Bureau Marketing Service v. Lewis

263 N.W. 7, 220 Iowa 662
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 23, 1935
DocketNo. 42962.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 263 N.W. 7 (Bureau Marketing Service v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bureau Marketing Service v. Lewis, 263 N.W. 7, 220 Iowa 662 (iowa 1935).

Opinion

Parsons, J.

This appeal is in two eases, consolidated and tried together as equity cases in the district court of Clarke county, Iowa, one being entitled Bureau Marketing Service of Osceola, Iowa, and Mrs. B. E. Agans v. Receiver of Simmons & Co., Bankers of Osceola, Iowa, and First National Bank of Chicago ; the other case was entitled J. D. Shively and against the same defendants. For convenience, the two cases will be hereafter called the Bureau Marketing Service case and the Shively case.

The cases grew out of the insolvency of Simmons & Co. bankers of Osceola, Iowa. Simmons & Co. was a private bank, owned by a copartnership, which did business in Osceola, Iowa, for a number of years prior to December 10, 1930. On the last-named date a receiver was appointed for Simmons & Co., and the bank ceased existence as a going concern.

The Bureau Marketing Service of Osceola was a corporation organized for the purpose of marketing the live stock of its members, and on the 5th day of December, 1930, the packing company gave to the marketing bureau for live stock purchased of it a check reading,

“The Iowa Packing Company, #5763
“Des Moines, Iowa 12-5-30
“Pay One Thousand Twenty Seven and 23/100 Dollars $1,027.23
“To the Order Of Bureau Mkt. Service, Osceola, Iowa
“The Iowa Packing Company
“Per A. Freed
“To Central National Bank and Trust Co., Des Moines, Iowa.”

This check was carried by the marketing service until the 8th day of December, 1930, when it was taken to the Simmons & Co. bank and delivered to it, and was credited in the passbook of the Bureau Marketing Service, as a deposit. The check was taken to the bank by E. E. Agans, who, with his wife, Esther Agans, operated the affairs of the corporation, she being the manager. It is claimed by the Bureau Marketing Service that Mr. Agans had a talk with A. D. Simmons of the banking firm as to what they were doing, and how the business was conducted. *665 That he told Paul Simmons, one of the banking firm, the nature of the marketing concern; that it was a cooperative concern, organized to sell the live stock of the members; and that it distributed the money received for livestock after it came in, and that all of the money belonged to the shipping association, and that the Bureau Marketing Service just had it in trust; that the Bureau Marketing Service’s interest in it was as it had taken up obligations; and that he (Agans) had handled the transaction of the particular check involved with Lloyd and Paul Simmons, who were partners in the bank.

It further appears in evidence that Simmons & Co., as bankers, were country correspondents with the First National Bank of Chicago, sending any items to the Chicago bank to be credited on its account, and drawing checks and drafts against the account in the Chicago bank. The check in question of the Iowa Packing Company was taken to the Simmons bank December 8th, between 4 and 5 o’clock p. m., closing time of the bank being 4 o’clock p. m., and it was by Mr. Agans given to the bank and was entered on the passbook as a deposit at that time. Simmons & Co. in sending the items to the Chicago bank sent them upon letters with printed head as follows:

“Simmons & Co., Bankers
“Osceola, Iowa...............................:..........................................19........
( i__
Ct_
“Enclosed find ,for collection and credit. Protest all Items Over $10.00 unless marked X before items.-
“Simmons & Co.
“On Amount

On the same day it received the cheek, the Simmons bank sent four letters of credit to the Chicago bank, listing various items sent, and among the items was listed this check for $1,-027.23. Upon receipt of these items at the Chicago bank, the Simmons bank was given credit, in accordance with the custom between these two banks, and a special custom between banks having such relations, with the full amount of the items listed, which were received in Chicago, in this instance, on the 9th of December. The book balance credit of Simmons & Co. in the Chicago bank at the close of business December 8, 1930, and at *666 the opening of bnsines December 9th, was $3,929.83. On December 9th, the Chicago bank credited the Simmons bank with $10,-433.56, by reason of such remittances, and amongst the items included was the Iowa Packing Company check for $1,027.23. These items, of course, when received by the Chicago bank, would be forwarded for collection so as to reach the various institutions upon which they were drawn. So, taking out the uncollected cash letter items, instead of a book balance of credit to the Simmons & Co. bank of $2,094.47 at the close of business December 9th, there was no actual balance, but an actual overdraft of $4,051.88, the Chicago bank having cashed Simmons & Co. drafts on December 9th in the total amount of $12,423.91. These items were all cashed, relying upon all items both collected and uncollected received from Simmons & Co., including their cash letters of the 8th and 9th. During the day of December 10th, the Chicago bank received the $535 check involved in the Shively case, and many other items in two cash letters, $4,062.18 of which eventually proved to be uncollected, so that there was an overdraft of $4,051.88 at the close of business on December 10, 1930. During the day the Chicago bank cashed $2,913.01 of the drafts of Simmons & Co. on that account, and made a charge of $600 for a matured rediscount, so that the total debit charges to the account that day were $3,513.08, and in cashing these items relied upon the Simmons & Co. cash letters received on the 10th, which included the Shively check, as well as the account as it stood on the books of the Chicago bank. These cash letters of Simmons & Co. were all of the same form and same construction as all such letters over a period of years prior to December 10, 1930, and the account was handled both as to items coming in and going out during all this time in the same manner, and it was the practice and relationship between these banks that the Chicago bank cashed the Simmons & Co. drafts collected and uncollected up to their book balance.

The Simmons & Co. bank was closed by the appointment of a receiver about 7:30 o ’clock the morning of December 10, 1930. The notice of such appointment was received in the country bank correspondents’ department about 3:05 p. m. of December 10, 1930. The business of the Chicago bank for that day had been closed since 2 o’clock, so that at the close of the business on that day there was this large actual overdraft of the Simmons & Co. bank of $4,051.88.

*667 The district court of Clarke county, Iowa, early in the morning- of December 10th, signed an order placing the Simmons & Co.

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Bluebook (online)
263 N.W. 7, 220 Iowa 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bureau-marketing-service-v-lewis-iowa-1935.