Freels v. Haun and City Nat. Bank

11 Tenn. App. 533, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 96
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 14, 1929
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Tenn. App. 533 (Freels v. Haun and City Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Freels v. Haun and City Nat. Bank, 11 Tenn. App. 533, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 96 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

PORTRUM, J.

The complainant, E. M. Freels, instituted this suit in the chancery court against Floyd E. Elaun, former cashier, and the City National Bank, of Knoxville, seeking a recovery on two notes, one of which was dated October 13, 1924, in the principal sum of $2200, due one year after date, payable to the order of the complainant Freels, and purported to have been made and executed by N. B. Kuhl-man, and which is endorsed on the back: 1 ‘ City National Bank by F. E. Elaun, Cashier.” The other one bears date of September 23, 1924, in the principal sum of $600, due one year after date, and payable to the order of the City National Bank, and purported to have been executed by R. B. Sweetman and Emma Sweetman, and bearing an endorsement'on its back: “City National Bank by F. E. Haun, Cashier. ’ ’

The complainant seeks to recover interest on the $2200 note from April 13, 1928, and on the $600 note from March 23, 1928, and also attorney’s fees provided for in the face of the note.

The complainant avers that the two notes represented actual money that he paid to the defendants Elaun and the City National Bank, and that said defendants received said sums of money as consideration for the notes so endorsed to him.

After the bill was filed, the defendant Elann was adjudged a bankrupt and thereafter the suit was prosecuted against the City National Bank alone. The complainant amended the bill to charge in substance that he took $2800 to the City National Bank and to Haun in his capacity as the cashier of the bank, dealing with Haun as cashier and not individually, and the said $2800 represented money which complainant left at the City National Bank through Haun as its cashier and accepted by the bank, and the bank accepting money from time to time for deposit or investment through its cashier, had sold and endorsed other notes of a similar nature to the complainant and had always paid the interest on the notes; that the bank held its cashier out to the public and to the complainant as having unrestricted authority to transact its business and. the complainant knew of no limitations on the authority. That the transactions between the complainant and the cashier of the bank were carried on openly, in the presence of others in the bank, during banking hours, and there was nothing to put the complainant on notice that the transactions were irregular and the bank authorized and ratified the acts of its cashier from time to time whenever he exceeded his authority and that said bank was negligent in not exercising any control or supervision over *535 the cashier and thus clothing him with apparent authority to Commit frauds and unauthorized acts upon the public.

The prayer of the bill was amended to pray an alternative in case of the denial or recovery on the notes, that a judgment be awarded against the bank for money had and received.

The defendant bank in its answer takes the position that if such transactions as those described in the original bill took place, then in that event the complainant was dealing* with its cashier Haun individually and not in his capacity as cashier. The defendant bank by its answer neither admits or denies that the names of Kuhlman or Sweetman as the makers are forgeries, but demands strict proof of the same, and denies that it received any consideration for said notes amounting to $2800.

The pertinent facts are that the complainant, Freels, a man sixty-one years of age, living in Roane county, Tennessee, is shown to be the owner and holder of the two notes sued on and had received the said notes from the City National Bank, through its cashier; that he bought the notes from the City National Bank through the cashier and had had dealings with the cashier for a long time but that he never dealt with him individually. When he received the $2200 note, he turned over to the bank some other notes, bearing similar endorsements, and $500 in cash. He said he never purchased a note at discount, but always paid the full value of the notes, so when he made the transaction in question, he delivered to the bank $500 in cash and the balance in notes which he ’had formerly purchased from the cashier as the notes of the bank and endorsed by the cashier in the name of the bank, and the interest on these notes had always been paid when due. When these notes became due, they were renewed, and he files a letter, written on the letterhead of the said City National Bank and signed by Haun as cashier in which Haun sent him, in the regular course of the mails, the renewal of the two notes. He further states that he had no knowledge that the notes were forgeries, but purchased them on the strength of the endorsement of the City National Bank, through its cashier. It appears that the cashier forged one of the notes, if not the other (since the makers of the other were unknown), and had been guilty of defrauding the bank and of misappropriating money. The president testified that Haun had many times made loans of money in violation of the rules of the bank and the unauthorized acts were later approved by the president and board of directors. The City National Bank had great confidence in its cashier Haun, and held him out to the public as a man of integrity and worthy of the public’s respect and confidence, by inserting advertisements in the newspapers containing a human interest story of Haun’s life and his picture, and inviting the public to confer with Haun about their financial difficulties. Notwithstanding these ad *536 vertisements, it is admitted that Harm did things that were extraordinary and the bank had condoned and confirmed Harm’s actions. It is now admitted by the president that Haun committed perjury in reference to these particular notes in not reporting them to the comptroller as liabilities of the bank in his report, as he was required to do by law. It is not denied that the complainant brought $2800 into the City national Bank and counted it out on Haun’s desk. The bank shows by the report of the auditor that these particular notes were never entered upon the records of the bank.

It is insisted by way of defense that the acts of Haun were unauthorized and illegal and that he was not within his power, either apparent or actual, in carrying on his dealings with Freels and had no authority, expressed or implied, to negotiate the bank’s negotiable paper, if by any theory the paper could in law be held to be the paper of the bank.

On the trial of the case the Chancellor was of the opinion that the bank was liable upon its endorsement upon the $600 note, since Freels dealt with the cashier as an officer of the bank, and parted with his money upon the faith of the endorsement upon the back of the note.

He held, however, that Freels was not entitled to recover the $2200 note, for the reason that the note was made payable to him as the payee by Kuhlman, the maker, and the endorsement of the bank on the back thereof was of such a character, taken with the face of the note, as to put Freels upon notice that the bank signed the note as the accommodation endorser of Kuhlman and, since national banks have no authority to become accommodation endorsers of another, no liability exists against the bank. From this decree both the bank and Freels have appealed to this court.

We will deal first with the assignment of error touching the $600 note.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Tenn. App. 533, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freels-v-haun-and-city-nat-bank-tennctapp-1929.