First National Bank in Frederick v. Whitelock

1937 OK 678, 74 P.2d 355, 181 Okla. 431, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 195
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 23, 1937
DocketNo. 27583.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1937 OK 678 (First National Bank in Frederick v. Whitelock) 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
First National Bank in Frederick v. Whitelock, 1937 OK 678, 74 P.2d 355, 181 Okla. 431, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 195 (Okla. 1937).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

The defendant had approximately $600 on deposit in a bank. He issued to Various persons who are not parties to this action a large number of checks, totaling an amount far in excess of the deposit. A sufficient number of these cheeks to exceed the deposit were presented 1o the bank at approximately the same time, and the bank refused payment on all of them, giving as 'a reason its inability to determine which checks to honor or which to dishonor. We are not concerned with the sufficiency of the bank’s reason for refusing acceptance of the checks. The point of importance for the purpose of this ease is that it refused them.

While those checks were outstanding and unaccepted the plaintiff sued the defendant on a labor bill and garnisheed rhe b'ank; The bonk answered, setting forth the foregoing and other facts, and denied liability. The plaintiff took issue with the garnishment answer. Upon hearing, the trial court sustained the garnishment, and the b'ank appeals. A default judgment was entered against the defendant, which judgment became final, and the present controversy is entirely between the plaintiff and the garnishee over the question whether the deposit was subject to garnishment.

The plaintiff in error garnishee presents five propositions which are all 'akin and involve the same principles, overlapping to some extent.

The first of such contentions is that the court erred in rendering judgment against the garnishee when the evidence showed doubt as to whether the funds in controversy were due to the defendant absolutely and beyond contingency. A debt which is not yet due may be garnisheed and thereby subjected to future payment, but no merely possible debt, whether of the present or future, may be g’arnisheed if it depends upon a contingency which is not bound to happen. Section 629, O. S. 1931, 12 Okl'a. St. Ann., sec. 1186; Jacobs v. Colcord, 136 'Okla. 158, 275 P. 649; Bay v. Paramore, 170 Okla. 495, 41 P. (2d) 73. The bank asserts that the holders of the checks may be entitled to the fund on deposit, or the fund may be apportioned between them pro rata upon final judgment of an action by the •owners of s'aid cheeks against the bank, which action is now pending; and further, that if the fund belongs to the check holders, it does not belong to the defendant, and that it cannot be said to belong to the defendant until and unless the other action is decided in favor of the bank. But that contention overlooks the fact that the bank refused 'and still refuses acceptance of the checks, aml so admits in the present case.

It further overlooks an important rule of law, namely that

“A check of itself does not operate as an assignment of any part of the funds to the credit of the drawer with the bank, and the b'ank is not liable to the holder, unless and until it accepts or certifies the check.”

Section 11488, O. S. 1931; First Nat. Bank of Durant v. School District. No. 4, 31 Okla. 139, 120 P. 614, 39 L. R. A. (N. S.) 655; Ballen, etc., v. Bank of Kremlin, 37 Okla. 112, 130 P. 539, 44 L. R. A. (N. S.) 621; Citizens Bank of Gans v. Mabray, 90 Okla. 63, 215 P. 1067; Bell-Wayland Co. v. Bank of Sugden, 95 Okla. 67, 218 P. 705. In particular, see Southern Coal Co. v. Mc-Alpine Coal Co., 176 Okla. 492, 56 P. (2d) 413, in which case the interveners were in the same position as the check holders in the present case, and this court denied them recovery because “a check constitutes no assignment of or lien upon bank deposits,” in the absence of acceptance or certification thereof by the bank. Therefore it is apparent that the argument of the bank is predicated- upon the prediction of a possibility which cannot legally happen (see below, under the second proposition). To the date of the judgment in the instant case the bank had refused to accept the checks. It therefore did not owe the holders of the checks. Section 11488, supra. But it did owe someone. To whom, then, did it owe the fund? Obviously, and beyond any contingency, to the defendant, who, as between him and the bank, could have stopped payment on any of the cheeks prior to acceptance or certification.

Plaintiff in error’s second proposition is:

“The court erred in rendering judgment against the bank (the garnishee) while the funds in question were being claimed by other parties.”

This proposition would be meritorious if the facts brought the case within its application. As a general rule it is true that where third parties are claiming actual ownership of the fund being garnisheed the trial court should not sustain the garnishment until the relative rights of said third parties have been adjudicated. The authorities cited by the plaintiff in error on this *433 proposition are tlie following. In Huff v. Oklahoma State Bank, 87 Okla. 7, 207 P. 963, a wife filed a divorce action against her husband, joining- a bank as defendant. Eight hundred fifty dollars had been deposited in the bank by the husband in his own name, but it was claimed by the wife that this money 'actually belonged to her. She notified the bank not to pay out the money, and the bank acceded to this request for nine days, at the end of which time, the wife having taken no steps to obtain the money, the bank paid it to the husband, in whose name it was held, when he presented his check for that amount and demanded the money. In the trial court it was held that the bank was not liable to the wife, and she appealed. In this court the judgment was affirmed, it. being remarked in the opinion that upon being notified by the wife, it was the duty of the bank to hold the funds a reasonable length of time, and that what was a reasonable length of time w-as a question of fact for the jury. The following excerpt from that opinion makes it clear that the question in the ease related to a situation where an actual ownership of the funds was being assorted by the third party, which is a different situation from the case where third parties are merely trying to fasten upon said funds in satisfaction of their claims:

“In regard to money deposited in the bank in the na'me of one person, and claimed by a third party, the general rule appears to be as follows: ‘The law presumes that a deposit belongs to a person in whose name it is entered, and the bank cannot question his right thereto, and may lawfully pay it out on his order. * * * Tf a deposit is claimed by a person other than the depositor who forbids the bank from paying it to any person other than himself, the bank may be held liable for a disregard of such notice in case the claim is substantiated. * * * However, the bank cannot be required to hold the money beyond a reasonable time in order for the claimant to assert his rights, and, if he fails to assert them within such time, he is estopped’ See 7 C. J. 639, 640.”

7 C. J. 679, also quoted by plaintiff in error, is:

“Where a bank has notice that money deposited belongs to a person other than the depositor, it may refuse to pay a check of the depositor: and if q. bank, with notice of a suit, over the ownership of a deposit, pays out the money, it does so at its peril.”

It is conceded the check holders in the instant case have never contended that the money in the bank in the name of the plaintiff actually belonged to said check holders; what the check holders do claim is that they have a right to fasten upon said fund in satisfaction of their cheeks.

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Bluebook (online)
1937 OK 678, 74 P.2d 355, 181 Okla. 431, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-in-frederick-v-whitelock-okla-1937.