Engen v. Merchants & Manufacturers State Bank

204 N.W. 963, 164 Minn. 293, 43 A.L.R. 610, 1925 Minn. LEXIS 1371
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 31, 1925
DocketNo. 24,582.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 204 N.W. 963 (Engen v. Merchants & Manufacturers State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Engen v. Merchants & Manufacturers State Bank, 204 N.W. 963, 164 Minn. 293, 43 A.L.R. 610, 1925 Minn. LEXIS 1371 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Action to recover damages for an alleged fraudulent sale of commercial paper by the defendant to the plaintiff. At the close of the testimony, the trial court directed a verdict for the defendant. From an order denying his motion for a new trial, the plaintiff appealed. The appeal involves the single question whether the court correctly directed a verdict in favor of the defendant.

The Horace State Bank is a small bank, with a capital of $10,000, located at the village of Horace, near Fargo, in the state of North Dakota. O. N. Hatlie was its president. He resided at Fargo and the bank was largely in charge of its cashier. The defendant bank was its Minneapolis depositary and correspondent. When Hatlie went to Minneapolis, it was his custom to go to the defendant bank and transact his business with its president, A. M. Hovland.

The defendant bank was also the Minneapolis depositary and correspondent of the First State Bank of Lansford, North Dakota, of which. Hovland was also president. ,

In December, 1917, the Horace bank had a balanceo! over $50,000 in the defendant bank and desired to invest a portion of it in good commercial paper. Hatlie- called at the defendant bank, saw Hov-land there, and arranged to have about $20,000 worth of such paper sent to the Horace bank. Hatlie left the matter of selecting the paper to Hovland. On December 19, 1917, it was sent by the defendant bank to the Horace bank. It was received by the cashier and entered in the books of the bank, but Hatlie was not at Horace and. did not see it until some time in January.

The paper consisted of notes and a certificate of deposit for $2,000, issued by the Lansford bank, which the bank subsequently paid. The notes were executed by persons residing in the vicinity of Lans-ford, were payable with one exception to the First State Bank of *295 Lansford, and were indorsed without recourse. Accompanying them was a separate guaranty of payment, signed by Hovland and two other persons but not by the bank. The full amount of the paper was $19,699.15. The defendant bank charged that amount against the deposit account of the Horace bank on December 19 and gave the Lansford bank credit therefor.

It appears that the Lansford bank had been carrying the notes, or the indebtedness they represented, for some time. It is claimed that the makers of the notes were unable to pay them, and that old notes had been renewed to make them appear as good current paper, and that the defendant bank, under Hovland’s management as its president, sent them to the Horace bank as good bankable 'paper. It is insisted that Hovland’s representations to Hattie were beyond question knowingly false and made to deceive. The defense is that the transaction was for the benefit of Hovland and the Lansford bank, and that at no time was Hovland acting as the representative of the defendant bank.

The testimony was directed principally to the quality of the paper and to the conversation between Hattie and Hovland when it was purchased. Hattie testified that he understood that he was dealing with the defendant bank, through its president, and that he did not know at the time that Hovland was in any way connected with the Lansford bank, while Hovland testified that he told Hattie the paper would come from the Lansford bank and that he was president of that bank.

When Hattie dealt with Hovland he had a right to suppose, nothing to the contrary appearing, that Hbvland was engaged in transacting business for the defendant bank as its president, and that he, Hattie, was dealing with the defendant bank. At the trial, testimony was introduced which tended to show that the notes in question were practically worthless and that Hovland knew it at the time they were sent to the Horace bank. It appeared that Hovland was interested in the Hovland, Walstead Land Company and in the Hovland, Walstead Farm Securities Company, both engaged in business at Lansford, with offices behind the room occu *296 pied by the Lansford bank; that Walstead was vice-president of the companies and that Nesvik was a salesman employed by the land company. They are the men who joined with Hovland in the guaranty sent to the Horace bank.

The trial court held that it was for the jury to determine whether the defendant bank was liable for Hovland’s acts and representations. Then a question arose as to the legal effect of the guaranty which accompanied the notes. As to that the court held that the guaranty was sufficient notice to the Horace bank that it was dealing, not with Hovland as president of the defendant bank, but with him as president of' the Lansford bank, and accordingly a verdict in defendant’s favor was directed.

■ We are of the opinion that the case should have gone to the jury. Hovland’s statement, if he made it, that he would send good bankable paper to the Horace bank was made by the president of the bank, at his desk in the banking house, and could have but one meaning to a person not knowing that he was connected with any other bank.

Haüie and Hovland agree that no formal guaranty of the paper was expected. The original guaranty was not produced at the trial. Hatlie testified that a later guaranty, received in evidence over plaintiff’s objection, was not a true copy of the original. It was upon this instrument that the trial court based its order for a directed verdict. The instrument reads in part as follows:

“Whereas, J. G. Walstead, J. K. Nesvik and A. M. Hovland on behalf of First State Bank of Lansford, N. Dak. with its principal office at Lansford, North Dakota, hereinafter known as parties of the first part, which said bank wishes to rediscount notes or sell with or without recourse, from time to time to Horace State Bank, Horace, N. Dak. or assigns, hereinafter known as party of the second part; * * *”

Then follows the guaranty which indemnifies the Horace bank against loss on “loans, discounts, credits or other accommodations already made or granted, or which may be hereafter made or granted by the said party of the second part, to the said J. G. Walstead, *297 J. K. Nesvik & A. M. Hovland or 1st State Bank of Lansford, N. Dak.”

The rule which fastens liability upon a corporation for the wrongful and unauthorized act of an officer is not confined to cases where the act is done in furtherance of the business of the corporation. A corporation selects its officers 'and places them in charge of its business. If one of them is unfaithful to his trust, and, while acting within the apparent scope of his authority, perpetrates a fraud on an innocent third party, the corporation is liable, notwithstanding the fact that the officer was really acting for his own benefit and not for the benefit of the corporation. 5 Fletcher, Corp. § 3346; Picha v. Cent. Met. Bank, 161 Minn. 211, 219, 201 N. W. 315, 203 N. W. 617.

In the present case the evidence would justify a jury in finding that Hovland apparently spoke for and represented the defendant bank throughout the transaction, and that Hatlie, as the representative of the Horace bank, was justified in relying upon the apparent authority Hovland assumed to exercise. It would warrant a finding that Hatlie was justified in the belief that the paper his bank was purchasing was paper held by the defendant bank.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 N.W. 963, 164 Minn. 293, 43 A.L.R. 610, 1925 Minn. LEXIS 1371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/engen-v-merchants-manufacturers-state-bank-minn-1925.