Cross v. Amoretti

9 P.2d 147, 44 Wyo. 175, 84 A.L.R. 140, 1932 Wyo. LEXIS 13
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1932
Docket1715
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 9 P.2d 147 (Cross v. Amoretti) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cross v. Amoretti, 9 P.2d 147, 44 Wyo. 175, 84 A.L.R. 140, 1932 Wyo. LEXIS 13 (Wyo. 1932).

Opinion

*177 Bltjme, Justice.

This is an action by plaintiff Edith Cross against Amoretti, Welty, Helmer & Company, a partnership, and against the individual surviving partners and against the receiver of the partnership. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, from which the defendants appeal.

The partnership above mentioned conducted a privately owned bank at a small place, named Dubois, in this state, with a capital of $10,000.00, doing business from 1913 or 1914 to about the middle of 1927. E. B. Helmer, one of the partners, had the active and apparently exclusive management of the bank. He died in the year 1927, and shortly thereafter the bank was found to be insolvent, and the State Examiner of this state took charge of its affairs under the laws of this state. The plaintiff herein claims that she loaned the partnership the sum of $3000 on January 11, 1923, and the sum of $1000 on January 15th, 1923, at interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum, and in her petition bases her claim upon an express contract, stating in her first cause of action:

*178 "On January 11, 1923, plaintiff, at tlie request of said copartnership, loaned Amoretti, Welty, Helmer and Company the sum of $3000, which said loan said company promised to repay on demand with interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent per annum, payable semi-annually.”

The second cause of action is stated in the same language, differing only in the amount and the date.

Over the objection of the defendants., plaintiff was permitted to introduce her day book and ledger, showing a charge against the partnership of the foregoing- amounts on the dates above mentioned, and showing interest items paid. Her pass-book — issued by the bank — showed credits for interest payments at intervals of about six months, till the summer of 1927. Her day book in two places showed interest payments of $160, each on anote "at Amoretti, Welty & Helmer,” and in one place an interest payment "on note of Helmer. ’ ’ In other places the items of $160 each were not identified, except as "interest,” and except that in two places there is indication that the amounts were paid "by Amoretti, Welty & Helmer.” Plaintiff also had two slips of debit items, shown to be in Helmer'’s handwriting. One of these reads:

"DEBIT Mrs. Edith Cross Investment Funds Amoretti, Welty, Helmer & Co. Dubois, Wyoming
Date Jan 11 1923 $3000.00
Authorized by Mrs. Cross.”

The other is dated January 15, 1923 and is also for $3000.00, but that is probably a clerical mistake, and should be $1000.00. The books of the bank show no loans made to the bank. Other facts are shown by a stipulation entered into by counsel for the respective parties, which is as follows:

*179 “It is stipulated by and between the parties Plaintiff and Defendants that the books of the Defendants Amoretti-Welty-Helmer and Company Bank show that on January 11, 1923, and January 13, 1923, the sum of $3,000.00 and $1,000.00, respectively, was withdrawn from the account of the Plaintiff, Mrs. Edith Cross, in the Amoretti-Welty-Helmer .Company Bank, by E. B. Helmer, who at that time made out the debit slips, Plaintiff’s Exhibits 5 and 6, and mailed them to Mrs. Edith Cross; that said books show that on the same day said E. B. Iielmer placed the said $3,000.00 to the credit of E. B. Helmer, special account in said bank, and there is no further record of the $1,000.00; that the books of the bank show that no part of said $4,000.00 was ever credited to the bank or to its general fund; that subsequent to January, 1923, and on June 23rd, 1923, December 28th, 1923, and periodically thereafter at six months intervals, to and including June 22nd, 1927, the sum of $160.00 was paid from the E. B. Helmer special account in said Amoretti-Welty-Helmer & Company Bank, which was interest on the said $4,000.00 at 8 per cent, and was credited to Plaintiff, Mrs. Edith Cross’ account in said bank; that said bank on January 11th, 12th and 13th, 1923, had on deposit in various other banks a sum in excess of $35,000.00. ’ ’

According to plaintiff’s testimony all the dealings were with Helmer and with no other member of the partnership.

The court rendered judgment for the plaintiff, from which an appeal has been taken. Numerous errors are assigned, among which are that the judgment is contrary to the evidence, and contrary to law, and that the court erred in admitting plaintiff’s account books in evidence. We have not been favored with a brief on behalf of the plaintiff.

1. It is contended by appellants that the transactions here shown were private transactions between the plaintiff and Helmer, and not transactions with the bank or the partnership. And it is argued that Helmer had no authority to bind the bank, particularly in view of the fact that, as is claimed to be indicated by the evidence, the transactions were for his individual interest and not that of the bank. While not necessary for the disposition of this case, it may *180 be well, in order to prevent misapprehension in the future, to call attention to the fact that counsel have evidently-overlooked some well settled principles of law. In the first place, it must be remembered that the authority of one who holds a dominant position in a, bank, as Helmer did in the case at bar, cannot be judged by the same standard as in other cases. That was pointed out by this court in the ease of Commercial Bank and Trust Co. v. Hauf, 32 Wyo. 127, 230 Pac. 539, where many authorities are cited, and where it was held that knowledge of an agent is imputed to his principal notwithstanding the fact that the agent is acting adversely to his principal, where the agent is the sole acting representative of the principal in the transaction.

Now a bank has authority to borrow money. Lander State Bank v. Nottingham, 37 Wyo. 50, 259 Pac. 181, 7 C. J. 592, 3 R. C. L. 450. The case of Western National Bank v. Armstrong, 152 U. S. 346, 14 Sup. Ct. 572, 38 L. Ed. 470, cited to us, was very much modified, if not entirely repudiated, by later decisions, as pointed out in Lander State Bank v. Putnam, 40 Wyo. 312, 276 Pac. 926. Helmer was the cashier, general manager and sole representative of the bank and of the partnership, and he had, under these circumstances at least, the right to represent the bank in borrowing money. 4 Mitchie, Banks and Banking, p. 133. And if it were shown herein by competent evidence that Helmer assumed to act for the bank in borrowing money for it, the fact that the money was misapplied by Helmer, either considered as agent of the bank, or as a partner, would not abridge the right of a lender in good faith to hold the bank. 14a C. J. 449; 47 C. J. 865; Citizen’s Bank v. Receiver, 126 Ky. 169, 31 Ky. L. 365, 103 S. W. 249, 11 L. R. A. N. S. 598 and note. In State Bank v. Bank, 118 N. Y. S. 641, 645, it was said:

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Bluebook (online)
9 P.2d 147, 44 Wyo. 175, 84 A.L.R. 140, 1932 Wyo. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cross-v-amoretti-wyo-1932.