Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Oklahoma State Bank of Enid

77 F.2d 734, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 4687
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMay 13, 1935
DocketNo. 1126
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 77 F.2d 734 (Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Oklahoma State Bank of Enid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Oklahoma State Bank of Enid, 77 F.2d 734, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 4687 (10th Cir. 1935).

Opinions

LEWIS, Circuit Judge.

Carl R. Jordan went to Enid, Oklahoma, as the agent of Henry L. Doherty and Company in 1926, and remained there in that capacity until September 12, 1928. His business as such agent was to sell shares of stock in companies in which Doherty and Company were interested, principally Empire Gas and Fuel Company and Cities Service Company. His office was in the building occupied by defendant bank, and on the door there was the inscription “Henry L. Doherty and Company, Carl Jordan, Agent.” Jordan opened an account with the bank on October 11, 1926, by depositing $440. In the month preceding he had borrowed $100 from the bank. It knew that Jordan was transacting business with the bank for Doherty and Company as its agent. He gave the bank approximately 150 checks signed as agent, his account being carried part time in his name as agent, but during most of the time in Jordan’s individual name only. During the time here material, Henry L. Doherty and Company held a written agreement with appellant by which for a consideration appellant agreed to indemnify Henry L. Doherty and Company on account of losses due to defaults, if any, on the”part of Jordan as its agent. It suffered such defaults to its damage, and appellant under its said obligation reimbursed Doherty and Company therefor, and then brought this suit seeking recovery against the bank by subrogation to the rights of Henry L. Doherty and Company for the amount so paid to the latter. The case was transferred to the equity side. These are the material facts:

1. On August 3, 1928, Jordan agreed to buy for W. H. Case Cities Service stock. Case bn that day gave Jordan a check for $3749.50 payable to Henry L. Doherty and Company with which to make said purchase for Case. Case delivered the check to Jordan, it being for the agreed purchase price of 57 shares. Jordan by use of a rubber stamp, which he procured, endorsed the payee’s name on the check, wrote his own name thereunder, took credit in defendant bank therefor, but later converted the amount thereof to his own use.

2. Riley Munkres in February, 1928, gave Jordan a certificate of deposit in The Bank of Drummond, Oklahoma, with which Jordan agreed to purchase for Munkres 27 shares Cities Service common stock. Jordan- made the purchase, received a stock certificate for the shares in the name of Munkres, but never delivered the certificate to Munkres. He forged the name of Munkres on the certificate, which authorized its sale, sold the shares through defendant bank, was given credit by the bank for the proceeds of the sale, and it later permitted Jordan to withdraw such proceeds by checks and convert the same to his own use.

3. James H. Andrews and wife owned Oklahoma Gas and Electric Company stock. They delivered to Jordan certificates for said shares in February, 1928, under an agreement with him by which he was to sell those shares and purchase with the proceeds Empire Gas and Fuel Company shares. Jordan sold the Oklahoma Gas and Electric shares as ágreed, and purchased in their names Empire Gas and Electric Company shares with the proceeds. He sold the latter shares through defendant bank after forging the signatures of Andrews and wife thereon, received credit for said proceeds in his account in defendant bank, and by checks against said account appropriated the proceeds for said Empire Gas and Fuel Company shares to his own use.

4. In another transaction Jordan obtained from Andrews ten additional shares in Oklahoma Gas and Electric Company under agreement to sell them for Andrews, which Jordan did, and with the proceeds purchase ten shares Empire Gas and Fuel Company stock, which Jordan did. Thereafter Jordan forged the signature of Andrews on the certificate for said shares, sold them through the defendant bank, which received the proceeds, credited said proceeds to Jordan’s account, and Jordan converted the same to his own use by checks on his account in said bank.

■ 5. John Bangerter had shares of stock in the Oklahoma Gas and Electric Company. In March, 1928, he delivered them to Jordan under agreement to sell them and with the proceeds buy Empire Gas and Fuel Company shares for Bangerter. Jordan sold the Oklahoma Gas and Electric shares and purchased the Empire Gas and Fuel Company shares for Bangerter. Later he forged the name of Bangerter on the certificate for the Empire Gas and Fuel Company shares, sold them through defendant [736]*736bank which gave him credit for the proceeds and checked them out to his own use.

Jordan, in September, 1928, voluntarily confessed his criminal conduct in all these transactions, and was sentenced to the penitentiary, and the proof herein is ample to sustain his defalcations. Doherty and Company made the parties above named whole by carrying out the contracts Jordan had made with them, and, as already said, it was reimbursed by appellant. The court below found the defendant bank not liable. The bank’s cashier at Jordan’s request without making any investigation except to take the word of Jordan certified that the forged signatures of Munkres, Andrews and wife, and Bangerter on their stock certificates were their true signatures. These transactions all occurred in the latter part of Jordan’s term of service at Enid. In each of them he had received the full amount of the purchase money for the Cities Service and Empire Gas and Fuel Company stock, which he purchased for the parties named, but in each case when he sent in the order for the stock he remitted only $5 per share, which was permissible under his employment by Doherty and Company, in which case the remainder of price for the' stock was to be forthcoming when the certificates for shares should be delivered. In remitting the stock certificates to defendant bank a draft on Jordan was attached for the amount of the remaining purchase price. When the bank notified Jordan of the drafts he did not have sufficient funds to take them up. He thereupon borrowed on his notes to the bank sufficient for that purpose, and left with it the certificates for shares as collateral security. The certificates remained with the bank, until it demanded payment of Jordan’s notes, whereupon the bank, with Jordan’s direction or consent, would sell them and credit Jordan with proceeds so he could pay the notes, which he did by checks on the bank, except he did take the Munkres certificate for shares out of the bank, brought it back as collateral to his note, and the shares were sold by the bank to pay his note.

The cashier of the bank testified: That in various instances there would be a bunch of drafts coming into the bank and it would be bad weather and Jordan could not go out in the country to deliver the drafts to his customers. The due date would be upon the drafts and he would have to remit to Doherty and Company for them, and Jordan would put the securities up and borrow enough money to pay the drafts; that Jordan had dozens of loans against which he would put up stock as collateral security for two or three times as much as the loan on them. There was one time they had Cities Service bonds, another time government bonds, and all kinds of stock as security; that if Jordan was unable to take the stock to the customer and deliver it, he would put it up as collateral security for the loan with other securities, borrow enough money to pay the Doherty draft off, leave it on the loan until he could deliver it to the customer and pay the note off; that was the transaction from start to finish.

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77 F.2d 734, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 4687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-deposit-co-v-oklahoma-state-bank-of-enid-ca10-1935.