Chickasaw County v. Love

153 So. 156, 169 Miss. 398, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 53
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1934
DocketNo. 31084.
StatusPublished

This text of 153 So. 156 (Chickasaw County v. Love) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chickasaw County v. Love, 153 So. 156, 169 Miss. 398, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 53 (Mich. 1934).

Opinion

*401 Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Chickasaw county filed a bill or petition against J. S. Love, superintendent of banks, and G. B. McDuff, liquidating agent of the Commercial Bank & Trust Company, of Okolona, Mississippi, seeking to have the amount of three pension warrants for the sum of ninety-two dollars each, issued to Confederate pensioners, declared to be preference claims on the funds and assets of the said bank, now in liquidation, and to recover the amount of these warrants for the benefit of the county pension fund and the pensioners to whom the warrants were originally entered. The superintendent of banks answered the petition, and the cause was submitted to the court upon the petition, answer, and an agreed statement of facts. A decree was entered denying the prayer of the petition and dismissing it, from which decree this appeal was prosecuted.

The agreed statement of facts is, in part, as follows:

“That on the 8th day of January, 1930, the Commercial Bank & Trust Company, of Okolona, Mississippi, was duly appointed and became the county depository of Chickasaw county, Mississippi, such appointment having been made in accordance with the statute, and that from said date to the date of the failure of said bank on the 18th day of October, 1930, it acted as county depository *402 of said county; that it had on deposit the pension fund of the county at and prior to the date of its failure.

“That on the 10th day of October, 1930, the chancery clerk and county auditor of the county drew three certain pension warrants on the pension fund had and kept on deposit in said bank, as follows, to-wit:

“Pension Warrant No. 666 for the sum of ninety-two dollars payable to Eeubin Davis; Pension Warrant No. 668 for the sum of ninety-two dollars payable to J. M. Griffin; Pension Warrant No. 688 for the sum of ninety-two dollars payable to D. A. Goza.

“That each of the payees in said warrants were Confederate veterans and pensioners of the state of Mississippi. That true and correct copies of the warrants so drawn and issued together with the endorsements thereon are shown as ‘Exhibits A, B and C’ to the petition. That each of said pensioners on receipt of their respective warrants so drawn on the pension fund in the treasury of the county on deposit in the Commercial Bank & Trust Company of Okolona, Mississippi, deposited 'the warrants for collection in the bank of Houston, Houston, Mississippi, which in due course forwarded same for presentment, payment and collection to the Bank of Commerce & Trust Company, Memphis, Tennessee, which bank in due course.on receipt of said warrants forwarded them directly for collection and payment to the Commercial Bank & Trust Company of Okolona, Mississippi, county depository; that the said Commercial Bank & Trust Company, on receipt of said warrants for collection marked them ‘paid’ as is shown by the exhibits and charged on its books the amounts thereof to the pension fund of the county, and forwarded its draft or exchange on its account on deposit in said.Bank of Commerce & Trust Company, Memphis, Tennessee, for payment of said collecting bank, as had been done in transactions theretofore. That before said Bank of Commerce & Trust Company had re *403 mitted said amounts to the credit of the bank of Houston the Commercial Bank & Trust Company, county depository, failed and was taken over for liquidation by J. S. Love, superintendent of banks in the afternoon of October 18, 1930. That said Bank of Commerce & Trust Company having been notified of such failure, immediately charged the deposit account of the Commerce Bank & Trust Company with the indebtedness due to it by said bank which failed, thereby exhausting the deposit account and leaving no balance to meet the demand, draft or exchange forwarded by the Commercial Bank & Trust Company, and refused to pay said draft or exchange of the failed bank to the bank of Houston, the collecting bank, which was without order or authorization of J. S. Love, superintendent of banks or the Commercial Bank & Trust. That by way of explanation said Commercial Bank & Trust Company kept deposit account with the bank of Commerce & Trust Company, Memphis, Tennessee, and the full amount of the deposit of said failed bank was applied as a credit by the Memphis bank on the indebtedness due it by the failed bank, which sum did not discharge the entire debt due the Memphis bank by the failed bank, and that said failed bank is still indebted to the Memphis bank for bills payable.

“That soon after the failure of the Commercial Bank & Trust Company, a statement of the pension fund of the county was delivered to the board of supervisors of Chickasaw county, showing credits and debits on the pension fund account, in which statement the warrants herein described and shown as exhibits A, B, and C to the bill were shown to be charged to said pension fund account, and the original warrants marked ‘paid’ and cancelled were delivered with said account and accepted by the board of supervisors of the county, who approved the account as rendered, the county now holding said warrants so marked paid and cancelled by said failed *404 bank, but it is agreed that the board of supervisors were uninformed at the time they approved the account and accepted the warrants about their having not been paid to the pensioners to whom they were made payable. It is further admitted that neither J. S. Love, superintendent of banks, nor any other person in charge of the liquidation of the Commercial Bank & Trust Company has attempted to collect or recover said deposit funds appropriated as aforesaid, by the bank of Commerce & Trust Company, and that the failed bank (county depository) has received the credit made by the Memphis bank to the debit account of the failed bank.

“It is agreed that the warrants were never returned to the pensioners and that they have never received payment thereon. That the pension fund of the county on deposit with the failed bank as county depository, prior to and at the time of its failure was public money paid by the state of Mississippi to- the county for the purpose of paying specific pensions as is provided by the pension statutes of the state of Mississippi, among whom were the payees in said warrants, and the money for the payment of said warrants was on deposit in said bank at the time it failed. That there was no assignment of the warrants by the pensioner owners to the depository bank which failed, and that neither the county of Chickasaw nor the board of supervisors waived payment of said warrants. That there was no gift of the warrants or the sums represented thereby to the county by the payees who received them, nor was there any gift by the pensioner payees of the warrants or amounts represented thereby to the depository bank which failed, and that said pensioners did not agree to the mingling of the collection of the warrants with the funds of the failed bank, but that the warrants Were 'deposited with the bank of Houston and sent through the regular channels for collection as hereinbefore stated.

*405

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153 So. 156, 169 Miss. 398, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chickasaw-county-v-love-miss-1934.