Brunswick County v. . Trust Co.

173 S.E. 327, 206 N.C. 127
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 28, 1934
StatusPublished

This text of 173 S.E. 327 (Brunswick County v. . Trust Co.) 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
Brunswick County v. . Trust Co., 173 S.E. 327, 206 N.C. 127 (N.C. 1934).

Opinion

This is an action brought by plaintiffs against defendants to recover $57,035 as a special deposit and trust fund. The action was originally brought against the North Carolina Bank and Trust Company subsequently Gurney P. Hood, Commissioner of Banks, was made a defendant. The defendants deny that the fund was a special deposit and trust fund, but the transaction was one of debtor and creditor.

It was admitted by the defendants that their only purpose was to have the court determine whether the plaintiffs had a priority over the general depositors of the bank to the extent of $57,035.00, and it was agreed that demand was made by the plaintiffs upon Gurney P. Hood, Commissioner of Banks, for the preferential payment of the sum of $57,035, and that the payment was refused by the said Commissioner of Banks.

On motion of plaintiffs, an order to show cause and restraining order was made on 25 April, 1933, by Judge Devin, to segregate and to hold separate and apart from its other assets, the sum of $57,035 in cash. This matter was heard by Judge Sinclair, 17 May, 1933, who found certain facts and ordered that the $57,035 be segregated to wit: "$57,035, be and the same is hereby ordered by the court to be by the defendant placed in a safety-deposit box in the North Carolina Bank and Trust Company, at Wilmington, N.C. and there held, intact, until the final determination of this action or some other order is made relative to its safe-keeping, and when so deposited in such safety-deposit box, the defendant North Carolina Bank and Trust Company shall lock said box and furnish a key thereto to E. K. Bryan, of counsel for the plaintiffs, and the bank shall keep one key, and neither the bank nor its officers, nor the said Bryan, shall open said box where the *Page 129 money is so deposited except in the presence of a representative of said bank and a representative of the plaintiffs."

I.C. Wright, one of plaintiff's witnesses testified on direct examination as follows "I am a practicing lawyer in the city of Wilmington, N.C. and was one of the attorneys who brought suit against the American Surety Company attempting to recover $135,000. We sued for more than that, but only recovered $57,035. This amount was paid by Mr. John D. Bellamy, of counsel for the American Surety Company, who brought to me as one of the counsel for the plaintiffs, two drafts drawn by the American Surety Company, payable at the Chase National Bank, New York, aggregating that sum. One of them was payable to the board of county commissioners of Brunswick and one to the board of education of Brunswick. These drafts were delivered to me in the courthouse in Wilmington.

The first thing that I did was to have Mr. Bellamy correct the checks by making it appear thereon that these payments did not include the costs of the action. I then notified Bryan and Campbell and we called Mr. Ruark, county attorney, at Southport, and other counsel for the plaintiffs and told them that we had the checks and requested that he have some one come up and endorse the checks to send them on for payment. In consequence of that conversation, Mr. Joe Ruark and R. I. Mintz, clerk to the board of county commissioners, and Mr. Sentelle, clerk to the board of education, came to Wilmington and met with me and Mr. Campbell in Bryan and Campbell's office. In the office of Bryan and Campbell we had a discussion as to how the checks would be handled and after we had the discussion we called Mr. Yates, vice-president of the North Carolina Bank and Trust Company, and he came up to the office and we told him the conversation and the discussion we had just had. I told him most of it and Mr. W. B. Campbell told him the balance. These gentlemen said that they did not feel that they had the power and authority to endorse those checks to us lawyers."

Mr. Royall: "Was Mr. Yates present?" A. "We told Mr. Yates of this conversation. We told Mr. Yates that we had these drafts for collection and that we had had a discussion with these gentlemen, and these two clerks to the respective boards did not feel that they could endorse the checks except to the Peoples United Bank, which was the county depository, and we lawyers did not want to turn the drafts over until our fees were paid out of the money and that we had agreed among ourselves, that the Peoples United Bank was willing for the drafts to be sent on through the North Carolina Bank and Trust Company and that the North Carolina Bank and Trust Company would hold that just like Mr. Campbell and I had sent it on for collection ourselves and we told *Page 130 him that we did not want to mix it with our funds but to keep it apart from other funds and send them for collection and when collected we were going to take the money and meet with the commissioners and agree on our fees and for the board of education and board of commissioners to be paid the balance due them.

Some of us asked if we could take that $57,000 down to Southport and deliver it and we said we would if they didn't come to get it or agree for some other way. I asked Mr. Yates the question if he or the North Carolina Bank and Trust Company would be willing to handle these drafts for collection under that agreement and he said that it could be done with the permission of the Peoples United Bank and he pointed to Mr. Joe Ruark and said `there sits the president, and if he agrees to it we will.' Mr. Ruark said he agreed to it and that was what he wanted done, and I said I don't like the proposition of the money going in some one else's name until it is paid in and until it is distributed, and Mr. Yates said he would send it for collection and hold it in a separate account until we agreed and notified them and thereupon the checks were signed and endorsed by Mr. Mintz for the board of commissioners and Mr. Sentelle for the board of education and Mr. Ruark for the Peoples United Bank, and they were turned over to Mr. Yates. The checks never went to Southport except for endorsement in that office. It was agreed that it should not be done, but be held by this bank.

It was agreed that the bank would distribute the funds if the drafts were collected according to the agreement. This was done on 20 February of this year. The checks were delivered to Mr. Yates in Bryan and Campbell's office in the North Carolina Bank Building and the meeting broke up. Mr. Yates did not give me any paper-writing about the two checks.

Mr. Mintz and Mr. Sentelle stated that they would go down stairs to the bank afterwards as they wanted a memorandum of the checks they had endorsed to carry back with them. I had a further conversation or agreement with Mr. Yates about these checks. I wanted to know whether the checks had been paid or not and he advised me that the drafts had been collected. This was a verbal communication. I was in and out of the bank every day. On the first Monday of March, following that meeting, my recollection is that it was 6 March, Mr. Campbell and I went to Southport and had a meeting with the board of commissioners and board of education in an effort to agree about our fees. We did not agree at that time on the fees or how this money should be distributed, so on the next day, 7 March, when we came back, we wrote a letter to the bank. I have not got it here. They notified them to produce it." *Page 131

Mr. Royall: "We make no point of using the copy. This is a copy of the letter. Mr. Campbell and I went down and put it on Mr. Yates' desk. He was not there at the time. This was 7 March, 1933."

Plaintiffs offer in evidence letter dated 7 March, 1933, as follows:

"7 March, 1933.

North Carolina Bank and Trust Company, Wilmington, North Carolina. Gentlemen:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 S.E. 327, 206 N.C. 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brunswick-county-v-trust-co-nc-1934.