First Nat. Bank of Laurel v. Johnson

171 So. 11, 177 Miss. 634, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 268
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1936
DocketNo. 32434.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 171 So. 11 (First Nat. Bank of Laurel v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Nat. Bank of Laurel v. Johnson, 171 So. 11, 177 Miss. 634, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 268 (Mich. 1936).

Opinion

Griffith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

For many years appellant bank has maintained an investment department, and for several years, and up to the time of his death in the spring of 1933, Mr. C. H. Ferrell, assistant cashier, was in immediate charge of that department. From time to time appellee, then a customer of the bank, had purchased investment bonds *639 through Mr. Ferrell, and particularly on April 2, 1924, he purchased through him, and the bank, bonds of the Pacific Spruce Corporation to the amount of six thousand dollars, the bonds bearing interest at six and one-half per cent., payable semiannually. These bonds were kept by appellee in a private box in the safety deposit vault of the bank.

On April 1, 1931, appellee took from the said bonds the interest coupons due on that day and deposited them to his account in the bank. The coupons having been forwarded by the bank for collection, they were returned to the bank on April 14, 1931, uncollected, and with the information that the Spruce Corporation had defaulted in its bonds, and that its affairs were in such condition that a bondholders’ protective committee had been organized, and it was suggested that all bondholders forward their bonds to that committee. On this same day, the bank mailed a registered letter, addressed to appellee, returning to him the coupons and advising appellee of the above-mentioned information which it had received. This registered letter was delivered to a son of appellee sometime during the day of April 16, 1931.

According to the version of appellee, he was leaving his home in Laurel, on the morning of April 16, 1931, for a short trip to Florida, and that he went to the bank as soon as it opened that morning in order to draw from his checking account the expense money for the trip; that as soon as he entered the bank he was accosted by Mr. Ferrell who urged him to make an additional investment in the Pacific Spruce Corporation six and one-half bonds; and in his declaration appellee avers that Ferrell represented the bonds as being as good as the bank and even better than government bonds; that ap-pellee had not then received or seen the letter about these bonds, registered to him by the bank two days theretofore, but believing and relying on the represen *640 tations of F'errell, he agreed to purchase bonds in said Spruce Corporation in an additional amount of six thousand dollars face value; that he and Ferrell then immediately went to the safety deposit vault of the bank and that appellee took from his private box therein currency in the sum of six thousand dollars, which he delivered to Ferrell, who then put the money “in the other vault, the big vault in the bank.”

His version is further that Ferrell stated to him that the bonds were not then immediately in hand for delivery but would be in a few days, and that to evidence the transaction, Ferrell executed and delivered to him the following receipt:

“Laurel, Miss. 4/16/31.
“Received of J. J. Johnson Six Thousand Dollars For
Pacific Spruce Corp. 6½ Bonds--
“$6,000.00 C. H. Ferrell, A/C.”

Appellee states further that upon his return from Florida in about ten days, he received and for the first time saw the registered letter of April 14, and that he immediately went to the bank and challenged Mr. Ferrell upon the transaction and demanded the return of his money, but that Ferrell put him off by the representation that the bonds had been received and had been forwarded to the bondholders’ protective committee who would see to it that everything would be all right. He states that several times thereafter he mentioned the matter to Mr. Ferrell, who gave, in effect, the same excuse. He admits that he did deliver the six thousand dollars in bonds of the admitted original purchase to Ferrell to be forwarded to the bondholders’ protective committee and that Ferrell delivered to him the written acknowledgment thereof by the committee under date May 8, 1931, the acknowledgment specifically naming the bonds by numbers, which numbers were those of the purchase of April 2, 1924. Appellee admits also that he never at any time mentioned the matter to any offi *641 cer of the bank, other than Ferrell, either before or after the death of Ferrell. Suit was not filed until March 30, 1936, and was for six thousand dollars with interest from April 16, 1931.

The bank filed the plea of the general issue, and a special plea of the three-year statute of limitations. Ferrell being dead, the bank was obliged to depend largely upon the evidence of the attendant circumstances; and the theory of the bank’s defense, other than the statute of limitations, was that appellee had received the letter of April 14, 1931, before he came to the bank on April 16, 1931, and that what he did was that he went to his private bank box in the safety deposit vault, procured the six bonds of one thousand dollars each, already for seven years owned by him, and delivered them to Mr. Ferrell to be by him forwarded to the bondholders’ protective committee, which was done as evidenced by the committee’s receipt already mentioned; and that it was to evidence the delivery to him by appellee of the said bonds that Ferrell issued the quoted receipt. The bank kept a daily safe deposit vault record showing the hour and minute of each day when a customer entered the vaults; and this record shows that appellee entered the vault and box 718 therein at two twenty-five and two thirty-five p. m. of April 16, 1931, and at no other time that day. The bank records further show that no such sum as six thousand dollars was found in its unaccounted cash on that day or subsequently thereto, as would have been inevitable had this money been delivered in the bank’s general banking vault on that day, as appellee states was done, and that there was never at any time any paper of any kind in the bank which would evidence or point to any such transaction as contended for by appellee.

Enough has been stated of the facts to present sharply the inquiry: What does the receipt, above quoted in exact words, mean, looking alone to the face of the receipt *642 and without the aid of anything by way of parol? Does it mean so viewed, that it was a contract to procure and deliver to appellee six thousand dollars in six and one-half per cent, bonds of the Pacific Spruce Corporation, or does it mean that appellee had delivered to the bank six thousand dollars in such bonds and that this was a receipt to evidence the delivery? Or rather than either of the above, does it not mean, looking alone, as we say, to the words of the receipt, that the bank had delivered to appellee the bonds mentioned and that appellee had paid for the same? Does it evidence a transaction to be completed in the future or one already completed? If it evidenced a completed transaction, it carried neither an acknowledgment of an indebtedness nor an obligation to pay, and the three-year statute of limitations would apply (Code 1930, sec. 2299).

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Bluebook (online)
171 So. 11, 177 Miss. 634, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-laurel-v-johnson-miss-1936.