First State Bank of Seminole v. Dillard

71 S.W.2d 407, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 490
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 23, 1934
DocketNo. 4214.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 71 S.W.2d 407 (First State Bank of Seminole v. Dillard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First State Bank of Seminole v. Dillard, 71 S.W.2d 407, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 490 (Tex. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

HALL, Chief Justice.

The appellant bank filed this suit originally in Gaines county. Thereafter the Court of Civil Appeals at El Paso ordered the same transferred to the county court of Crosby county, where the bank filed its first amended original petition, alleging that since the institution of the suit it had closed its doors and become insolvent and was in the hands of the Texas commissioner of banking.

The substance of the cause of action, as alleged, is that about May 7, 1930, while appellant bank was still open and doing business, the appellee, Dillard, deposited various checks with it for collection and credit, together with a deposit made out by defendant’s agent which did not contain the names of the towns where the banks on which the several cheeks were drawn were located. That plaintiff’s teller refused to accept the deposit slip in that condition and made out a new one. That the aggregate of the cheeks offered for deposit was $410.92. That after appellant’s teller had made out the deposit slip 'by direction of defendant’s agent, there was deducted therefrom $210.92 in cash and a charge of $2 for exchange was added thereto, which cash was delivered to defendant’s agent, leaving the amount actually deposited to defendant’s credit on said date, the sum of $198. That when the transaction was completed, appellant’s teller inadvertently failed to destroy the deposit slip which had been tendered by defendant’s agent, whereupon plaintiff’s bookkeeper found the same amongst the other documents of the day’s work and erroneously credited the defendant’s account with said sum in addition to the $198 with which defendant had been lawfully and properly credited. That thereafter defendant withdrew said sum of $410.92 wrongfully *408 credited to his account and though often requested, has refused to pay plaintiff the same or any part thereof.

Defendant answered specially alleging that the plaintiff had failed to give defendant credit for $500 which defendant had deposited with plaintiff and that after plaintiff had made the alleged error complained of hy it in its pleadings, same was offset hy the $500 defendant alleged plaintiff owed him. That defendant during the latter part of May, 1930, discovered from records and deposit slips in his possession that plaintiff had failed to give him credit for as much as $500 that he had deposited with the hank. That he endeavored to get an exact record of his deposits hut was unable to do so. That he decided he would not he able to establish His claim in the county where plaintiff’s bank was located and dismissed the matter.

Plaintiff filed a second supplemental petition consisting of a general demurrer and general denial.

The case was submitted to the Jury upon two special issues, which, with the answers, are as follows:

(1) “Do you find that the defendant Jno. A. Dillard is indebted to the plaintiff?”

Answer: “No.”

(2) “If you answer the above question in the affirmative, then in what amount is said defendant Jno. A. Dillard indebted to the plaintiff? ”

Answer: “We, the jurors, find that the defendant Jno. A. Dillard is not indebted to the plaintiff.”

Judgment was entered accordingly, denying the appellant a recovery.

By its first proposition the appellant bank insists that because the testimony offered by it is uncontroverted, unequivocal, unim-peached, undenied, and without confusion, the jury may not capriciously reject said testimony and find the issues in the case in favor of the defendant, as was done in this suit.

In our opinion the verdict of the jury is against the great weight of the testimony.

B. B. Curry, appellant’s teller, testified that Dillard and his two sons were in the grocery business on May 6, 1930, and prior thereto, and on that day the appellee’s son Brit-ton Dillard brought to the bank and presented to him the original deposit slip (which was introduced in evidence) containing only the amounts of the checks then tendered for deposit and did not contain the names of the towns in which were located the banks on which said checks were drawn aggregating $410.92. He said he declined to accept the deposit slip and prepared another slip (which was introduced in evidence), which gave the names of the towns in which the drawee banks were located. That at that time Britton Dillard received upon said checks $210.92 in cash, which was the total amount of the checks so deposited, leaving $200 and from said sum $2 was deducted by appellant bank as exchange upon the foreign checks and Britton Dillard was given a copy of the slip introduced in evidence, showing the deposit of a balance of $198, for which defendant rightfully received credit. Curry further stated that through oversight he failed to destroy the deposit slip which Britton Dillard had brought in and which he refused to accept and on May 7, 1930, the assistant bookkeeper, in the absence of the regular bookkeeper, erroneously credited the defendant with said slip in addition to the other slip for $198. There was also introduced in evidence defendant’s bank statement, showing that on May 7, 1930, he was credited with $410.92 and immediately following that $19S.

The appellee, Dillard, testified that he relied on the bank to keep the books reflecting the transactions between himself and the bank. That his store did not purport to keep a correct set of books, but he put down a memorandum of each of his deposits with the bank and of the checks that he paid out and in that way kept up pretty well with how he stood with the bank. That sometimes cheeks given him for merchandise and which he deposited and which were turned down by drawee banks, would lie in plaintiff’s bank for ten to thirty days before he would find out about it on account of unfavorable conditions governing the transportation of the mails from Hobbs, N. M., into Texas. That mail from Seminole would go west by way of Sweetwater, then over to Midland and back up to Hobbs. He further testified that along about the last of May he concluded that the appellant bank had failed to give him credit for something around $500 that they owed him. That he took his memorandum- books and cheeks and went to Lorenzo, Tex., and talked with Ered Weise, cashier of the First State Bank of Lorenzo, and got Weise to go over the memorandum with him and as a result of that interview concluded that the appellant bank owed him about $500. That" his records were not sufficient to enable him to demonstrate that to the plaintiff bank and because he would Have to sue the plaintiff bank in Gaines county, where it was located, he would not have a chance of recovering *409 against plaintiff bank and just let it go and finally figured tb9t he did not owe appellant bank anything. He stated that he sent deposits to Seminole from Hobbs by third parties who were passing that way and it was possible that some of "those deposits never reached the appellant bank. That the mem-oranda he kept of such deposits so made and sent to Hobbs by third parties and left by him at a drug store were never checked by him with any statements made by the bank. He admitted that he was frequently in Seminole and could have called at the bank and checked over his account, but “just did not do it.” He further testified: “I don’t deny that I received $410.92 too much money by reason of the duplicate deposit of May 6, 1930.

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.W.2d 407, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-state-bank-of-seminole-v-dillard-texapp-1934.