Davis v. Butters Lumber Co.

43 S.E. 650, 132 N.C. 233, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 265
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 24, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 43 S.E. 650 (Davis v. Butters Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Butters Lumber Co., 43 S.E. 650, 132 N.C. 233, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 265 (N.C. 1903).

Opinions

Connor, J.

This cause is before us upon a petition to re-bear filed by the defendant. It was beard at Spring Term, 1902, and the court being of opinion that certain findings or conclusions of fact made by the court were inconsistent and contradictory, ordered a new trial. 130 N. C., 174. The defendant in its petition suggests that by reason of other findings than those referred to by this court, those which were deemed contradictory and immaterial, judgment should have been rendered in this court. The entire record has been argued before us upon the rehearing and we are enabled to [234]*234dispose of the cause without sending it back for further proceedings.

The action is brought by the plaintiff, receiver of the Bank of New Hanover for the purpose of enjoining the defendant from prosecuting a certain action instituted by the defendant against the Bank of New Hanover in the Superior Court of Baltimore City in the State of Maryland. The defendant answered the complaint, and for further answer set up' a counterclaim against the said Bank. The plaintiff replied denying the allegations in regard to the counterclaim. The parties waived a trial by jury and the court found the facts. So far as it is necessary to' the decision of this cause, the facts as found by the court, are:

That the Bank of New Hanover was, on June 19, 1893, and had been for several years prior thereto, conducting a banking business in the city of Wilmington in this State, having been duly chartered and organized; that on said day the bank being insolvent ceased to do' business and in actions properly constituted in the courts of this State the plaintiff was duly appointed receiver of said bank and duly qualified; that the defendant is a corporation duly chartered and organized under the laws of this State and is a citizen and resident of said State; that at various times during the month of June, 1893, just prior to the suspension of said bank, the defendant negotiated and discounted with said bank several drafts drawn by it on one W. M. Burgan of Baltimore, Md., payable to the order of said bank, aggregating the sum of $1,535.85 and the net amount of said drafts after deducting the discount of $4.08 was duly entered to the credit of the defendant as cash on its general account on the books of the bank. The drafts were duly accepted by the said Burgan, the drawee; that thereafter and up to the time of the suspension of the bank, the defendant drew checks from time to time against its account with the bank amounting to the sum [235]*235of $109.87 which, were duly paid by the bant, and at the time of the suspension thereof there was a balance to the credit of the defendants on said books of $1,412.90; that there was no specific agreement by the bank with the defendant that the drafts were taken for collection, but it was agreed to take the drafts and credit them to the defendant’s account, and if they came back unpaid the bank would charge back the full amount to said account and return the drafts, and this was an agreement with all of the customers of the bank. This was because the defendant was liable on the drafts as drawer equally with the drawee Burgan. The defendant bad a right to draw on the proceeds of the drafts after they bad been credited. The defendant understood that the title to the drafts had passed to the bank and that the bank had become its debtor for the net amount of the drafts; that both the bank and the defendant intended at the time when the drafts were discounted that the title thereto should pass to the bank; that the bank was utterly insolvent at the time when it took the drafts from the defendant, and its managing officers were aware of that fact; that after the plaintiff, as receiver of said bank, took charge of its assets, the defendant applied to him to charge against the defendant in said account with the bank the amount of said drafts, and to deliver them up to the defendant that it might collect said drafts of said Burgan for its own benefit, which plaintiff refused to do. The defendant soon thereafter stopped the payment of the said drafts by Burgan and commenced an action in the city of Baltimore, Maryland, against the Bank of New Hanover upon the aforesaid debt of $1,421.90 the said balance of account, and caused an attachment and garnishment to be made upon the debt due to said Bank by Burgan by reason of his acceptance as aforesaid, for the purpose of condemning and subjecting the debt, owing by Burgan to the Bank, to the payment of the debt aforesaid due by the Bank to the defend[236]*236ant, and said action is still pending. The defendant at the time when it brought the suit in Baltimore and attached the proceeds of said drafts, knew that at the time when the drafts were discounted by the bank and credited to its account, the bank was utterly insolvent and that its managing officers were aware of that fact. Burgan has refused to pay the drafts and they remain unpaid. The court upon said findings of fact adjudged that the defendant be perpetually enjoined from prosecuting the suit in Baltimore.

This court was of the opinion and so held that the finding of the court that there was no special agreement that the drafts were taken for collection, but that it was agreed to take the drafts and credit them to the defendant’s account; that if they came back unpaid the bank would charge back the full amount to said account and return the drafts to the defendant, irreconcilably conflicted with the finding that the defendant understood that the title to the drafts passed to the bank and that the bank had become its. debtor, and that the bank so understood the transaction. It will be observed that the court also found that the right of the bank to> charge the amount of the drafts back to the defendant, if unpaid, was “because The Butters Lumber Co. was liable on the drafts as drawers equally with the drawee Burgan.” We do not think that in the light of the conduct of the defendant, in regard to the suit in' Maryland, the said findings materially affect the right of the parties in this action. At the time the bank closed its doors, the drafts had not been returned; on the contrary, they had been accepted and the defendant had drawn against them, and, as found by the court, had a right tO' draw the entire amount and that the bank could not have prevented its doing so. The right of the plaintiff to enjoin the defendant from prosecuting the action in the Maryland Court, so far as he thereby prevented or interfered with the collection of the assets of the bank which passed to [237]*237him as receiver, is well settled. Cole v. Cunningham, 133 U. S., 107. The defendant says that it is immaterial whether the fact be that the bank received the drafts as collecting agent or purchased them outright, for that the court finds that at the time the drafts were deposited or sold, as the case may be, the bank was hopelessly insolvent, and that such insolvency was well known to the managing officers of the bank; that it was therefore by fraudulent concealment that the bank obtained the drafts, and no title passed to it. This proposition is sustained by high authority. St. Louis & S. F. Railroad Co. v. Johnson, 133 U. S., 566, and many other cases.

It is also true that the drafts passed to the plaintiff as receiver subject to the rights of the defendant to demand and sue for them. The plaintiff says that, while this may be true the defendant has elected to treat the drafts as the property of the bank and the bank as its debtor for the balance due it on account, in doing so it has ratified the purchase or taking of the drafts.

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Related

F. E. Lykes & Co. v. Grove
159 S.E. 360 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
43 S.E. 650, 132 N.C. 233, 1903 N.C. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-butters-lumber-co-nc-1903.