Fidelity Nat. Bank of Oklahoma City v. Copeland

1929 OK 167, 280 P. 273, 138 Okla. 19, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 467
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 16, 1929
Docket18250
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1929 OK 167 (Fidelity Nat. Bank of Oklahoma City v. Copeland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity Nat. Bank of Oklahoma City v. Copeland, 1929 OK 167, 280 P. 273, 138 Okla. 19, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 467 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

ANDREWS. J.

The plaintiff in error was-the defendant in the trial court and defendant in error was the plaintiff in the trial court, and they will be so referred to-here.

Plaintiff offered in evidence an agreed statement of facts. The defendant offered in evidence the testimony of one witness.

The court rendered judgment on the agreed statement of facts and oral testimony and found generally in favor of the plaintiff and awarded the plaintiff the suffi of $3,-492.12, with interest thereon at the rate of six per cent, per annum from the 10th day of May, 1923.

The testimony shows that the plaintiff made an application to the F. B. Collins Investment Company, a corporation, for a loan on his farm in Carter county in the sum of $1.500. The written application contained the following language:

“I do hereby appoint the F. B. Collins Investment Company, my attorney, irrevocably, for me. and in my name, place and stead to procure this loan from any person- or corporation; principal and interest payable at such place as lender may direct; my said attorney being hereby authorized by me. to receive and transmit my funds for the payment of interest or of principal on said loan as it may from any cause from time to time become due and payable.”

The company had for a long time been engaged' in the farm loan business in Oklahoma City, its business being that of a loan broker, that is, taking applications for farm-loans and negotiating the loans to divers and sundry persons.

*21 The loan company sold the plaintiffs note and mortgage and received therefor $1,489.25 by a draft payable to the loan company, which draft was deposited, with other items, by the loan company in the defendant bank, and on the. same date the loan company sent the plaintiff a check for the sum of $1,490.12, which was the amount due to the plaintiff after deducting some expenses. When the check was presented to the defendant bank the account had been closed and the check was protested and $2 protest fee was charged. The plaintiff did not receive his money and brought this suit for the recovery thereof.

Before the transaction between the plaintiff and the loan company, the loan company had borrowed from the defendant bank th'e sum of $30,000, which was not due at the time the plaintiff’s check was presented for payment. The $30,000' note provided:

“Said bank or the legal holder hereof is hereby authorized and empowered at any time to apply to the payment of any obligation. liability or liabilities, whether the same be. due or not of the undersigned to said bank or to the legal holder hereof, whether now existing or hereafter contracted and whether or not then due or whether now held or hereafter acquired by said bank, all property, real and personal of every kind and description, including balances, credits, collections, moneys, drafts, checks, notes, bills or accounts, whether on hand or in transit of the undersigned.”

That note was the first business transaction between the loan company and th'e defendant bank. The bank furnished the money and the loan company deposited it in the bank, and that account continued with additions and withdrawals to the time, it was closed as hereinafter set out.

The defendant bank learned of the insolvency of the loan company and applied the balance on hand in the loan company’s account to the indebtedness of th'e loan company to the bank, thereby closing the account. This happened after the issuance of the check from the loan company to plaintiff and before its presentation to the bank. At the time the account was closed there was a balance on deposit in excess of the amount of the check.

This case comes her'e on appeal on seven assignments of error which are presented in the defendant’s brief under four heads, and we will discuss them in the ord'er presented.

1. The money sued for was not a trust fund.

In Fidelity .& Deposit Co. v. Rankin, 3$ Okla. 7, 124 Fac. 71, this court held:

“If a party mixes trust funds with his own, the whole will be treated as trust property, except in so far as he will be. able to distinguish what is his. This doctrine applies to money deposited in banks.”

The loan application, the note and th'e mortgage all constituted one contract. Chas. E. Knox Oil Co. v. McKee et al., 101 Okla. 56, 223 Pac. 880. Under those instruments it is clear that the loan company, acting as agent for the plaintiff, procured for the plaintiff a loan out of which th'e plaintiff was entitled to $1,490.12. This sum was the property of the plaintiff. When the loan company deposited it in the defendant bank, it remained the property of the plaintiff. As was said in Pollock v. Leonard & Braniff, 112 Okla. 276, 241 Pac. 158:

‘‘The depositing of trust money in a bank, although it creates the relation of debtor and creditor between the bank and the depositor, does not change its character, or relieve th'e deposit from the trust. It is not the identity of the form, but the substantial identity of the fund itself, which is the important thing”

—and

“Equity will follow trust money through any number of transmutations, and restore it to the owner so long as it can be identified in its original or substituted form.”

Ther'e is no question but that this money was the. property of the plaintiff and constituted a trust fund in the hands of the defendant bank.

2. If tlhe fund was a trust fund, notice to the bank is an essential element of plaintiff’s case.

This is fully answered by the statement that it is directly contrary to the decisions of this court.

The statutes of Oklahoma, section 7434, C. O. S. 1921, read:

“A banker has .a general lien, dependent on possession, upon all property in his hands belonging to a customer, for th'e balance due to him from such customer in the course of the business.”

This was adopted by this state from t'he territory of Oklahoma.

Section 2 of the Schedule of the. Constitution provides:

“All laws in force in th'e territory of Oklahoma at the time of the admission of the state into the Union, which are not repugnant to this Constitution, and which are not *22 locally inapplicable, shall be extended to and remain in force in the state of Oklahoma until they expire by their own limitation or are altered or repealed by law.”

Section 7434, supra, is identical with section 3212 of the Statutes of Oklahoma 1893. That section was under consideration by the territorial court in Winfield National Bank v. McWilliams, 9 Okla. 493, 60 Pac. 229. In that case “the Winfield National Bank had no knowledge that the defendant claimed any interest in the cheek until after the Farm'ers & Merchants Bank had' failed, and the proceeds of the check had been applied.” That court said:

‘‘We are of the opinion, that even though the Farmers & Merchants Bank was credited on the books of the Winfield National with the amount of the check, the defendant in error is entitled to recover the.

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1929 OK 167, 280 P. 273, 138 Okla. 19, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-nat-bank-of-oklahoma-city-v-copeland-okla-1929.