Equity Elevator T. Co. v. Farmers M. Bank

250 N.W. 529, 64 N.D. 95, 250 N.D. 529, 1933 N.D. LEXIS 252
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1933
DocketFile No. 6200.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 250 N.W. 529 (Equity Elevator T. Co. v. Farmers M. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Equity Elevator T. Co. v. Farmers M. Bank, 250 N.W. 529, 64 N.D. 95, 250 N.D. 529, 1933 N.D. LEXIS 252 (N.D. 1933).

Opinion

Plaintiff seeks to recover $2000.00 which, it says, was deposited with the defendant between the 19th and 21st days of March 1929 upon an agreement whereby the defendant was to use this money for the purpose of paying drafts drawn by the plaintiff; that the defendant so accepted the deposits but failed to pay the drafts and plaintiff was compelled to pay them, and defendant refuses on demand to return the $2000.00.

The defendant denies such agreement and says the plaintiff deposited this amount in the bank in the usual manner for deposit subject to check; that plaintiff had an account in the bank upon which it drew checks and from time to time these checks were paid as presented; that at the close of business on March 23, 1929 the balance due the plaintiff from the defendant on the checking account was $2190.29; thereafter the bank became insolvent and at a later date was re-opened upon the action of a "large majority of the depositors in said bank" after the removal of undesirable assets and an agreement upon the part of said depositors "to accept a reduction of sixty per cent of his or her deposit," and the appointment of the directors as trustees for the purpose of handling the charged off assets; that it was determined the depositors should receive a certain percentage of their claims at specified periods; that the bank examiner and the Guaranty Fund Commission examined the affairs of the bank and determined that such re-opening was for the best interests of the depositors; that the plan was submitted to the District Court of Burleigh County for its approval and that all of the proceedings were had in conformity with the provisions of "Chapter 99 of the Session Laws of 1927 and particularly paragraph 20 thereof;" and that the plaintiff is bound by the agreement. *Page 97

Plaintiff replied admitting the defendant claimed it was re-opened but denying any knowledge of the plans or arrangements by which it was re-opened. The plaintiff then alleged that the fund deposited was a trust fund given to the defendant bank for the "specific purpose of paying checks and drafts drawn upon it by the plaintiff" and that at all times it had sufficient funds of the bank to repay this trust fund.

The matter was submitted to a jury for a general verdict and for answers to specific questions submitted. The jury found for the plaintiff and that the deposits made by the plaintiff were "made under agreement . . . that the deposits were . . . special trust fund deposits;" that they were special trust fund deposits; and that they were not made in the "usual and ordinary course of banking business for general use and for no special purpose."

The defendant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial, and from the order denying such motion it appeals.

In support of this motion the defendant filed six specifications of error — three being based on rulings of the court and the remainder on insufficiency of the evidence.

The paramount issue is the sufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict.

Just prior to the alleged agreement the defendant and the First National bank transacted business in Sheyenne; the plaintiff was a depositor in the First National bank which closed. Upon its closing the plaintiff transferred its account to a bank in New Rockford and the defendant bank solicited the account. Testimony adduced by the plaintiff is to the effect that when defendant solicited the business he told the president "No, we don't know what effect the closing of the First National Bank will have on your bank, and for that reason we will not open up an account." And the president said "We don't want any of your money. All we want to do is to cash your checks and then each day we will come and get a draft from you;" that in furtherance of this agreement the president and cashier of the defendant bank agreed to cash whatever checks were issued by the plaintiff, keep a separate account of these, tabulate them, present a list of the checks and get the drafts saying "We will even cash those checks for you and then come over and get a draft from you for what amount we have cashed;" *Page 98 and that in pursuance of this agreement practically every night the bank would send over a tabulation, a draft would be issued sometimes for an additional sum to take care of the outstanding checks or checks that were to be issued; and that this continued until the bank closed.

It is the contention of the plaintiff that the drafts involved were drawn and delivered under this agreement and not applied to that purpose.

In the examination of plaintiff's manager the pass book issued by the defendant bank was introduced and the witness testified that the entries did not represent bank deposits but drafts deposited "to take care of checks they had cashed for us in the bank, all those items;" that they were not deposits as a matter of fact; that the deposits were not made just for the purpose of balancing an account but for the specific purpose claimed; that when he gave the drafts involved he had gone to the bank to get money to pay these particular checks which the defendant at that time was holding. Timely objection was made that the questions called for a conclusion of the witness and that the line of questioning was an attempt to vary the terms of a written contract by parol evidence. There was no error in overruling such objections. The entries in the pass book were made by the defendant and showed the date and amount, but not the nature of the deposit nor the agreement under which it was made. It was proper for the plaintiff to show why it issued drafts and delivered them to the defendant. No reversible error is shown in the rulings.

"Where a person makes a deposit in a bank for the specific purpose of meeting certain checks to be thereafter issued, the bank on accepting the deposit becomes bound by the conditions imposed, and if the money so deposited is misapplied it can be recovered as a trust fund." Morton v. Woolery, 48 N.D. 1132,189 N.W. 232, 24 A.L.R. 1107. Where money is deposited in a bank under an agreement with the bank that such money is to be used for a specific purpose and the bank without the consent of the depositor permits it to be used for some other purpose the bank is liable therefor. Merchants Bank v. Schatz, 59 N.D. 365,230 N.W. 18.

The testimony for the plaintiff shows that in issuing a draft plaintiff added to the amount of the checks already cashed certain sums for the *Page 99 purpose of paying checks outstanding or to be cashed, no drafts were issued for the purpose of having a general deposit subject to check and all were issued for the specific purpose of being applied to certain checks issued or to be issued. Clearly, if this testimony be correct, the amount of the drafts involved became a trust deposit.

The testimony for plaintiff is not undisputed, but there is evidence to go to the jury in support of this contention, which if believed is sufficient to sustain a verdict for the plaintiff.

Defendant received the proceeds of the drafts involved and did not use them to pay the checks, but closed almost immediately thereafter.

There being evidence to sustain the verdict the court was not in error in refusing to grant judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Such order is made only when the verdict is not justified by the evidence and there is no reasonable ground for believing the defect can be remedied. See Donahue v. Boynton,62 N.D. 182, 190, 242 N.W. 530

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250 N.W. 529, 64 N.D. 95, 250 N.D. 529, 1933 N.D. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/equity-elevator-t-co-v-farmers-m-bank-nd-1933.