Cox v. St. Anthony Bank & Trust Co.

242 P. 785, 41 Idaho 776, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 137
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 242 P. 785 (Cox v. St. Anthony Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cox v. St. Anthony Bank & Trust Co., 242 P. 785, 41 Idaho 776, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 137 (Idaho 1925).

Opinion

*778 TAYLOR, J.

— Plaintiff, appellant, brought this action against the St. Anthony Bank and Trust Company, an insolvent bank, and the state commissioner of finance, to compel classification of a claim against the bank under Sess. Laws, 1921, c. 42, sec. 13, subd. 2; “Debts due by the bank or trust company as trustee or other fiduciary, or other claims of like character,” instead of the classification given it by the commissioner under subdivision 3, “Debts due depositors,” etc. This is an appeal from a judgment affirming the decision of the commissioner.

Appellant specifies as error that the evidence was insufficient to support the findings and judgment of the court that the deposit was general, and that the court erred in not making findings of fact and rendering judgment in his favor.

On October 4, 1919, plaintiff deposited $10,509 in the bank, which failed November 20, 1922. He contends that by agreement, $10,000 of this was deposited to be invested by the bank for him in warrants, and $500 placed to his cheeking account, and that the $10,000 constituted a trust fund, a deposit for a special purpose. The money was commingled by the bank with its general deposits. The lower *779 court found that the money was a general deposit, and not a deposit for a special purpose, and did not constitute a trust fund. It will serve no useful purpose to discuss the evidence as to this alleged trust fund being such, as a deposit for a special purpose, for the evidence is wholly lacking in tracing the fund or any part of it into the existing assets, of the bank or the assets coming into the hands of the commissioner of finance.

Sess. Laws 1921, c. 42, sec. 13, subd. 2, provides for classification of “debts due by the bank or trust company as trustee or other fiduciary, or other claims of like character,” ahead of general depositors in class 3. Former decisions of this and other courts, setting forth the principles governing the tracing and recovery of a trust fund, in the absence of such statute, are of value in arriving at the legislative intent in its enactment, and what if any change was intended thereby.

“One of the recognized rules of construction of statutes is that we are to look to the state of the law when the statute was enacted in order to see for what it was intended as a substitute. No single statute should be interpreted solely by its own words.” (25 R. C. L. 1052, sec. 277.)

“It is not to be presumed that the legislature intended to abrogate or modify a rule of the common law by the enactment of a statute upon the same subject; it is rather to be presumed that no change in the common law was intended, unless the language employed clearly indicates such an intention. It has been said that statutes are not presumed to make any alterations in the common law further than is expressly declared, and that a statute, made in the affirmative without any negative expressed or implied, does not take away the common law. The rules of the common law are not to be changed by doubtful implication, nor overturned except by clear and unambiguous language.” (25 R. C. L. 1054, sec. 280.)

On the establishment of a trust, the ordinary relation of debtor and creditor does not exist, and prior to the enactment of this statute the fact that a failed bank owed one for dissipated or unidentified trust funds did not entitle *780 the cestui que tmist to a preference. (Lusk D. & I. Co. v. Giinther (Wyo.), 232 Pac. 518; Covey v. Cannon, 104 Ark. 550, 149 S. W. 514.) But a violation of trust gives rise to the right to impress a trust on the property of the trustee.

“The true owner of a fund traced to the possession of another has a right to have it restored, not as a debt due and owing, but because it is his property wrongfully withheld from him.” (3 R. C. L. 552, sec. 180.)

This court held in Fidelity State Bank v. North Fork Highway Dist., 35 Ida. 797, 209 Pac. 449, 31 A. L. R. 781, that it would be unconstitutional to take trust property from the cestui que trust and give it to a creditor.

Bellevue State Bank v. Coffin, 22 Ida. 210, 125 Pac. 816, decided in 1912, in the absence of a statute such as Sess. Laws 1921, c. 42, and in accordance with the principles laid down in adjudicated cases, that a trust fund must be traced into the hands of a receiver in order to recover it as such. That decision was followed by Blackman v. Pettengill, 25 Ida. 307, 137 Pac. 182, wherein this court held that the provisions of the law as it then stood “are silent as to preferences among depositors, but class all depositors together; preferences or unequal advantages among depositors are not sanctioned, and .... the statute places all depositors in a class .... ”

State v. Bruce, 17 Ida. 1, 134 Am. St. 245, 102 Pac. 831, L. R. A. 1916C, 1, in treating, however, of a general deposit of state funds in violation of law, with relation to the necessity of tracing trust funds and the proof necessary to show augmentation of the assets of the bank, said:

“We fail to see what difference it can make in point of fact, reason or law whether the money was used in buying bonds, mortgages and other paper to add to the general assets of the bank, or in discharging the debts of the bank. In either event, it adds to or appreciates the body and value of the bank’s assets. If the money is used to-day to pay the bank’s debts and it suspends business to-morrow, the indebtedness of the bank to-morrow will be just as much less than it would otherwise have been as the amount paid out represents.”

*781 In Bellevue State Bank v. Coffin, supra, the court expressly refused to follow that principle, saying: “We are inclined to think, however, that this rule is a little too broad to be applied to the facts involved in this case,” and quoted with approval from Travellers' Ins. Co. v. Caldwell, 59 Kan. 156, 52 Pac. 440, as the rule properly applicable, as follows:

“The fund itself, or something into which it has gone, and which stands as its representative, must be on hand, subject to identification, and separable from the general assets, in order to charge the assignee with the trust; or, if the fund has been so commingled with the general assets as to be incapable of identification or tracing, the estate which came to the assignee must have been augmented or bettered in an appreciable and tangible way, in order to charge it with the trust. The mere saving of the estate, by the discharge of general indebtedness otherwise payable out of it, or the payment of the current expenses of the business, is not an augmentation or betterment of the estate, within the meaning of the rule. If the estate has not been increased by specific additions to it, or if what previously existed has not been improved or rendered more valuable, it has not been impressed with the trust claimed.”

This court in Martin v. Smith, 33 Ida. 692, 197 Pac. 823, followed Bellevue State Bank v. Coffin, supra,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
242 P. 785, 41 Idaho 776, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-st-anthony-bank-trust-co-idaho-1925.