City Electric Street Railway Co. v. First National Bank

47 S.W. 855, 65 Ark. 543, 1898 Ark. LEXIS 124
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 9, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 47 S.W. 855 (City Electric Street Railway Co. v. First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City Electric Street Railway Co. v. First National Bank, 47 S.W. 855, 65 Ark. 543, 1898 Ark. LEXIS 124 (Ark. 1898).

Opinion

McCain, Special Judge.

This is an appeal from the Pulaski chancery court. Two suits were consolidated in the court below. One of these was a suit brought by Nick Kupferle, as trustee, on an account which H. G-. Allis had or claimed to have against the Electric Street Railway Co., and which he had assigned to Kupferle as collateral security for his indebtedness to the First National Bank of Little Rock. The amount claimed in this suit was $157,500. The other suit was an action brought by the receiver of said bank against the same defendant for an amount claimed to be due on several overdrafts and promissory notes aggregating a little over $110,000. The street car company, by answer filed in each case, disputed the correctness of the claims sued on, denied any liability on either claim, averred that the receiver was not the holder or owner of certain of the notes embraced in his suit, and by way of counter-claim asked for judgment over against the receiver for the proceeds of certain notes alleged to have been negotiated by the bank for the street car company.

. The chancellor appointed a master to state an account between the parties, and, on the coming in of the master’s report, the receiver was awarded a decree against the street car company for $106,850.26. Both parties appealed.

1. We conclude that the street car company has no right to complain of the chancellor for refusing to give judgment over against the receiver on the counter-claim. The contention of counsel on this point is plausible, but underlying it there is the fallacy that, in negotiating the notes in question, the action of Allis was the action of the bank. Allis was president of the bank, it is true, but he was also payee of the notes, and he was personally interested in their negotiation. This of itself made him a stranger to the bank, so far as the handling of these notes was concerned. An agent can not prostitute the name of his principal to the service of his own personal ends1, and this rule applies with full force to the official of a corporation in making use of the corporate name. Am. Surety Co. v. Pauly, 170 U. S. 133; 1 Morawetz, Corporations, § 517.

Not only so, but it was held by this court in Grow v. Cockrill, 63 Ark. 418, that a national bank can not engage in the brokerage business. It follows that officers of the bank had no authority to negotiate notes which did not belong to the bank. But it is said that the bank got the proceeds of the notes when they were discounted, and that for this reason the bank ought to account for the amount received. It is true that Allis deposited the proceeds of the notes-in the bank, or, which is the same thing, he had the amount passed to the credit of the bank by its metropolitan correspondents, to whom he remitted the proceeds. To deposit money in bank is the same in legal effect as to place an amount with its approval to' its credit in another bank. But the bank did not in this case get the proceeds of these notes, because Allis deposited the same to his own credit. It is no answer to this to say that he ought not to have done this, or that the bank ought not to have allowed him to do this. When you go to deposit money in bank, it must be a very extraordinary case in which the bank can challenge your right to say whether the deposit offered shall go to your credit or to that of some one else. As Allis in this case had unlawfully used the name of the bank in procuring the money on the nqtes, the bank official making the entry might well have refused to credit Allis with the deposit, and might have placed it to the credit of bills payable or re-discounts; but we are not satisfied that there was anything in the circumstances of the ease to require the bank to credit the amount to the street car company over the objection of Allis or without his direction.

It is said that the bank knew that this paper in Allis’ hands was accommodation paper. We are not certain that the bank did know this, but, if it did, that was the most satisfactory evidence that the street car company intended him to have the money. If you intrust a friend with your negotiable note, either for his accommodation or your own, you would hardly be allowed to complain that some one had discounted the paper for your friend, and allowed him to have the proceeds.

But, even conceding this, counsel sa^ it. was wrong for the bank to allow Allis to check out the money without Brown also signing the checks, as the latter was a joint payee with Allis in some of the notes. This is a matter of which it would seem that Brown alone coiild complain, but we may be sure that Allis did not get any money on a note payable to Allis and G. R. Brown without Brown’s signature to the note, and an inspection of the notes filed show that they bear Brown’s indorsement. This indorsement puts an end to any further demand for Brown’s signature.

We need not discuss what are the duties, if any, of a bank when, it finds a trustee depositing trust funds and checking them out in his own name. We do not think the street car company have made a ease calling for the determination of that question. It is a circumstance not to be overlooked in this connection that all these transactions took place long before either one of the corporations ceased to do business, and renewal notes were given by the street car company after they knew, or had an opportunity to know, what had been done with the proceeds of the original notes. What we have said disposes of the contention that the street car company is entitled to judgment against the receiver on the counter-claim. If we are wrong in our conclusion on this point, however, it would not follow that the street car company should have the affirmative relief claimed, since the chancellor allowed the street car company credit for this amount on the account .sued on by Nick Kupferle as trustee, and if the claim of Nick Kupferle were found to be just, then a credit on this is all that the street car company could ask.

2. Counsel insist that the receiver of the bank should not be allowed to recover in this action on certain notes embraced in the decree, because these notes at the commencement of the suit were, as the receiver admits, in the hands of a St.° Louis bank which claimed to hold them as collateral security for a debt due the latter bank. It seems that, after the suit was commenced, the St. Louis bank and the receiver reached an agreement, by which the notes were returned to the receiver, and the latter filed them in court for cancellation when the decree herein was taken. This defense, it must be agreed, is extremely technical, so much so that counsel seem to concede that, if all the parties were solvent, this plea would hardly merit attention, but the apology offered for the interposition of this defense is that the insolvency of the corporation destroyed the right to-make a transfer of claims to be used as a set-off. Since we have determined, however, that the street car company is entitled to no affirmative relief against the receiver, it has nothing to lose on this score.

This court held in Key v. Fielding, 32 Ark. 56, that where commercial paper is assigned as collateral, the assignee takes it as trustee of an express trust. Such a trustee, under our statute, may sue in his own name, but the assignor still has an interest in the paper assigned, and he is not an improper party plaintiff in a suit on the paper. If in. this case the St.

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.W. 855, 65 Ark. 543, 1898 Ark. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-electric-street-railway-co-v-first-national-bank-ark-1898.