County of Hettinger v. Trousdale

288 N.W. 25, 69 N.D. 505, 1939 N.D. LEXIS 178
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1939
DocketFile No. 6605.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 288 N.W. 25 (County of Hettinger v. Trousdale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of Hettinger v. Trousdale, 288 N.W. 25, 69 N.D. 505, 1939 N.D. LEXIS 178 (N.D. 1939).

Opinions

Morris, J.

This is an action by Hettinger county against the sureties on bonds given to secure deposits of county funds in the closed First National Bank of Mott. On March 4, 1933, the county had on deposit in this bank the sum of $146,089.72 secured by two depository bonds of $60,000 each executed by the defendants as sureties. On the above date the bank was closed by Proclamation of the President of the United States. It was first placed under the control of a conservator. It never reopened for regular business and a receiver was appointed by the Comptroller of the Currency of the United States on April 23, 1934. In May, 1934, a dividend of 75 per cent was paid to the depositors. It is undisputed that the county received all of this dividend. The final dividend was paid about July 1, 1935, and shortly thereafter the receivership was closed. The disputed facts in this case hinge upon the payment of the second and final dividend. The defendants claim that this dividend was 25 per cent and was actually paid to and received by the county treasurer who receipted therefor; The county claims that it received only a dividend of 15 per cent and that the defendants are liable upon their depository bonds for the balance of 10 per cent of the deposit which amounts to $14,608.97. The trial court found for the defendants. The county appeals and demands a trial de novo. Eecords of the receivership submitted at the trial consist of the receiver’s certificates upon which are indorsed a first dividend of 75 per cent and a second dividend of 25 per cent; a waiver of all interest that might have accrued in favor of the county since the closing of the bank; receipts showing payment of the first dividend of 75 per cent, and receipts showing payment of “a final dividend of 25 per cent.” All receipts were signed by the county treasurer. In addition to these documents, the record discloses checks of the comptroller of the currency designated “second (final) dividend The First National Bank of Mott, North Dakota” payable to Hettinger county for amounts *507 'equalling 25 per cent of the county’s deposits which checks áre indorsed by the county treasurer.

The county contends that despite the showing made by these documents that it actually received but 90 per cent of its deposits and in support of this contention produces trust certificates issued by a depositors’ committee consisting of three members, one of whom is the defendant, R. E. Trousdale, which certificates aggregate 10 per cent of the amount of the county’s deposits. These certificates recite that Hettinger county is a creditor of the trust created by the liquidation of the Eirst National Bank of Mott and that the certificates are payable out of the liquidation of the assets of the trust. All certificates are dated July 1, 1935.

The county treasurer testified at some length regarding the transaction wherein he surrendered the receiver’s certificates of the county, signed receipts for the final dividend of 25 per cent, and indorsed the comptroller’s checks. TIis testimony is that all of this took place in the office of the receiver and that he left all of these instruments lying on the receiver’s desk after he signed them.

At the time this transaction took place the receiver’s office was in the bank building that had been occupied by the closed institution. This building was then occupied by a new bank known as The Eirst National Bank in Mott, which had purchased a part of the assets of the defunct institution. It was largely with the proceeds of this purchase that the receiver paid the first dividend of 15 per cent. The testimony of the cashier of the new institution, William Mitchell, and the deputy ■receiver, witnesses for the defendants, 'differs materially from that of the treasurer as to the manner in which the transactions dealing with the payment of the final dividend were handled. According to the deputy receiver, the county treasurer came to his office on the 29th clay of June, 1935, pursuant to a notice given either by mail or by telephone, and surrendered the county’s receiver’s certificates and signed receipts for the final dividend of 25 per cent. The checks issued by the comptroller for this dividend were turned over to the treasurer who took them and went into the portion of the building occupied by the Eirst National Bank in Mott. Mr. Mitchell testifies that the county treasurer brought the comptroller’s dividend checks into the bank and there indorsed them and said that he wanted drafts for three fifths of *508 the amount and that the other two fifths were to go to the depositors’ committee. After the checks were indorsed by the treasurer they were cashed through the ordinary course of banking business. Two fifths of the proceeds were deposited to the credit of the depositors’ committee and drafts payable to TIettinger county or to the various funds to which its deposits were allocated, were issued. They were deposited 'in the Bank of North Dakota. Mr. Mitchell further testifies that after he had completed the deposit slip for the depositors’ committee, that the treasurer asked for some trust certificates. It appears that R. E. Trousdale had the trust certificates already made out in an office on the same floor but off from the banking room. Mitchell communicated the county treasurer’s request to Trousdale who produced the certificates.

It appears that interested parties had been negotiating for some time for the closing of the receivership. On December 10, 1934, the county commissioners of Hettinger county adopted a resolution approving a plan whereby all depositors of over $100, including' the county, would accept a dividend of 15 per cent of their deposits which added to the 75 per cent already paid would make a total payment of 90 per cent for which the creditors would release the bank and the receiver, and that the remaining assets of the bank would be liquidated by a committee who would issue trust certificates or other instruments evidencing the balance of 10 per cent still due the creditors, which resolution contained the following: “It is further provided that this Resolution and release of the bank shall not in any shape, form or manner constitute or operate as a release of any of the sureties of the depository bonds, for the remainder of such deposits.”

On December 13, 1934, the defendants signed and consented to this resolution in the following language: “We, the undersigned, sureties oil the depository bonds covering deposit of Hettinger County and the County Treasurer of Hettinger County, in the First National Bank of Mott, do hereby consent to that certain Resolution of the Board of County Commissioners of Hettinger County, enacted and passed on the 10th day of December, 1934, pertaining to the liquidation of the First National Bank of Mott, and the discharge of the receiver thereof, copy of which resolution is hereto attached and made a part of this consent,”

*509 The defendants contend that the terms of this resolution were never carried out; that its plan was abandoned, and that the agreement has no bearing upon the transactions resulting in the closing of the receivership and the payments to the county, the issuance of the trust certificates, and the discharge of the receiver.

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Related

Gunsch v. Gunsch
67 N.W.2d 311 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1954)
Rovenko v. Bokovoy
45 N.W.2d 492 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1950)
Remmich v. Wagner
41 N.W.2d 170 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1950)
Arhart v. Thompson
26 N.W.2d 523 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1947)
County of Hettinger v. Trousdale
5 N.W.2d 417 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
288 N.W. 25, 69 N.D. 505, 1939 N.D. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-hettinger-v-trousdale-nd-1939.