Citizens' Guaranty State Bank of Hutchins v. National Surety Co.

242 S.W. 488, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1028
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 20, 1922
DocketNo. 8684. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 242 S.W. 488 (Citizens' Guaranty State Bank of Hutchins v. National Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens' Guaranty State Bank of Hutchins v. National Surety Co., 242 S.W. 488, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1028 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

HAMILTON, J.

Appellant, a banking corporation organized under the laws of Texas, seeks in this suit to recover $5,000 against appellee upon a surety bond in that sum ex-' ecuted by appellee to appellant against any loss by appellant on. account of embezzlement, wrongful abstraction, or willful misapplication of money or other valuables by C. H. Bussey, Jr., appellant’s cashier.

The cause of action alleged by appellant is pleaded at great length and in exhaustive detail.

However, the description of two transactions set out in the petition reflects the facts upon which liability in this appeal is sought to be grounded. These transactions are denominated by appellant as the “liberty bond transaction” and the “cotton transaction.”

In connection with the libei’ty bond transaction appellant alleged that about October 1, 1919, it was the owner of certain liberty bonds of the United States government valued, approximately at $3,600, and that it had for safe-keeping certain other of such bonds belonging to its customers, its possession of which was such that it was bound and obligated to its customers, the owners of these-bonds, to care for them and return them to said customers, or pay instead the value thereof, which was alleged to be $5,500.

It was alleged that the assistant cashier, O. H. Bussey, Jr., converted all of these bonds to his own use and benefit by hypothe- *489 eating them with the Security National Bank of Dallas, Tex., as collateral security for his note in the sum of $6,000. It was alleged that appellant was compelled to pay the Security National Bank of Dallas the sum of $6,000, being the amount of the indebtedness secured by the liberty bonds, in order to repossess them; their total value being $9,100 as alleged.

As a basis of recovery in connection with the “cotton transaction,” it was alleged that on or about August 15, 1918, O. H. Bussey, Sr., and-C. H. Bussey, Jr. (the former being the latter’s father), were, respectively, cashier and assistant cashier of the bank.

It was further alleged that about this date these two officials of the bank entered into a conspiracy for the purpose of swindling and defrauding it by making unlawful use of the money then on deposit, and thereafter to come into possession of the bank; the unlawful use described being for the purpose of purchasing cotton during the season beginning in the fall of 1918 and extending over into 1919. It was alleged that they agreed to enter into the cotton business as partners to purchase cotton and cause the seller to draw sight drafts on C. H. Bussey, Sr., who, in turn, was to, and did, write his acceptance thereof across the face of such drafts, sign the acceptance in his own name, and deliver the drafts to the seller with instructions to take them to the bank and there receive pay from Chas. H. Bussey, Jr.

It was alleged that purchases were made and cotton paid for in this manner to an extent of approximately $31,000, and that a sum of money amounting approximately to this amount was paid on such drafts out of appellant’s funds by C. H. Bussey, Jr., without lawful authority of any officer of the bank authorized to give consent, and that at the time such payments were made Bussey, Jr., had no funds on deposit to his credit in the bank, and that the bank was not indebted to him in any amount. It was also alleged that the cotton thus purchased was sold by the Busseys from time to time and the proceeds returned to the appellant bank, but that, on or about November 7, 1918, the said Bussey, Sr., and Bussey, Jr., in order to obtain money for their own use and benefit, obtained a loan from Theo. Marcus & Co., of Dallas, Tex., and agreed to pledge 100 bales of cotton purchased with the bank’s funds in the manner above stated as collateral security for the money so borrowed; that the cotton declined in price; that the said Bus-sey, Sr., and Bussey, Jr., were unable to repay the loan and obtain a release of the cotton, and, in ¡such circumstances, authorized the bank to handle the matter for them, whereupon the bank, in turn, authorized Marcus & Co. to sell it for the best price obtainable and repay itself out of the proceeds of the sale; that On or about May 5, 1918, after such sale was made by Marcus & Co., it deducted the amount of the indebtedness owing to it from the proceeds thereof and paid the balance, amounting to $2,201.03, to the bank, which left due the bank on this transaction; $3,428.82.

The petition contained allegations to the effect that these transactions were consummated without the knowledge of the board of. directors and governing body of the bank, and that they were not discovered for some time, after they had been made; and it was also alleged, in effect, that the board of di-, rectors and those in authority never ratified or approved, either of the transactions, and that such transactions, even if they could be construed as loans made by the bank, were unlawful, unauthorized, and ultra vires, because they exceeded the amount the banking laws of Texas authorize and permit to be made to any particular individual by a bank with a capital stock of the amount which that of appellant was at the time of the, transactions.

Appellee answered by general and special-exceptions, general denial, and by special pleas relating to the two particular transactions involved in "this appeal.

It was pleaded that the alleged loss accruing from the liberty bond transaction did not render appellee liable because appellant, by an order of its board of directors, loaned the bonds to O. H. Bussey, Sr., and F. B. Bussey. It was also alleged that appellant’s board of directors ratified and confirmed the loan of the liberty bonds and that appellant is es-topped to assert as against appellee that the liberty bonds were converted. Appellee also pleaded that the note alleged by appellant to have been paid in order to redeem the bonds was not the note of O. hu Bussey, Jr., but was the note of C. H. Bussey & Co., and alleged that a portion of the liberty bonds redeemed by appellant by payment of the $6,000 note to the Security National Bank was the property of C. H. Bussey, Jr.; the amount of the bonds thus alleged to have been owned' by C. II. Bussey, Jr., being $2,100. , '

With reference to the cotton transaction appellee answered that C. H. Bussey, Jr., had no interest in it, obtained no benefit from it, and that in paying bills of exchange for C. H. Bussey, Sr., he acted under the orders of superior officers of the bank by virtue of an order of the board of directors authorizing the payment of such bills of exchange. ⅞ was alleged that the bills of exchange were drawn and paid in the usual manner of handling cotton accounts by appellant; that appellant’s board of directors had full knowledge of the cotton account, authorized it, ratified it, and confirmed it.

Appellee specially pleaded that the bond executed by it expressly provided that within 90 days after knowledge of any loss in respect to which liability against appellee might be claimed, notice thereof in writing should be given to appellee; that no such notice *490 was given appellee of any loss claimed by appellant within such time; and that for this reason no liability exists under the contract.

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242 S.W. 488, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1028, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-guaranty-state-bank-of-hutchins-v-national-surety-co-texapp-1922.