Fulton v. Mahoning Valley Council Boy Scouts of America

15 Ohio Law. Abs. 318, 1933 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1272
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 27, 1933
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Ohio Law. Abs. 318 (Fulton v. Mahoning Valley Council Boy Scouts of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fulton v. Mahoning Valley Council Boy Scouts of America, 15 Ohio Law. Abs. 318, 1933 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1272 (Ohio Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

[319]*319OPINION

By ROBERTS, J.

It thus appears that it was not the intention of McKenzie, who testified in the case, to deposit this money with the bank of which he was cashier, but he kept it personally in his own possession, and acting with supposed authority the young lady put it in the bank and gave a check. Now, under those conditions, what was the relation existing between the bank and the claimant, the Boy Scouts, that of simply debtor and creditor, or was it a trust relationship such as it would be entitled to a preference. Reference will be made to a few authorities upon this subject.

Turning first to the case of Smith et, [320]*320Trustee v Fuller et, 86 Oh St, 57, paragraph 4 of the syllabus reads as follows:

“Where a trustee deposits trust money in a bank, taking as evidence thereof a certificate of deposit certifying that he as trustee has deposited the fund payable to self on return of the certificate properly endorsed, the same not being subject to check, and no stipulation for interest made, a presumption will be indulged, in the absence of proof to the contrary, that the trustee intended to perform and not violate his duty, and that the deposit was intended as a special, and not a general deposit.

Paragraph 5 of the syllabus reads:

“Where, in such case, the bank fails and makes an assignment for the benefit of creditors before such fund is withdrawn, and it appears that the bank, upon receiving such deposit, had mingled the trust money with its own funds, money paid out from such fund for its own purposes will be presumed to have been paid from its own money, and not from the trust fund. And if it be shown that at all times from the making of the deposit to the time of the assignment by the bank, there was in its vaults money of amount and value equal to the amount so deposited, a court of equity may engraft a trust upon such money, and the trustee will become a preferred creditor to the amount of such deposit.”

Reading' from page 67, in the opinion:

“It is not the identical dollar that may be pursued any more than it is the identical grains of wheat put in a warehouse or elevator that the depositor may follow, but equivalent dollars, and the rule now is, as held in Board of Commissioners v Strawn, 157 Fed. Rep., 49, opinion by Burton, J. that where a bank has mingled trust money with its own funds, money paid out from such fund for,its own purposes will be presumed to have been paid from its own money and not from the trust fund in a situation where, as in this case, the mingled fund has not been reduced at any time below the amount of the trust fund. The presumption above referred to rests upon the idea that the drawings out from time to time were moneys which the bank had a right to expend in its own business, and -that the balance which remained included the trust fund which the bank had no right to so use. To have used it would have been a violation of the trust, and that will not be presumed in the absence of evidence to that effect.” fhe same conclusion is expressed in Massey v Fisher, Receiver, 62 Fed. Rep., 958, thus: ‘The fact that the money was not marked, and by a mingling with other funds of the bank, lost its identity, does not affect the right to recover in full, if it can be traced to the vaults of the bank, and it appears that a sum equivalent to it remained continuously within those vaults until removed by the receiver.’ See also, Elizalde v Elizalde, 137 Cal., 634. Numerous other cases to like effect cited by counsel will be found in the reporter’s notes, and we regard the principle as not only consonant within reason and fair dealing but as abundantly supported by authority.”

That is perhaps the ruling case in Ohio upon that subject. Another frequently cited case which is interesting upon this question, and time will not be taken to read therefrom, is Orma and Okey v Baker, 74 Oh St, 337.

In the case of Jones et v Kilbrath, 49 Oh St, commencing on page 401, in the second and third paragraphs of the syllabus it is said:

“The banking company, could not, by crediting, on the day of its failure, the owner with the amount of the draft before its maturity and collection, place him in the position of a general creditor of the company, entitled to receive only dividends out of its assets in the hands of the trustee.
The relation between the owner of the draft and the banking company with which it was lodged for collection, was that of ■principal and agent; and a trust character was‘impressed upon the draft and its proceeds, which forbade their application, with the company’s or trustee’s acquiescence, as a credit in payment of a debt of the company.”

Klaustermeyer v Cleveland Trust Company, Assignee, 89 Oh St, 142, is an interesting- case of kindred nature, in which equitable rules of interest in this case are stated. Ellerbe et v Studebaker Corporation of America, reported in 21 Fed., 2nd Series, 993, is a recent case by the Circuit Court of Appeals, in which the syllabus reads, in part:

“Owner of draft sent bank for collection and prompt remittance, there being nothing in contract between parties authorizing collecting bank to appropriate proceeds of collection and make itself mere debtor, or to send its check in settlement, when its check was not paid, was entitled to pro[321]*321ceeds of collection, if they could be traced into funds which came into hands of receiver.
Where bank to which drawer forwarded draft for collection was insolvent at time it made collection, proceeds of collection were held in trust for drawer, and could be collected from receiver after they had come into his possession, since insolvency of collecting bank terminates its authority to proceed further.
Owner of draft collected by insolvent bank is not entitled to have trusts declared on assets in hands of its receiver, or to preferential payment therefrom, unless he is able to trace proceeds of collection into hands of receiver, or to show that assets which have come into his hands have been directly augmented as a result thereof.”

This is a. case in which the opinion is of considerable length and the subject under discussion voluminously discussed.

Attention is now directed to Volume 82 A.L.R., in which there is a very elaborate brief under the title of “Insolvent Bank; Following Trust Fund,” of several hundred pages, and commencing on page 265 the decisions of Ohio upon this subject are annotated and discussed, and this report will be found to be of considerable interest to any person curious to be. advised as to the law in this respect. Several other cases may be quoted from as follows;

“A depositor, making a deposit for the specific and stated purpose of meeting checks which he has just issued, binds the bank by the special conditions imposed, and does not make the bank merely the debtor of the depositor.”
Dolph v Cross, 153 Iowa, 289.
“A fund which comes into the possession of a bank, with respect to which the bank has a single duty to perform, which is to deliver it to the person entitled thereto, is a trust fund incapable of being co-mingled with general assets of the bank substantially transferred to a receiver.”
49 Nebr., 786; 69 NW, 115.

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Related

Elizalde v. Elizalde
66 P. 369 (California Supreme Court, 1902)
Capital National Bank v. Coldwater National Bank
69 N.W. 115 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1896)
Dolph v. Cross
133 N.W. 669 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ohio Law. Abs. 318, 1933 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fulton-v-mahoning-valley-council-boy-scouts-of-america-ohioctapp-1933.