Commercial Bank v. Atlanta & St. Andrews Bay Railway Co.

162 So. 512, 120 Fla. 167
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 22, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 162 So. 512 (Commercial Bank v. Atlanta & St. Andrews Bay Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial Bank v. Atlanta & St. Andrews Bay Railway Co., 162 So. 512, 120 Fla. 167 (Fla. 1935).

Opinion

Buford, J.

The order appealed from requires the appellant to produce for inspection by the complainant, its agents and attorneys at such reasonable times and not to interfere with the transaction of business of defendant, certain books, documents, records and papers which were specifically described in the order and which books, documents and papers constituted records of account between the Bank and one George A. Barnes.

The suit was one for accounting instituted by the appellee against George A. Barnes and his wife, Jessie G. Barnes, Commercial Bank in Panama City, a Corporation, Roy Van Kleeclc, trading and doing business as Van Kleeck *169 Company, Gulf View Lumber Company, Inc., a Corporation, M. J. Williamson and Commercial Bank of Panama City, a Corporation.

It was alleged in the bill of complaint amongst other things that George A. Barnes was depot agent of the complainant and that he collected fees and charges due to the complainant and receivable by the complainant as a common carrier of freight; that the Bank, through its officials, was cognizant of the position held by George A. Barnes and of the fact that George A. Barnes received the moneys referred to in trust for the complainant; that George A. Barnes deposited large sums of money in the Bank in his own name which sums of money he had no right to deposit there and that the Bank, through its officials, knew that the said George A. Barnes was converting to his own use and embezzling the funds belonging to the complainant; was depositing complainant’s money in the Bank in his own name and drawing out on his personal check for his own use and benefit and that yet the said Bank permitted said practice to continue.

The bill alleges specifically:

“Despite the fact that the plaintiff has requested the said Commercial Bank in Panama City to permit plaintiff to see and examine the depositor’s account of said George A, Barnes with such bank and for information respecting the nature and amount of same during the period of time when the said George A. Barnes was the agent as aforesaid for the plaintiff, said Bank has refused to plaintiff such examination, inspection and information, and the only information which the plaintiff has been able to get from said Bank respecting the account of said George A. Barnes with it was given to one of plaintiff’s officials on or about May 31, 1933, to the effect that the said George A. Barnes had such an *170 account with it, that it had been a very active account, but that he had withdrawn the money to his credit in said Bank except a small sum thereof. For this reason plaintiff is not able to allege the amount of its said money which said George A. Barnes, during the time when he was plaintiff’s agent as aforesaid, so deposited to his own credit in said Commercial Bank in Panama City or Commercial Bank of Panama City and withdrew from said account and used for his own benefit, but on information and belief alleges the amount thereof to be in excess of the sum of $12,500.00. The plaintiff would show this Court that as to this sum which plaintiff has herein alleged to have been misappropriated by the said George A. Barnes through the device of depositing the same in said Bank and withdrawing same on his checks, the allegation in this respect is subject to this exception and qualification and addition, to-wit:

“Not having access to said George A. Barnes’ deposit account in said banks, it does not know whether all the sums of money which said Barnes misappropriated as aforesaid through the use of said banks were actually placed to his credit or not in said Banks, or whether in such instances wherein said Barnes took checks or drafts payable to the plaintiff or payable to himself as agent of the plaintiff, the amount of the same was placed to the credit of the said Barnes in said Banks, or were paid to him in cash, or were otherwise misappropriated by him with the use and facilities of said Banks; that the allegation as to the said sum in excess of $12,000.00 is to be taken as meaning that said Barnes with the facilities which said Banks extended for his use and benefit, misappropriated according to the information and belief of the plaintiff, more than $12,000 of money (or checks or drafts representing money), received and held by said Barnes as agent for and in trust *171 for plaintiff, and this misappropriation and embezzlement of money by said Barnes was accomplished by means unknown to this plaintiff and known to said George A. Barnes and said Commercial Bank in Panama City and Commercial Bank of Panama City, but consisting in said money, or the proceeds of checks or drafts representing money, being deposited to the account of said Barnes in said Banks and withdrawn by him for his personal use and benefit, or by the amount of such checks or drafts being paid to said Barnes in cash by said Barnes, or otherwise being misappropriated, or by a combination of all or any of these methods. Plaintiff alleges that when the Commercial Bank in Panama City and Commercial Bank of Panama City extended to the said George A. Barnes its aid and facilities at and during the period of time' said Barnes was misappropriating said sums of money of the plaintiff in excess of $12,500 as aforesaid, said Banks had knowledge of certain facts, to-wit:” * * *

The bill then alleged that Barnes was a man of limited means, if not entirely insolvent. The bill further alleges:

“That said Banks well knew they had no authority from the plaintiff to cash checks or drafts in the hands of the' said George A. Barnes as agent of the plaintiff, which checks or drafts were payable to the plaintiff or showed on their face to be payable for the benefit of the plaintiff; and the said Banks well knew that the proceeds payable on such checks or drafts represented moneys held in trust for the plaintiff by the said George A. Barnes.

“The plaintiff therefore alleges that the defendants, Commercial Bank in Panama City and Commercial Bank of Panama City, with knowledge that the said George A. Barnes was. misappropriating the money of plaintiff as aforesaid, or, possessed tif such facts that had it exercised *172 the diligence and caution required of it in the conduct of its general banking business would have acquired knowledge that the said Barnes was misappropriating plaintiff’s money as aforesaid, and as a result of its gross negligence, as above set forth, aided and assisted the said George A. Barnes to misappropriate plaintiff’s money as aforesaid, the effect of which constituted collusion between said Barnes and each of said Banks, to the great injury to the plaintiff as herein set forth.”

Other pertinent allegations are contained in the bill of complaint, but these allegations we think it unnecessary to quote for the purposes here involved.

Section 49 of the 1931 Chancery Practice Act provides as follows:

“Section 49. Production of books and writings for inspection or at Trial.

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Related

State v. Dawson
290 So. 2d 79 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1974)
First National Bank of Miami v. Dade-Broward Co.
171 So. 510 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 So. 512, 120 Fla. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-bank-v-atlanta-st-andrews-bay-railway-co-fla-1935.