Citizens State Bank of Denison v. Drumright State Bank

1925 OK 528, 244 P. 178, 116 Okla. 213, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 373
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 23, 1925
Docket15387
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1925 OK 528 (Citizens State Bank of Denison v. Drumright State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens State Bank of Denison v. Drumright State Bank, 1925 OK 528, 244 P. 178, 116 Okla. 213, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 373 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

THREADGILL, C.

This action was prosecuted by the Citizens State Bank of Denison, Tex., as plaintiff, against the Drumright State Bank of Drumright, Okla., as defendant, to recover a deposit of money in the sum of $19,860.74, alleged toi be on deposit in said bank on or about July. 15, 1921, in favor of the Denison Bank & Trust Company of Denison, Tex., and which was claimed by purchase from said trust company. The Denison Bank & Trust Company became insolvent about July 15, 1921, and its assets were sold and the plaintiff bought the same, and it claims that the deposit sued for was one of the items it bought of said insolvent trust company. The cause was tried to a jury at the November, 1923, term of the district court of Creek county and resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant, and plaintiff has appealed, alleging various assignments of error for1 reversal, the principal of which, as we view it, is that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the judgment. We do not think there is any controversy as to what the law is as applied to the faqts claimed by each party. They differ far and wide as to the facts proved by the evidence, but they do not differ as to the law.

1. Plaintiff contends that the evidence shows that the Denison Bank & Trust Company had on deposit with the Drumright State Bank at the time it closed its doors, the sum of $19,861.74; that the same was the proceeds of certain notes placed with or made to the Drumright State Bank resulting -in a loan to J. S. Mullen. The first of these notes are what are called the Mullen notes; one for $20,009, signed by J. J. Eaves and C. T. Barringer, and one for $5,-000, signed by D. Lacy and J. S. Mullen, making the- sum of $25,000, for which the Drumright State Bank gave the Denison Bank & Trust Company credit om its books on April 4, 1920, for $24,444.45, and for which defendant paid 4% on daily balances. The Denison Bank & Trust Company entered the same amount on its books as a charge against the Drumright State Bank and credited the account of J. S. Mullen with the same and upon which J. S. Mullen checked as a loan. Plaintiff contends that this was a loan to Mullen from the Drumright State Bank, by virtue of the notes sent to the said bank by the Denison Bank & Trust Company, and the latter assumed no liability in the transaction, but only acted as a clearing house for the former. It says, as a matter of fact, the Drumright State Bank made the loan to J. S. Mullen on the notes given and kept the money on deposit as' a credit in favor of the Denison Bank & Trust Company, and the Denison Bank & Trust Company permitted the Drumright State Bank to keep the money on deposit for 4% interest to it, while it charged on its books the said bank with the amount and advanced the money to Mullen by giving him credit on his account for the same. After these entries were made upon the books the Den-ison Bank & Trust Company drew on the Drumright State Bank at various times, reducing the amount of this deposit, and the Drumright State Bank: drew back, building up the account until about March 1. 1921, when the Drumright State Bank became dissatisfied wiith the Mullen notes, and upon notifying the Denison Bank & Trust Company, its president, Tom Rogers, and its vice president, O. R. Nicholson, each' made out a demand note to the Drumright State ¡Bank for $12,500, and each indorsed the other’s note, and they sent these notes to said bank to take the place of the Mullen notes and permitted the Mullen notes to stand as collateral to continue the deposit in force and to make the loan good to Mullen. About 60 days thereafter these demand notes wei'e substituted o.r renewed by notes, made by the same parties, and indorsed the' same, and due 60 days after date, and about the time these notes became due the Denison Bank & Trust Company failed, arid on the morning of- July 15, 1921, the Drumright State Bank made an entry .upon its books appropriating the deposit in controversy in payment on the two $12,500 notes, which the plaintiff *215 claims they had no right to do, on the ground that the said notes were the personal obligations of Rogers and Nicholson, and the trust company, of which they were officers, was in no way liable upon these notes. Upon these facts, which the plaintiff claims the evidence supports, it says the Drumright State Bank should lose the deposit and not the Denison Bank & Trust Company, who gave the credit on its books to J. S. Mullen, the same being given on the strength of the deposit in the Drumright State Bank, and to support their contention they cite Western Nat. Bk. of New York v. Armstrong, 152 U. S. 346, 38 L. Ed. 470; City Electric Street Ry. Co. v. First Nat. Bk. (Ark.) 47 S. W. 855; American Nat. Bk. v. Warren Deposit Bank (Ky.) 92 S. W. 585; State Nat. Bk. of St. Joseph, Mo., v. Newton Nat. Bk., 66 Fed. 691; First Nat. Bk. of Burlingame v. Hanover Nat. Bk. of New York, 66 Fed. 34.

2. If the. facts and inferences, as contended for by plaintiff, were undisputed by defendant and without conflict with the record, we would have no trouble in approving the authorities cited and reversing the judgment of the trial court, but there is another side to the question involved.

The defendant contends that the Mullen notes were received by an agreement with Mr. Rogers, the president of the trust company, that it would carry the Mullen notes upon condition that the Denison Bank & Trust Company would carry a deposit with it during the life of the notes in the sum of about $20,000. This agreement was made with J H. Hulme, who was vice president of the Drumright State Bank and active in its manangement till he retired about September 1, 1920. and went to California, at which time the Mullen notes were in the bank and unpaid. After this, about January 24, 1921, the Denison Bank & Trust Company complained by letter that they did not think that they should keep the deposit up to $25,-000 against the Mullen notes, amormting to $25,000, but they thought that $20,000 was all they should be ¡required to maintain, and the Drumright State Bank, in answer to this letter, informed the president of the trust company that they would be willing to allow the deposit reduced to $20,000 upon other good notes, but the Mullen notes were not satisfactory, and the board of director*» of the bank had decided against the Mullen notes, and on February 7, 1921, the Drum-right State Bank charged the account of the Denison Bank '& Trust Company with the sum of $20,153.33, against the Mullen notes, the amount of the deposit at that time, and enclosed the Mullen notes by mail to the Denison Bank & Trust Company, and informed it that if the Trust company desired to continue an account with them, upon receipt of other good notes, it would be glad to “re-credit” the trust company in the sum of $20,000. The evidence shows the trust Ci mpany received the Mullen notes and thereupon, the president, Mr. Rogers, and the vice president, Mr. Nicholson, executed the notes above mentioned in the sum of $12,500 each and sent them to the Drumright State Bank and asked that the trust company be given credit on its account with $25,000, and its draft was honored for the sum of $5,000 and the $20,000 to be kept on deposit against the notes; it is also in evidence that after this arrangement the trust company returned the Mullen notes to the defendant and requested that it make an effort to collect them, and advised that it should not permit J. S.

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Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 528, 244 P. 178, 116 Okla. 213, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-state-bank-of-denison-v-drumright-state-bank-okla-1925.