Davis v. McNair

48 F.2d 494, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 4238
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 1931
Docket5938
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 48 F.2d 494 (Davis v. McNair) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. McNair, 48 F.2d 494, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 4238 (5th Cir. 1931).

Opinion

WALKER, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree sustaining a motion to dismiss a bill in equity the-allegations'of which showed as follows: On July .8, 1929, the appellant, who is herein, called plaintiff, had to his credit the sum of' $35,062.74 on deposit in the savings department of the First National Bank of St. Augustine, Fla., which is herein referred to as the bank. On that day plaintiff went to the-place of business of the bank and made-known his desire to purchase Liberty bonds to the amount of $35,000, par value, in the denomination of $5,000 each, with money he-so had in deposit, and plaintiff then ordered said bonds and offered to draw out his money to the amount then to his credit, and tendered'. his passbook. He was informed at that time-by the bank’s representative that it was not necessary for him to draw out his money,, that the bank would purchase the bonds for-him and charge the price of same to his account. Plaintiff then asked when he could get the bonds, and was told that it would take eight or ten days before the bonds could be-delivered, and that he would be notified when-the bonds arrived. For reasons unknown to plaintiff the bonds were not ordered immediately as he had requested, and were not ordered until the 18th day of July, 1929, on which day the cashier of the bank ordered said bonds by letter, on the office copy of which, retained by the bank, a notation was-made showing that the order and purchase were for plaintiff. Said bonds were ordered in the amount and denomination above stated through the Chase National Bank of the-city of New York, which made due acknowledgment to the bank of the order to purchase said bonds, which said acknowledgment was received by the bank on or about July 22, 1929.

On July 23, 1929, an officer of the bank called an officer of the bond department of *495 the Chase National Bank on long-distance telephone, and was advised that $35,000, par value, of Liberty bonds had been purchased and charged to the account of the bank. The bank by vote of its directors closed its doors for business on July 24, 1929; on or about July 25, 1929, the Comptroller of the Currency appointed T. J. Cottingham receiver of the bank, for the reason that said bank w.as insolvent and unable to pay its just and legal debts. Subsequently the Comptroller of the Currency, under and by virtue of the authority in him vested, appointed R. L. Van Zandt receiver of the hank to succeed T. J. Cottingham, and said R. L. Van Zandt was receiver of the bank at the time the bill of complaint was filed. After the bill was filed, as alleged by plaintiff by way of supplement thereto, the appellee, M. C. McNair, by authority of the Comptroller'of the Currency, succeeded R. L. Van Zandt as receiver of the bank. He is herein referred to as the defendant.

Plaintiff made demand on T. J. Cottingham, .as receiver of the bank, for delivery to plaintiff of said Liberty bonds purchased by the bank for him, and the demand was refused. Plaintiff has since made formal demand in writing on the receiver of the bank for delivery to him of said Liberty bonds, and such demand has been refused, and said Liberty bonds have never been turned over and delivered to plaintiff or any one for him. At the time plaintiff ordered the purchase of said Liberty bonds by the bank, he offered to have entered upon his passbook the charge of the money necessary to pay for said bonds, and thereafter plaintiff would not have been permitted by the bank to withdraw his money from the savings department of the bank had he desired to do so. The president of the bank stated to several persons that plaintiff had drawn out his money and purchased Liberty bonds. Plaintiff did not learn and did not know until after the bank had closed its doors for business, as above stated, that his account in the savings department of the bank had not been charged with the purchase of said bonds, if in fact his said account has not been so charged. Said bonds, purchased as above stated, are being held by the Chase National Bank as security for indebtedness of the bank to the said the Chase National Bank, but plaintiff is without information as to the amount of said indebtedness or as to how much, if any, of said indebtedness is on account of the purchase price of said bonds, or whether said Chase National Bank has a lawful lien upon said bonds. “The plaintiff is now informed that the actual purchase price of said liberty Bonds including earned interest was less than a hundred dollars more than the amount which the plaintiff had on deposit at the time he ordered said Liberty Bonds; that the plaintiff was never advised or informed until after said The First National Bank of St. Augustine closed its doors that the purchase price of said Liberty Bonds was more than the amount of his deposit, and is now without information as to the precise amount of the purchase price of said bonds and the costs and charges attendant upon said purchase, but the plaintiff has always been ready, able and willing to pay over and above the amount he had on deposit in said The First National Bank of St. Augustine whatever might be reasonably due said Bank on account of the purchase price of said bonds and its proper charges in that behalf; and the plaintiff is now ready, able and willing to do equity and so offers.”

The bill, to which the defendant, as receiver of the Bank, by substitution became the sole party defendant, contained prayers that the court decree the right of appellee as such receiver in said bonds to be subject-to a trust in favor of plaintiff, and that in the liquidation of the indebtedness for which said Chase National Bank may have a lawful lien upon said bonds, if any, the right and equity of the plaintiff be preserved, and appellee decreed to discharge said indebtedness from funds in his hands or that may come into his hands, other than said bonds; that plaintiff be decreed to have a lien upon said bonds or their proceeds to the extent of said sum of $35,062.74, the same to be enforced by sale of said bond and/or application of their proceeds to the payment of said sum, and that, if the amount' realized and available be insufficient to pay said sum, then that for the unpaid balance plaintiff be decreed to recover same from the assets of the bank in liquidation; and for such further or other relief in the premises as the nature of the circumstances óf this cause may require and to the court shall seem meet.

By what occurred, as indicated by the above-recited allegations of the bill, when plaintiff arranged with the hank for the purchase of the stated amount of Liberty bonds, the previously existing relation of creditor and debtor between plaintiff and the Bank was terminated, with a result that from that time the balance to the credit of the plaintiff ceased to be subject to be checked on by him in favor of another or others than the bank, and the bank in a 'fiduciary capacity held *496 the amount of that balance to he used only in paying for' the bonds it agreed to buy for the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
48 F.2d 494, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 4238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-mcnair-ca5-1931.