Bright v. . Hood, Comr. of Banks

199 S.E. 630, 214 N.C. 410, 119 A.L.R. 820, 1938 N.C. LEXIS 367
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 23, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 199 S.E. 630 (Bright v. . Hood, Comr. of Banks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bright v. . Hood, Comr. of Banks, 199 S.E. 630, 214 N.C. 410, 119 A.L.R. 820, 1938 N.C. LEXIS 367 (N.C. 1938).

Opinion

This is an action brought by plaintiffs against the defendant to recover $2,400 of Liberty Bonds. If the bonds for any reason cannot be returned, the value as a priority and trust claim.

The evidence on the part of the plaintiffs was to the effect that they are executors of the last will and testament of J. R. Bright, who deposited with the Bank of Sanford, U.S. Liberty bonds totaling $2,400 in 1917 and 1919. The receipt for same was signed by J. M. Ross, Cashier (by Miss Judith M. Ross) and Ida C. Holmes (now Mrs. W. M. Cade). On the first receipt, dated 5/2/1917, is the following: "Liberty Loan Bonds — This receipt must be surrendered when bond is delivered." Second receipt, dated 8/15/1919: "For safekeeping in bank vault the following (naming the Liberty Bonds). Sealed contents and value unknown. The above property to be delivered only to person named hereon or legal representative upon return of this receipt." On reverse side: "This Bank will give the same care to property left for safekeeping that it does to its own property, but beyond that does not assume responsibility. Bank of Sanford, by I. C. H." The third receipt, dated 3/17/1919, is in similar language but for different bonds. The above were all signed for Bank of Sanford by J. M. Ross and Ida C. Holmes.

J. R. Bright in his lifetime took up some of these Liberty Bonds, leaving $2,400.00, as follows: Liberty Bond for $1,000.00, No. 232974; Liberty Bond for $500.00, No. 31617; Liberty Bond for $500.00, No. 843502; Liberty Bond for $100.00, No. 7292931; Liberty Bond for $100.00, No. 7292936; Liberty Bond for $100.00, No. 7292929; Liberty Bond for $100.00, No. 7292930. The amount herein sued for.

The evidence was to the effect that the Page Trust Company, under deed dated 4 January, 1922, took over the Bank of Sanford's land and choses in action. Following the execution of the deed, the Bank of Sanford did not continue in active business, but the Page Trust Company then occupied the building formerly occupied by the Bank of Sanford. On the day the deed was executed, Miss Judith M. Ross was an employee of the Bank of Sanford and later was an employee of Page Trust Company. There was no period of time between that in which the Bank of Sanford conducted business and the Page Trust Company conducted business. Page Trust Company occupied the identical part of what is known as the Commercial Bank Building in Sanford when it began doing business in Sanford. When it began business, Page Trust Company employed the same employees that were employed by the Bank of Sanford immediately prior thereto. The papers and deposits on hand in the Bank of Sanford at the time of that deed were transferred to Page Trust Company. Miss Judith M. Ross was in the bank as an *Page 413 employee at the time the Bank of Sanford sold out and she was there at the time Page Trust Company went into receivership. She was continuously in the employment of Page Trust Company. After Gurney P. Hood took over Page Trust Company in May, 1933, Miss Judith M. Ross was there in the bank. The Liberty Bonds are not mentioned in the deed of conveyance.

E. R. Buchan, vice president of the Bank of Sanford, testified, in part: "I know Miss Judith M. Ross very well. She was in the employment of the Bank of Sanford prior to and at the time it was taken over by Page Trust Company. She was cashier at the time of Bank of Sanford. She then continued in the employ of Page Trust Company, and she was assistant cashier and chief bookkeeper of Page Trust Company. . . . During all the time I was connected with Page Trust Company and on through the time until Page Trust Company went into liquidation. After Mr. Hood, the Commissioner of Banks, took over Page Trust Company, she was employed in the work of liquidating the bank. . . . I was familiar with that form of receipt. That is the form that was used by the Bank of Sanford. That was a receipt for papers that were given to the Bank of Sanford for safekeeping, not for deposit, but for safekeeping. . . . Miss Ida Holmes was bookkeeper and teller of the Bank of Sanford. She was accustomed to perform any duties incident to the workings of the bank other than making a loan. (The receipts signed by Judith M. Ross and Ida C. Holmes were identified as in their handwriting.) Mr. Bright was a customer of the Bank of Sanford for many years and from time to time he brought papers in there, valuable papers, for safekeeping, which the bank was in the habit of taking. . . . There was no property that the Bank of Sanford had or owned or had for safekeeping that I remember that did not pass over to the Page Trust Company. There was not anything there left with the Bank of Sanford that Page Trust Company did not take. . . . When Page Trust Company succeeded the Bank of Sanford, the same method of handling matters was pursued with respect to matters that were in the bank for safekeeping."

Mrs. Eugenia Bright testified, in part: "I qualified as executrix, I had transactions with Page Trust Company in regard to bonds of my husband. It was soon after I qualified, about a month or six weeks thereafter, that I saw someone connected with the Page Trust Company about the bonds. I know of my own knowledge of Mr. Bright's having bonds there. I went to Page Trust Company to see Miss Ross and I saw her. When I went there to deposit my insurance, my lawyer in Chatham County had asked me to bring up everything, that he was going to settle up and I asked her about the bonds and she said that `they would look them up, did I have anything to show for it,' and I told her I did not *Page 414 know that I would have to have anything, that I thought they were there for safekeeping, and she said, no, they could not do anything about it unless we brought up the numbers or whatever it was and she said though they would try to get them up and would I call again soon, and I told them, yes, I would as soon as I could. I know that my husband, J. R. Bright, had bonds because I used to go with him to the bank for him to get his coupons to get the interest on them, and he always would say that he would have to go and Miss Ross always clipped the coupons and fixed it for him. . . . I was at Page Trust Company with Mr. Bright once or twice after that. He would generally get his interest on the bonds when he went there. He always called on Miss Ross. I never knew him to call on anybody else. She generally fixed it up and she was the one and only one I went to and asked about bonds at that time and she would put me off from time to time, that they would get them up and always promise me she would get them up. She never turned them over to me. They said if I would bring the numbers they would. At the time Mr. Bright died I did not have these receipts. If I had them I didn't know where they were. I found the receipts with the deeds, amongst his deeds, his land deed, and I was not looking for them, I have looked for them so many times I had about given them out, but I found them and I brought them to Sanford and turned them over. I have never received these bonds from Page Trust Company or anybody that I know of. I don't know that I could tell exactly when I found these receipts. I don't remember whether it was 1933 or 1934. It was along then. . . . I went to see Miss Ross about the bonds the first time in about a month or six weeks after my husband died. She said to call back again, she could not produce them right then but she would get them up for me and the next time she said what do you have to show for it, and I told her I did not know I would have to show for it, I thought they were there for safekeeping and I did not have anything to do but call for my bonds, and she said if I would bring the numbers she would get them up.

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Bluebook (online)
199 S.E. 630, 214 N.C. 410, 119 A.L.R. 820, 1938 N.C. LEXIS 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bright-v-hood-comr-of-banks-nc-1938.