Dugan v. Security Savings Bank of Perry

217 N.W. 831, 205 Iowa 171
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 7, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 217 N.W. 831 (Dugan v. Security Savings Bank of Perry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dugan v. Security Savings Bank of Perry, 217 N.W. 831, 205 Iowa 171 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

It appears without dispute that tbe appel- . lant, George J. Dugan, was tbe attorney for tbe administrator with tbe will annexed of tbe estate of John Charles White, and was also an agent or representative of tbe Western Surety Company. It also appears that it was in contemplation that a loan was to be made upon tbe property of tbe White estate, to prevent tbe sale of real estate to pay debts. In tbe negotiations for tbe loan, it became necessary for tbe representatives of tbe estate to furnish a bond. Tbe bond appears to have been executed by Dugan, as the representative of tbe Western Surety Company. Before doing so, however, be required that the payment of tbe premium therefor be secured. This was done, after some adjustment of tbe amount by tbe deposit by the heirs of tbe White estate of tbe amount of tbe premium, $314.53, with tbe Security Savings Bank, for which certificate of deposit or cashier’s cheek was issued. This was held by Dugan, pending tbe completion of tbe loan and tbe delivery of tbe bond.

On the. day that tbe bank closed its doors, but before that event, and while it was still transacting business as a going concern, Dugan, through a representative, demanded payment of tbe $314.53. His representative was induced by tbe officers of tbe bank to leave the amount in tbe bank on special deposit, and to accept the following certificate:

“Security Savings Bank

“Perry, Iowa, Jan. 24, 1925 “No. 5214.

“Geo. Dugan, Trustee, has deposited in this bank Three Hundred Fourteen and 53-100. ...Dollars $314.53

“Payable to tbe order of himself as trustee in current funds on tbe return of this certificate properly endorsed. Special deposit as per notation on back.

“H. N. Graves, Cashier”

*173 On the back of the instrument appears the following:

‘ ‘ This amount of $314.53 is a special deposit and paid into this bank for the express purpose of paying the premium of a bond of Western Surety Co. to Annis & Holding in John White estate and said funds are a special deposit for said purpose and preferred claim for the above amount.

“Security Savings Bank, “By H. N. Graves “Cashier.”

It also appears, as shown by the books of the bank, that there was cash on hand in the bank on that day in the sum of $1,318.53; and there is no dispute but that this amount came into the hands of the receiver.

I. Although it appears without dispute that the officers of the bank were familiar with the entire transaction, and knew that the purpose of the original deposit was to pay the premium on the bond, it is clear that the bank, prior to the issuance of the instrument above set out, assumed no duty with respect to the deposit other than to pay the amount thereof to Dugan, or on his order, on return of the certificate or cashier’s check. It was, prior to that time, a general deposit, and the relation of the bank was not changed by the fact, or knowledge on the part of the officers of the bank, that Dugan was holding the money as trustee. Officer v. Officer & Pusey, 120 Iowa 389.

II. To entitle the appellant to a preference, it must appear (1) that the bank held the money as trustee, and (2) that the funds of the bank were thereby augmented, and so passed into the hands of the receiver.

It is a well established doctrine that if, from the nature of the transaction, it appears that the relation of a claimant and a bank is that of principal and agent, the money of the claimant is held by the bank as trustee, and the claimant is entitled to a preference, on the insolvency of the bank, upon a proper tracing of the money into the hands of the receiver. Nurse v. Satterlee, 81 Iowa 491; Whitcomb v. Carpenter, 134 Iowa 227; Messenger v. Carroll Tr. & Sav. Bank, 193 Iowa 608.

It is also well settled that a special deposit, or a deposit for a specific purpose, creates a trust relation, as between the depositor and the bank, which will entitle him to a preference. *174 Officer v. Officer & Pusey, supra; Hudspeth v. Union Tr. & Sav. Bank, 196 Iowa 706 (31 A. L. R. 466), and cases cited in note in the latter publication. See, also, 7 Corpus Juris 631, 751.

Here the character of the deposit as special was recognized, the purpose for which the money was to be used was designated, and the right of the depositor to a preference was secured by the express terms of the certificate issued by the bank, the written contract between the parties. The basic fact upon which a preference must be predicated,' — the existence of a relation of trust between the bank and the claimant, — could not be more definitely and certainly established.

III. The question remains whether the funds in the hands of the bank were augmented by the transaction. It cannot be doubted that, if the appellant had passed the cash over the bank’s counter, 'and received the certificate in question, and the bank had mingled the amount with its funds, there would have been such an augmentation of the latter that a right to enforce a preference would have existed. Did the fact that the amount was already on general deposit in the bank, and represented by a certificate of deposit or a cashier’s check, which was surrendered at the time the certificate in question was issued, work such a change in the situation as to require us to say there was no augmentation of the funds in the hands of the bank?, The query is answered by the doctrine laid down in Messenger v. Carroll Tr. & Sav. Bank, supra.

In that case, as in this, two questions were presented: the one having to do with the relation of the parties in respect to the fund, and the other, with whether the funds of the bank had been augmented. The claimant had sent to the bank for collection a sight draft drawn on one who had a deposit in the bank. The sight draft was paid to the bank by a check on the depositor’s account at the bank. The bank undertook to remit the amount so collected by its draft on its Chicago correspondent, but the draft was not paid because of the failure of the drawer bank. It was held that the relation between the claimant and the bank was that of principal and agent. This resolved the first question in favor of the claimant.

In respect to the second, and to the payment of the claimant’s sight draft to the bank by a check on the drawee’s account at the bank, we said:

*175 “That this method of collection was the full equivalent of the payment of money by the Swaney Company [the drawee], and served to the augmentation of the assets of the bank in precisely the same manner as the delivery of currency would have done, is held in the following authorities * * * [citing cases]. We deem it clear that the net result of the transaction of payment by the-Swaney Company and the receipt thereof by the collecting bank wás the same as though the Swaney Company had drawn the currency into its own hands by means of check, and had thereupon delivered the same to the collecting bank in payment of the sight draft. Such is the holding of the cited cases.”

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Bluebook (online)
217 N.W. 831, 205 Iowa 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dugan-v-security-savings-bank-of-perry-iowa-1928.