First Nat. Bank v. Bianca

158 So. 478, 171 Miss. 866, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 9
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1935
DocketNo. 31354.
StatusPublished

This text of 158 So. 478 (First Nat. Bank v. Bianca) 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 v. Bianca, 158 So. 478, 171 Miss. 866, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 9 (Mich. 1935).

Opinion

*870 McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

From an adverse decree the appellant the First National Bank of Memphis, Tennessee, and J. S. Love, state *871 superintendent of banks of Mississippi, in charge of the liquidation proceedings of the Merchants ’ Bank & Trust Company of Indianola, Mississippi, prosecute this appeal.

The appellee, Sam Bianca, filed his petition in the liquidation proceedings of the Merchants’ Bank & Trust Company, 'which bank was being liquidated under section 3817, Code 1930, wherein he alleged that he was entitled to a preference claim, because the proceeds of a certain check were held by the bank in trust for the petitioner. After the hearing of this case had proceeded to a considerable extent, the petition was amended so as to allow the petitioner, Bianca, to enter suit against the First National Bank of Memphis, Tennessee, as his agent in the collection of that certain check.

It was charged in the petition that the First National Bank of Memphis, which we shall hereafter call the Memphis Bank, had collected a certain check which had been forwarded to it by the Merchants’ Bank & Trust Company of Indianola, which we shall hereafter call the local bank, and that the two banks had conspired together to defraud him of the proceeds of the check, in that the Memphis Bank had applied the proceeds thereof to the debt of the local bank.

The decree in this case, after reciting the parties in pleading, uses this language: “Is of the opinion, and doth so order that complainant is entitled to the relief prayed for: It is, therefore, the judgment of this court that the petitioner, Sam Bianca, do have of, and recover from, the defendant, J. S. Love, Superintendent of Banks in charge of the Merchants Bank & Trust Company of Indianola, Mississippi, in liquidation, and the First National Bank of Memphis, Tennessee, incorporated, the sum of five hundred and ninety-nine dollars and fifteen cents, being the sum of five hundred and thirty-five dollars and legal interest thereon, together with six per cent, interest on said sum from this date until *872 paid, and all costs of this suit accrued, and to accrue, on all of which let execution issue as at law. ’ ’ The amended petition sought preference as to the local bank and a money decree against the Memphis Bank.

In stating the facts of the case, we will assume that the." chancellor found from the evidence the following facts: On December 19, 1931, B. B. Allen, of Indianola, an attorney for the appellee, presented a check at the local bank, a copy of which, with the indorsements thereon, is as follows:

“Bank of Clarksdale, 85' — 121— No.---
“Clarksdale, Miss. Dec. 17, 1931.
“Julius Ross Bankrupt.
“Pay to the order of B. B. Allen, Attorney $585.00 five hundred eighty five '& 00/100 dollars for Sam Bianca rent under Sheriff’s Levy, Indianola Store—
“Void after 30 daLys
“Dividend of — per cent.
“Louis Jacobson, Trustee.
“No, 1429.”
On left-hand side appears:
“(No. Protest 85 — 567)
‘ ‘ Countersigned:
“William Schmitt, Referee,
“By-----, Clerk.”
Punched “paid” through center “12/22/31 85 — 121.” On back appears: “B. B. Allen, Atty.”

Stamped:

“Pay to the orde rof Any Bank or Banker, (All prior endorsements Guaranteed Dec. 19, 1931.
“Merchants’ Bank & Trust Co.
Indianola, Miss.
“85 — 567”

Also stamped:

“Mail:
“All prior endorsements Guaranteed: Pay to the order of Any Bank or Banker, Dec. 21, 1931.
*873 “First National Bank 26 — 2—
Memphis, Temí.
“26 — 2— H. Craig, Cashier.”

Allen stated to the acting cashier of the local hank that he had no authority to make a deposit therein for Bianca, whom he represented as an attorney, but that he was entitled to fifty dollars attorney’s fee out of the proceeds of the check, which amount he wanted credited to his personal account; the balance he left with the bank for collection, the money to be paid to- Bianca when the check was collected. Thereupon the cashier handed Allen two deposit slips, one issued to the appellee, Bianca, for five hundred thirty-five dollars, and the other to Allen for fifty dollars. The deposit slip so delivered appeared, in form, to be a regular deposit slip. No notation was thereon that it was a deposit for collection only. On the next day, when Allen delivered the deposit slip to- Bianca, the latter immediately objected, stating that he did not wish to become a depositor of the local bank, and had not authorized Allen, his attorney, to deposit his money there. Upon complaining to the bank that he wanted the proceeds of the check due him to- pay taxes, he was assured by it that the money would be paid to him as soon as the check was collected, and that it Would be treated as a deposit for collection. At the same time, he was told that he could draw a check in favor of the sheriff for his taxes, and that the check would be honored out of the funds when collected. He drew in favor of the sheriff, but the payment thereof was refused.

The check reveals that it was indorsed by the payee, “B. B. Allen, Atty.,” a general indorsement without restriction, and that the local bank so indorsed it. This check, thus indorsed, was forwarded by the local bank to the Memphis Bank, with a number of other checks, and accompanying them was a letter known in banking circles as “collection and credit instructions.” Upon receipt of this check by the Memphis Bank, on December *874 21, 1931, which was Monday, it credited the deposit account of the local bank with the amount of the check, five hundred eighty-five dollars, notifying the local bank to that effect, and forwarded it to the Bank of Clarksdale, at Clarksdale, Mississippi, the drawee. On December 22d it was collected by the latter bank, and remitted by check, drawn on the Memphis Bank, to the Memphis Bank, which upon receipt thereof, on December 23d, charged the Clarksdale Bank therewith; and thereupon the collection of the check became final. The local bank finally closed its doors and did not reopen for business on Monday, December 28, 1931.

Before the local bank closed, the Memphis Bank notified it of the collection of the check in controversy, but the letter containing the notification was not opened by the local bank officials until after the local bank had suspended operation.

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Bluebook (online)
158 So. 478, 171 Miss. 866, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-v-bianca-miss-1935.