check was deposited in a New York bank, and on May 12,, 1923, in due course presented to the defendant bank and payment thereon refused. At the time said drait was deposited the investment company had on deposit in the defendant bank other funds amounting to $13,925.15. On the 8th day1, of May, 1923, the defendant bank, having learned, of the impending insolvency of the F. B. Collins Investment Company, credited its entire de-peteit, which on said diajte amounted to $11,-545.94, upon its indebtedness to the bank. The defendant had no notice of the trust, character of the draft until after the 8th day of May, 1923. The plaintiff never authorized the investment company to deposit said draft to its own credit in the defendant bank. From April 26th, until May 8, 1923,, the F. B. Collins Investment Company continued co make further deposits in said defendant bank and to "draw its checks thereon, which were paid. The amount of the investment company’s balance between said dates never (fell below $9,329.83. It was expressly agreed chat no loans were made or credit extended by the defendant bank to the F. B. Collins Investment Coimpany on account of said deposit, or after April 26, 1923, and that the defendant bank in no way changed its petition on account of said deposit.

The trial courc, upon these facts, found the issues for the defendant, and entered judgment dismissing the plaintiff’s petition. The plaintiff’s motion for a new trial wt-s overruled, and she has duly appealed co this court. The assignments of error are: (1) That the court erred in overruling the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial. (2) That the judgment is contrary to law and to the evidence.

The theory of the defendant is based on section 7434, C. O'. S. 1921:'

“A bafnker has a general lien, dependent on possession, upon all prope'rty in his hands belonging tó a custotaier, for the balance due to him from such ¡customer in the course of the business.”

And it is argued that:

“The weight of authority is to 'the effect that, where the bank, in which funds in which third persons have an interest are deposited in the individual name of the de-positclr, hate neither actual nor constructive notice as to the true character of the deposit, the bank may apply the deposit io the individual debt of the depositor.”

And this-contention is supported by a number of authorities, among which is Arnold v. San Ramon. Valley Bank (Cal.) 194 Pac. 1012, 13 A. L. R. 320, and note at page 827.

*161 Whether a majority of the courts have adopted the rule contended for by the defendant in error is not important; such rule has not been adopted in this jurisdiction, 'and we think it is. wrong in principle. Section 7434, supra, gives a bank a littn on the property of its customer in the bank's possession, but there is no course of reasoning by which, we can conclude -that it was the intention of the Legislature by this section to give the bank a lietn on the property of a stranger in the absence1 of tuny equities. It is true that, in many cases, funds belonging to a cestui que trust may be held by the bank to pay thie indebtedness due it by che trustee) bub the only just cheeky upon which this may be done is upon the doctrine that:

“When one cf two innocent persons must suffer by the acts of a third, che one who enables the third person to occasion the loss must sustain it, and what cine induces another to regard as true is the truth between them if the other has been misled thereby.” Magnolia Petroleum Co. et al. v. Saylor, 72 Okla. 282, 180 Pac. 861.

And where A. permits B. to deposit his money in a bank to the credit of B., and the hank, relying upon the apparent ownership of B., extends credit tcJ B., or parts with something of value, then, in equiry, A., having induced the bank to regard his deposit as belonging to B., is estopped from dlaiming it.

In the recent case of Southwest National Bank v. Evans et al., 94 Okla. 185, 221 Pac. 53, this principle is recognized in the following language:

“1. The right of the plaintiff to exercise its banker’s lien in the application of funds held by the bank to the payment of indebtedness owing by a depositor, presupposes: (a) That the fund deposited in the bank by the debtor wfas the property of the latter; (b) that the fund was depoteited without restrictions and was not a special fund; and (c) an existing indebtedness then due and owing by the depositor to the bank.
“2. The rule rests upon the principle that it would he inequitable to permit a depositor to carry am open aceotant or funds in the bank which induces the bank to feel secure in granting a certain line of credit, and then permit the debtor to apply the funds to a purpose other than the satisfaction of the indebtedness because the debtor had not expressly agreed tol apply the same to the indebtedness owing to the bank.
“3.

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Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 484, 250 P. 1006, 120 Okla. 159, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brady-v-american-nat-bank-of-oklahoma-city-okla-1926.