Commercial Guaranty State Bank v. City of Longview

11 S.W.2d 217
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 20, 1928
DocketNo. 3557.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 11 S.W.2d 217 (Commercial Guaranty State Bank v. City of Longview) 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
Commercial Guaranty State Bank v. City of Longview, 11 S.W.2d 217 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

HODGES, J.

In January, 1926, the Commercial Guaranty State Bank of Longview was selected as the legal depository for the city of Longview. The same bank had been such depository the preceding year. At the time the selection was made in 1926, the city had on deposit with the bank the sum of $41,404.71. In the effort to qualify for depository in 1926, the president of the bank had an agreement with the city manager of Longview and a committee of city officials that, instead of executing a bond with personal security as required by the statute, the bank might pledge government bonds and United States Treasury notes to the amount of $24,400 as security for the city’s deposits. It was agreed that those bonds and notes should be placed in the hands of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, Tex., and by it held in trust for the benefit of the city of Long-view. Some time later the Federal Reserve Bank declined to longer act as such trustee, and by consent of all parties the securities were transferred to the American Exchange National Bank of Dallas, who agreed to hold them as trustee for the same purpose for which they were originally deposited with the Federal Reserve Bánk. On account of a reduction in the amount of the city’s deposits at that time it was agreed that the amount of securities to be held in trust should be reduced to $22,500. Thereafter United States bonds and treasury notes payable to bearer were held by the American Exchange National Bank of Dallas, in accordance with the agreement above stated. On September 29, 1926, the Commercial Guaranty State Bank failed, and its affairs passed into the hands, of the 'banking commissioner for liquidation. At the time the bank closed its doors, it owed the city for deposits the sum of $30,184.57. This suit was later filed by the city of Long-view against the bank, the banking commissioner, and the American Exchange National Bank, to establish a claim against the assets of the Longview bank in the hands of the banking commissioner, and to foreclose a lien on the bonds and treasury notes held by the Dallas bank.

The city pleaded in the alternative that, if the bonds and treasury notes were not subject to the lien asserted, it have judgment establishing its debt as a preferred claim against the assets of the Longview bank, then in the hands of the banking commissioner. As the basis for the preferred claim, the city alleged that the Longview bank had perpetrated a fraud in securing the contract for the city’s deposits while the bank was insolvent. In still another count the city alleged, in substance, that, if the designation of the Commercial Guaranty State Bank as city depository was unlawful because the bank could not qualify as city depository by pledging the bonds and treasury notes, then that the funds of the city placed in the bank constituted a trust fund, and for that reason the city was entitled to a preferential payment out of the assets of the bank.

The answer of the American Exchange National Bank, so far as material; alleged, in substance, that it held the bonds as a mere trustee, or stakeholder, and expressed a willingness to deliver them to the party to whom the court might award them in the trial of the case.

The other defendants answered by general demurrer and general denial, and specially pleaded that J. R. Sparkman, the president of the Longview bank, was not authorized, to pledge the bonds as security for the city deposits, and that Bothwell, city manager for the city of Longview, was not authorized by the city to accept them as such security. They further alleged that the Commercial' Guaranty State Bank did not have the power to secure deposits in that manner, and that the contract pledging its assets was contrary to public policy and void.

H. L. Foster and sixteen other parties intervened in the suit, each filing a separate petition, claiming certain designated bonds and treasury notes among those pledged by the bank to the city. They alleged that they had left those instruments with the bank for safe-keeping only, and that neither the' bank nor Sparkman had any authority to sell or mortgage them for any purpose.

The city of Longview filed a supplemental' petition, pleading estoppel against the in-terveners and other facts necessary to present the issues hereinafter discussed.

The case was tried before the court without a jury, and findings of fact and conclusions of law were filed at the request of the parties.

In addition to the facts previously stated, the court found that the interveners were the legal owners of $17,500 worth of the bonds pledged by Sparkman to the city; that those bonds had been left with the Commercial Guaranty State Bank for safe-keeping only, and that the use made of them by Sparkman, was unauthorized. He further found that the officials of the city of Longview who con *219 tracted for the security were deceived by the false representations of Sparkman as to the ownership of the bonds, and were thereby induced to accept the bonds as security for the city deposits; that, had they known that the bonds were not the property of the bank, they would have withdrawn the city funds and would have selected another depository.

In the final adjudication the court awarded the bonds to the interveners. He also entered a judgment in favor of the city of Longview against the banking commissioner for the amount of money due the city- at the time the bank failed. That judgment was made a preferred claim against the assets of the bank in the hands of the commissioner. The court also allowed an attorney’s' fee of $250 in favor of Coke & Coke, who represented the American Exchange National Bank in the trial of the case.

Two appeals are prosecuted — one by the city of Longview, complaining of the judgment in favor of the interveners for the title and possession of the bonds; and the other by the banking commissioner, who complains of the judgment making the debt due the.city by the Longview bank a preferred claim against the assets in his hands. In the disposition of the case we shall first consider the appeal of the banking commissioner.

The classification of the debt of the city against the bank as a preferred claim was based by the trial court upon a finding that a fraud had been committed by the bank officials in securing the contract for the deposit of the city funds. The court not only found that the bank did not own the bonds pledged as security, but was insolvent at the time the contract of January, 1926, was made. The findings as to the fraud above stated are fully sustained by the evidence. But that fact alone does not entitle the city to a preferred claim against the assets of the bank.

The right to such preference in cases of this character rests upon the .right of the depositor to rescind the contract of deposit and reassert title to the money which the bank obtained by the fraud. He must also be able to trace the money deposited, or that into which it has been converted, into the hands of the banking commissioner. Austin v. Lacy et al. (Tex. Oiv. App.) 2 S.W.(2d) 876; Tyler State Bank v. Shivers (Tex. Com. App.) 6 S.W.(2d) 108, and cases there referred to. Under the facts before us the fraud perpetrated by the officials of the bank clearly entitled the city to a recission of its contract selecting the bank as the city depository ; but the evidence fails to show that any of the funds deposited under that contract passed into the hands of .the banking commissioner. In the Shivers Case above referred to the court said:

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.W.2d 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-guaranty-state-bank-v-city-of-longview-texapp-1928.