Campbell v. Manufacturers National Bank

51 A. 497, 67 N.J.L. 301, 38 Vroom 301, 1902 N.J. LEXIS 104
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 3, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 51 A. 497 (Campbell v. Manufacturers National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campbell v. Manufacturers National Bank, 51 A. 497, 67 N.J.L. 301, 38 Vroom 301, 1902 N.J. LEXIS 104 (N.J. 1902).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Fort, J.

This is an action by the receiver of the Middle-sex County Bank to recover back money paid to the plaintiff in error by George M. Valentine, who was, at the time of the payment, cashier of said bank. The payment was made by Valentine in satisfaction of his individual debt. The method of payment was by a draft of the Middlesex County Bank, drawn on the National Park Bank of New York, its correspondent, and signed “George M. Valentine, Cashier.” The draft thus issued was drawn to the order of John A. Miller, attorney, and delivered to him for the plaintiff in error.

The transaction out of which the indebtedness of Valentine to the plaintiff in error, the Manufacturers National Bank, arose was the discounting of a'note, made by a firm of which Valentine was a member, and endorsed by Valentine individually and others. This note, thus discounted, fell due and was protested, and afterward judgment was obtained thereon against the makers thereof and Valentine individually.

The Middlesex County Bank had no interest, directly or indirectly, in the note or its proceeds.

All these facts were known to the plaintiff in error, both before and after the judgment.

The judgment was entered March 4th, 1899.

Mr. Miller, the attorney of the plaintiff in.error, after several attempts, found Valentine at the bank, in Perth Amboy, on March 13th, 1899. Payment of the judgment was demanded, and, after some talk, Valentine, in the presence of Miller, took the draft-book of the Middlesex County Bank, [303]*303containing blank drafts of that bank on the National Park Bank of New York, and filled out a draft of the Middlesex County Bank upon the' National Park Bank of New York, for the sum of $7,500, to the order of J. A. Miller, attorney as aforesaid, and signed it “Geo. M. Valentine, Cashier,” and handed this draft to Miller.

The draft thus delivered to Miller was not, and did not pretend to be, anything other than the draft of the Middlesex County Bank, made by its cashier, in his official capacity, against the funds of the Middlesex County Bank deposited in the National Park Bank of New York, and was intended by Valentine, and known by Miller, to be issued for the payment of the debt of George M. Valentine as an individual. With all of these facts the plaintiff in error, by its officers and its attorney, was familiar.

There is no reason, which is founded on principle, that can be given for not applying the same rule of agency to a cashier as to other persons occupying fiduciary relations. No person can act as an agent in a transaction in which he has an interest, or to which he is a party, on the side opposite to his principal. This must be so where the person dealing with the agent has knowledge of the facts.

A person cannot deal with a cashier of a bank as an individual in securing a draft, and claim, after the draft is delivered, it lias become the transaction of the bank. To make the acts of the cashier valid, the transaction in which the draft is delivered must be a bank transaction, made by the cashier, within his express or implied authority, in the conduct of the business of the bank. So long as a person deals with the cashier in a matter wherein, as between himself and the cashier, he is dealing with, or has a right to believe he is dealing with, the bank, the transaction is obligatory upon the bank.

The cashier is presumed to have all the authority he exercises in dealing with executive functions legally within the powers of the bank itself, or which are usually or customarily done, or held out to be done, by such an officer.

But the test of the transaction is whether it is with the [304]*304bank and its business, or with, the cashier personally and in his business. Claflin v. Farmers Bank, 25 N. Y. 293; Moores v. Citizens National Bank, 111 U. S. 156.

As to the former, all presumptions are in favor of its regularity and binding force. In the latter, no such presumption arises; in fact, upon proof that it was known to- the claimant to be an individual transaction, and not one for the bank, the burthen is cast upon the claimant to establish, by proof, that the act of the cashier thus done, for his own individual benefit, was authorized or ratified.

These are fundamental principles applicable to principal and agent in every transaction arising out of that relation. Bank of New York v. American Dock and Trust Co., 143 N. Y. 559, 564; Manhattan Life Insurance Co. v. F. S. S. & G., &c., 139 Id. 146, 151; Shaw v. Spencer, 100 Mass. 382, 390, 394; Petrie v. Clark, 11 Serg. & R. 377 (Chief Justice Gibson); Rochester & C. T. R. Co. v. Paviour, 164 N. Y. 281, 286; Hutc. Ag. (2d ed.) 110.

Little contention was made in this case, even by the counsel jof the plaintiff in error, against the rule above stated, although some effort was made to distinguish between the rule applicable to principal and agent, as applied to a cashier, as contradistinguished from other agency relations, but we are unable to accept such a theory or to hold the- rule to be any broader in the case of a cashier than as above declared.

Strong contention was made by the plaintiff in error for the right to retain the fund received for Valentine’s individual debt from the proceeds of the draft of the Middlesex County Bank, upon the grounds (1) that Valentine was authorized to issue such drafts, and (2) that if he were not so-authorized, his act in this case would be deemed ratified, • through the knowledge of the bank’s officers, obtainable from the draft itself or the records of the bank, from which they actually knew, or were chargeable, in the exercise of ordinary care, with knowing, the transaction.

The case is utterly devoid of proof that Valentine was ever authorized by anyone to draw drafts of this character for his individual account against the funds of the bank with its-[305]*305Yew York correspondent. It does appear that he had overdrawn his account and borrowed money on questionable securities, but those transactions are stated, by the letters to the banking department, to be ones with which the directors were familiar, and about which the directors knew, and for which they held securities, and in which the directors only differed with the banking department, as to the sufficiency of the security fhcy had required Valentine to pledge for those loans.

There is no proof that those loans were not made in the usual course; nor that the directors authorized or acquiesced in the use of the bank’s funds by Valentine before, or without, their knowledge; nor that Valentine, in any of the transactions out of which these obligations arose, had ever dealt with any person to create his indebtedness to the bank before the bank directors knew of it and had authorized his use of the funds; nor is there anything to show, in any of those letters to the banking department by the president of the bank, or from that department to the bank, that the directors knew he was using the funds of the bank, without their knowledge or consent,. in his individual transactions, or that he had paid a single individual debt before they were advised of it and had received security from him for the money which he proposed to use to pay it.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fine v. Harney County National Bank
182 P.2d 379 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1945)
Haynes v. Lincoln Trust Co.
39 A.2d 657 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1944)
State Bank v. Bache
162 Misc. 128 (New York Supreme Court, 1937)
Bank of Taylorsville v. Blyth
269 Ill. App. 16 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1932)
American Ry. Express Co. v. Gallup State Bank
264 P. 947 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1928)
Gilman v. F. O. Bailey Carriage Co.
131 A. 138 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1925)
Citizens' Trust Co. v. Croll
289 F. 421 (Seventh Circuit, 1923)
First Nat. Bank of Sweetwater v. Rust
257 F. 29 (Fifth Circuit, 1919)
Choctaw Bank v. Gewin
78 So. 96 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1918)
Pope v. Ramsey County State Bank
162 N.W. 1051 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1917)
DeBaca v. Higgins
143 P. 832 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1914)
De Jonge v. Woodport Hotel & Land Co.
72 A. 439 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1909)
Home Savings Bank v. Otterbach
112 N.W. 769 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1907)
State v. Miller
85 P. 81 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1906)
Manhattan Web Co. v. Aquidneck Nat. Bank
133 F. 76 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island, 1904)
Hier v. Miller
63 L.R.A. 952 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 A. 497, 67 N.J.L. 301, 38 Vroom 301, 1902 N.J. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-manufacturers-national-bank-nj-1902.