First Nat. Bank of St. Petersburg v. City of Miami

69 F.2d 346, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3538
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 1, 1934
Docket6795
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 69 F.2d 346 (First Nat. Bank of St. Petersburg v. City of Miami) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit 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 St. Petersburg v. City of Miami, 69 F.2d 346, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3538 (5th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit to charge moneys of a failed bank which has passed into a receiver’s hands, with a trust for the amount of a collection item on itself-sent to the bank for collection and remittance.

When it was here before on the city’s appeal from a decree dismissing the bill on motion, we thought the allegations of the bill *347 sufficient, if proved, 1 and we sent the cause back to be tiied on the merits. City of Miami v. First National Bank of St. Petersburg (C. C. A.) 58 F. (2d) 561. It lias now been tried on that bill.

In defendants’ answer the drawing, the sending, and the marking of the draft paid were admitted. It was admitted, too, that at all times after the receipt of tlie check the bank had in its possession more than $5,000 in cash, and that more than that amount passed to the receiver. It was denied, however, that the bank had actually collected and held any sum of money for payment over to the owner of the draft. It was alleged that there were merely bookkeeping entries in the accounts and on the records of the bank, which resulted not in segregating and setting apart a sum of money to which a trust could attach, but in creating a debit. On the trial it was agreed that the bank did not, on accepting the cheek for $5,000' drawn on it, and marking it paid, segregate and set apart any cash as representing the proceeds. That it merely made entries on its books, charging the account of the drawer, and crediting the First National Bank of Tampa, with the amount of the remittance draft forwarded. The credit balance of the drawer was thereby reduced $5,000, the check was marked paid and delivered to the drawer, and it has never been returned to the complainant. The remittance draft on the Tampa bank was rejected when it arrived, for want of funds.

The District Judge thought the case was proven as it was pleaded, and that a decree for the city was demanded by our decree of reversal. The receiver insists that the city failed to prove the allegations on which our opinion rested, that the bank had actually collected and was holding for it $5,000'. That the agreed statement on which the case was tried shows that there were merely bookkeeping entries by which the debit to the drawer was canceled and a debit to the forwarding bank set up. It argues, therefore, that the conclusion of our former opinion, “The alle-ga! ions of this bill plainly present facts which show that the hank received money of plaintiff’s for a special purpose, to wit, to remit it, to which it was bound to apply it; that it has not so applied it, n,nd that it still has the money. Under such circumstances, equity charges a trust upon the funds in the hands of the receiver,” City of Miami v. First Nat. Bank, supra, at page 565 of 58 F. (2:d), is not applicable here. That the agreed facts establish that the bank did not receive any moneys of plaintiff which it could or did hold in trust for it. That it merely received a check drawn on itself, payable to plaintiff’s order, and by bookkeeping entries “it shifted its liability,” substituting the forwarding bank in the place of the drawer as creditor for the amount of the draft. It insists, then, that our former opinion is not authority for the judgment plaintiff got. It argues further, however, that if it was intended by that opinion to hold more than that -a failed bank which has collected actual moneys in a segregated and identified form for remittance, holds them in trust for that purpose, and that such a trust is en-foreible against the receiver of the hank, the opinion is not a correct statement of the law.

We agree with appellant that the ease proven is not the case alleged, that as proven no case of trust was made out, and that the decree must be reversed. As alleged the draft “was presented to the Petersburg bank for payment and was paid,” as proven there was no payment. The draft was indeed marked paid, but the payment thus evidenced was not in fact the payment of moneys or of any identified or identifiable thing. It was merely a form of bookkeeping; “it was but a shifting of its liability” from tbe drawer to the forwarding bank. Anheuser-Busch v. Clayton (C. C. A.) 56 F. 759, 760. As alleged “said sum of $5,000 thus collected and held for it by the St. Petersburg Bank is still in the possession of the hank and its receiver.” As proven, no sum whatever was collected and held for plaintiff by the St. Petersburg bank to which a trust could attach. In this state of the proof to hold the bank as trustee would be to hold it a trustee not of a thing, but of a claim against itself, a bolding on its face so artificial and unreal as to be impossible. It is true enough that the liability of the bank as debtor was as completely and effectively *348 fixed by the proceeding it went through in this ease as it would have been had the collection been made at the window, and the money deposited with it.

“There are some disadvantages of sending a cheek for collection directly to the bank on which it is drawn, but when such bank performs the dual function of collecting and crediting the transaction is closed, and, in the absence of fraud or mutual mistake, is equivalent to payment in usual course. National Bank v. Burkhardt, 100 U. S. 686, 689, 25 L. Ed. 766, 768. In the present case [which was to hold the bank .as debtor for a deposit] it was as though an officer of the Macon bank had presented the check to the teller of the Nashville bank, and, on receiving the money, had paid it back over the counter for deposit to the credit of the Macon bank.” American Nat. Bank v. Miller, 239 U. S. 520, 33 S. Ct. 883, 884, 57 L. Ed. 1310.

When, however, it is sought, as here, to hold the bank on whom the cheek is drawn not as debtor, but as trustee, it must be made to appear that there was an agreement expressly made or implied in law from the relation, th'at the bank should collect and hold the moneys in trust, and that it actually did so. Proof short of this will not suffice. Nothing more need be shown. We have not held differently in the Miami Case. In that ease we held that augmentation, in the sense of bringing moneys into the bank from outside, was not necessary to charge a collecting bank with a trust for collections actually made. Augmentation by bringing money into the bank from outside, of which so much is made in the federal cases from other circuits, is indeed often significant in determining whether a trust will be declared and enforced, but its significance is only evidential in pointing to and identifying a res. Notwithstanding augmentation, that is, new money coming into a bank, no trust will be raised if the money is collected under the understanding that the collecting bank is to become debtor to the owner of the item. A trust will be raised where whether new money comes in from the outside or not, moneys to which a trust can attach are identified by segregation and setting apart, and there is no agreement that the bank’s agency for collection becomes debtorship for the proceeds. In the Miami Case we rejected the view expressed in Heeker-Jones-Jewell Milling Co. v. Cosmopolitan Trust Co., 242 Mass. 181, 136 N. E. 333, 335, 24 A. L. R.

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Bluebook (online)
69 F.2d 346, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-st-petersburg-v-city-of-miami-ca5-1934.