H. & B. Beer v. Chickasha Nat. Bank

26 F.2d 36, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3596
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 24, 1928
DocketNo. 7813
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 F.2d 36 (H. & B. Beer v. Chickasha Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H. & B. Beer v. Chickasha Nat. Bank, 26 F.2d 36, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3596 (8th Cir. 1928).

Opinion

VAN VALKENBURGH, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs in error, a copartnership, doing business under the firm name and style of H. & B. Beer, at New Oiieans, La., hereinafter, called plaintiffs, brought suit in the District Court of the United States for the Western' District of Oklahoma against defendant in error, a national banking corporation, doing' business at Chiekasha in the state of Oklahoma, hereinafter called defendant, to recover an alleged balance on deposit with defendant. The statement of account incorporated in the petition showed a balance in favor of plaintiffs of $8,396.13, for which recovery was prayed. The attitude of the defendant bank is best disclosed by its answer, to wit:

“Defendant denies all and singular the allegations contained in the petition herein filed, and asks for strict proof of same.

„ “Eor further answer herein, defendant says that during the years 1924, 1925, and 1926 the plaintiff H. & B. Beer was engaged in what is termed the brokerage business, which means, among other things, that the said plaintiff was engaged in the sale of cotton futures and grain futures throughout different parts of the country; that at the same time one C. F. .Avery was engaged in the same character of business in Oklahoma City and throughout other portions of the state of Oklahoma, and at the (at the) same time one Paul James was engaged in gambling in cotton and grain futures through said Avery and H. & B. Beer, plaintiff herein; that at and during said time C. F. Avery had a duly appointed and acting agent by the name of C. E. McGugan; that the method of operation adopted by said Avery and said Beer was for said Avery to find a buyer for cotton or grain futures, draw draft through the defendant’s bank on said buyer for the amount of money necessary to purchase the futures contracted for, and that said draft or drafts were always drawn.by C. F. Avery, per C. E. McGugan, his agent, on the person who had undertaken to purchase said futures or to furnish money to buy said futures; that during the years 1924 and 1925 many drafts of this character were drawn through defendant’s hank on different persons; that each time a draft was drawn for the purposes aforesaid, the said McGugan, acting for said Avery, who, defendant alleges, was the agent of the said plaintiff in all these transactions, would and did represent to the defendant that the draft so drawn was good and would be paid promptly when presented to the person and bank on whom and which it was drawn.

“Defendant further alleges that on or about September 21, 1925, said Avery afore'said, by said McGugan, drew a draft on one Paul James for $7,000, which draft was accepted by the defendant as a cash item, and the sum of $7,000 was placed to the credit of said plaintiff herein in the bank of defendant; that on the very next day, or the afternoon of the said day that said $7,000 draft was drawn, defendant learned that the draft was protested and would not be paid, and defendant, through its cashier, Roy Smith, then and there notified McGugan, the agent of Avery as aforesaid, that no more drafts would be honored on Jaul James, the person on whom said $7,000 draft was drawn; that the said McGugan was notified that the said James had'been found to be unreliable and unable to pay this draft, and the said McGugan was told not to attempt to put any other drafts through the bank on said James; that on the next day, that is, on the 22d day .of September, 1925, another draft was drawn by C. F. Avery, through ,C. E. McGugan, on Paul James, First National Bank of Alex, Okl., payable to the order of the Chiekasha National Bank for $6,000; that without the knowledge of the cashier as aforesaid, who had notified McGugan not to draw any more drafts and that they would not be honored if drawn, said McGugan induced one Foster who was an employee of the bank, to accept said $6,000 draft as a cash item, and said McGugan obtained from said Foster, on behalf of the Chiekasha National Bank, a telegram to the plaintiff that said $6,-000 had been deposited to the credit of plaintiff. Defendant says that as soon as the bank, through its cashier aforesaid, found out that said telegram had been sent, the defendant bank wired to the plaintiff in New Orleans that the $6,000 deposit as indicated by the wire aforesaid was a mistake, that it was an error, and that there was no deposit of $6,-000 in said bank. Defendant says that said $6,000 was never carried upon the books/of the bank as a deposit, and never entered on said books as a deposit in favor of the plaintiff herein; that neither the $7,000 draft aforesaid, nor 'the $6,000 draft aforesaid, was ever paid by said James; that defendant was caused to accept said $7,000 and to wire plaintiff in regard thereto, as above set forth, by the fraudulent misrepresentations of the said McGugan, acting as agent for plaintiff, that said draft was good and would be paid when presented, when the said McGugan well knew that same was not good and would not he paid. Defendant says that the telegram sent the plaintiff as aforesaid, that $6,000 [38]*38was on deposit, was an error, a mistake, and that said mistake was brought about through the false representation of said MeGugan as aforesaid, who had been advised by the cashier of the bank as aforesaid that said $6,000 draft would not be accepted as a cash deposit, and that said MeGugan concealed this matter and this direction from the cashier of the bank, from said Foster, who sent the telegram as aforesaid that $6,000 had been deposited to the credit of the plaintiff. Defendant says that it received no consideration whatever for the business of the plaintiff during these transactions, and that it acted purely as a matter of accommodation to the plaintiff herein; that it, at all times as indicated aforesaid, when said drafts were drawn by Avery through MeGugan, accepted MeGugan’s statements that the drafts were absolutely good and would be paid, and defendant would never have passed any of the drafts so drawn by Avery through MeGugan to the credit of the plaintiff as a cash item if it had not believed and relied upon the representation by said MeGugan that the same would be paid when presented to the drawee; that during all these transactions the said Avery and his agent, MeGugan, were acting for the said plaintiff; that they were negotiating the sales on futures for said plaintiff, and were, in every sense, the agent of the plaintiff in finding purchasers and in securing, through drafts aforesaid, the money from said purchasers for said plaintiff. Defendant furthermore alleges that the plaintiff herein knew and was advised each time by said Avery or MeGugan as to the person who was making the purchase of futures, that to the amount of money said purchaser was to furnish, and that plaintiff knew and understood that the money obtained by said Avery and MeGugan from the purchaser was to be placed in the defendant bank for the purpose of securing the plaintiff against any loss which it might suffer by reason of the purchase by plaintiff of futures for the particular person against whom said drafts aforesaid were drawn.

“Defendant further says that the said Avery and the said MeGugan knew the very day the $7,000 draft aforesaid was drawn on James that the same had been dishonored, and knew that the $6,000 draft drawn the next day on said James would be dishonored, and yet, notwithstanding this fact, said Avery and MeGugan advised their principal, the plaintiff herein, that said drafts had been paid and that the money was actually on deposit for the plaintiff, thereby practicing a fraud upon this defendant.

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Related

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64 F.2d 399 (Eighth Circuit, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
26 F.2d 36, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-b-beer-v-chickasha-nat-bank-ca8-1928.