Farmers Exchange Bank Ex Rel. Commissioner of Finance v. Farm & Home Savings & Loan Ass'n

61 S.W.2d 717, 332 Mo. 1041, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 520
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 12, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 61 S.W.2d 717 (Farmers Exchange Bank Ex Rel. Commissioner of Finance v. Farm & Home Savings & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers Exchange Bank Ex Rel. Commissioner of Finance v. Farm & Home Savings & Loan Ass'n, 61 S.W.2d 717, 332 Mo. 1041, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 520 (Mo. 1933).

Opinions

This case comes to this court from the Springfield Court of Appeals on the dissent of one of the judges of that court who deemed the majority opinion affirming the judgment of the trial court for plaintiff to be in conflict with certain decisions of the other Courts of Appeals. This gives us the same jurisdiction as would an appeal direct to this court. The suit is on an ordinary bank check payable to the order of L.H. Garst for $1973.75 drawn on the Nevada Trust Company, a banking institution at Nevada, Missouri. It was drawn and signed by the defendant, Farm Home Savings Loan Association of Nevada, Missouri, a building and loan association of this State, and was given to L.H. Garst, the payee, in settlement of a loan made to him. The plaintiff bank came into possession and claim of ownership of this check in this manner: L.H. Garst, the payee of the check, lived at Marshfield, Missouri, was engaged in business there, and was and had been for several years a customer of the plaintiff bank of that town. On receiving the check in question, dated June 5, 1930, from the defendant, Farm Home Savings Loan Association at Nevada, drawn on a bank of that city, Mr. Garst at once took the same to the plaintiff bank at his home town, indorsed the same in blank, that is, merely wrote his name on the back of the check, and handed it over the counter to the plaintiff bank, together with a deposit slip or ticket made out by himself dated June 6, 1930, to be signed and which was signed by plaintiff bank and returned to him as evidence of the deposit. This deposit slip had written or printed thereon the words "All checks credited subject to final payment. Please indorse and list each check separately." There were appropriate blank spaces on this slip to show the amount deposited of currency, silver and gold, which spaces in this case were left blank, and then followed: "Checks as follows: Farm Home, $1973.75." The word "Duplicate" was written or printed thereon and just preceding the plaintiff bank's signature at the bottom were the words: "This slip is a duplicate of our memorandum of money or checks you have left in our care."

This is all that took place at the time and the question presented by this appeal is whether the title and ownership of this check passed to and vested in the plaintiff bank, or did such bank receive it for collection as the collecting agent of the depositor, L.H. Garst, subject *Page 1045 to certain rights growing out of that agency, but with the general title to the check and its proceeds remaining in the payee Garst. In other words, was the relationship between these parties created by this transaction that of debtor and creditor or that of agency. As having some bearing on this question, it was shown that the plaintiff bank at once, under date of June 6, 1930, placed on its books to depositor Garst's credit the full amount of the check, $1973.75. At the beginning of that day Garst's credit balance in plaintiff bank was $314.66, which was increased by the amount of this check, $1973.75, and checks of Garst were cashed to the amount of $327.33, so that at the end of the day's business Garst had a balance of $1961.08 or $12.67 less than the deposited check. On the next day the plaintiff bank cashed two small checks of Garst amounting to $9.11, leaving his balance in the plaintiff bank $1951.97 or $21.78 less than the amount of the deposited check in question. The plaintiff bank then on June 9, 1930, failed to open for business and was placed in the hands of the Commissioner of Finance for liquidation, by whom it is represented in this litigation. As we have said, the plaintiff bank gave Garst credit for the full amount of this check, $1973.75, at the time of its deposit and allowed him to check out $21.78 of that amount and presumably would have allowed him to check further against this balance had the bank not failed and its assets passed to the liquidating officer. What further happened was that the plaintiff bank had on the day this check was deposited by Garst forwarded same to its correspondent, the McDaniel National Bank at Springfield, with the indorsement thereon "Pay to the order of any Bank, Banker or Trust Co. All Prior Indorsements Guaranteed," and the Springfield Bank, in turn, indorsed this check "Pay to the order of First National Bank, Kansas City, Mo.," and on June 7, 1930, forwarded same to that bank. This Kansas City bank, in turn, forwarded the check for collection to Nevada, Missouri, but with what indorsement or to what institution as collecting agent is not shown. In any event, the check in question was presented to the Nevada Trust Company, on whom it was drawn, and payment was refused on June 10, 1930. Same was duly protested and returned to plaintiff bank with the notation thereon "Protested for non-payment this 10th day of June, 1930." What really happened was that on June 9, 1930, the original owner and depositor of this check, L.H. Garst, learned of the failure of the plaintiff bank and at once notified the drawee of the check, Nevada Trust Company, not to pay the check, and its refusal to pay was based on this instruction. It is apparent, however, that if L.H. Garst, the payee, had passed the ownership and title of this check to the plaintiff bank by his indorsement and deposit of same in the plaintiff bank on June 6, 1930, he had no interest therein and could not stop payment on same. *Page 1046

The previous course of business between the depositor Garst and plaintiff bank throws little, if any, light on the question of whether the bank took this check as absolute purchaser or for collection. The account of Garst with plaintiff bank for two years previous to this time showed a rather small but very active account. On three or four occasions Garst was allowed to overdraw his account for small amounts and not for a very long time. It is not shown that he ever previously deposited checks as so much cash or how checks deposited by him, if any, had been previously handled. For ought that is shown, all his previous deposits in plaintiff bank were of cash.

On behalf of plaintiff, it was shown that after the liquidating officer took charge of plaintiff's assets on June 9, 1930, this check was there and listed and inventoried as an asset of the plaintiff bank; that L.H. Garst never made any claim against the bank for the money represented by this check and that the time for doing so had expired; that the bank records did not show that this check was ever charged back to Garst, but that the bank's books showed a balance of $1951.97 to his credit. We know, of course, that the bank's books could not well have been changed or any transactions had except in an official way after the bank's failure.

As to any "understanding" in regard to the way this check was received or was to be handled, L.H. Garst testified that he made out the deposit slip himself and handed the check over to plaintiff bank and "had no special understanding with anyone about it." He did not say whether he knew or not that the amount of the check was at once credited to his account subject to his right to check on same, but said that he did not then know that, except for this credit, the checks he drew thereon would have slightly overdrawn his account. The then cashier of the plaintiff bank testified that he handled this deposit and transmitted same to the McDaniel National Bank at Springfield for collection. Asked if he had any "understanding" with Mr. Garst that this item was received for collection only, he said: "There wasn't anything said about it. It was handled in the regular way. I presume he had a little book (pass book?). He was given credit for it on the ledger sheet."

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.W.2d 717, 332 Mo. 1041, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-exchange-bank-ex-rel-commissioner-of-finance-v-farm-home-mo-1933.