Haines v. First Nat. Bank

172 P. 505, 89 Or. 42, 1918 Ore. LEXIS 90
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 172 P. 505 (Haines v. First Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haines v. First Nat. Bank, 172 P. 505, 89 Or. 42, 1918 Ore. LEXIS 90 (Or. 1918).

Opinion

BURNETT, J. —

The record contains many assignments of error, some of which we find it unnecessary to consider. Having testified, admitting that he had received the statement of account mentioned and that he had not made objection to it, the plaintiff introduced in evidence a printed circular of date June 17, 1911, announcing the consolidation of the defendant bank with the Douglas National Bank and the purpose to carry on banking business under the name of and in the rooms of the Douglas National Bank. The plaintiff testified that he had received this through the mail, but nothing appeared in evidence about who sent it or by whose authority it was issued. He also introduced a letter dated August 9, 1911, on the letter-head of the Douglas National Bank and signed by J. H. Booth, president. It is addressed to the plaintiff and aside from mere formal expressions reads thus:

“We have forwarded check books of this bank to you as requested in your favor of the 7th and thank you for your expressions of continuing your business with the consolidated bank as formerly done with the First National. We appreciate it and we assure you that we shall always be ready to care for your wants as called upon and shall extend just the same courteous treatment as given in times past by the other bank which we have now absorbed. Mr. Sheridan continues right along actively with us as he did in the other bank but he wants some of us younger men to take the burden of the work from him a large share of which the writer will undertake.”

1. The defendant objected to the introduction of both these documents on the ground that they were incompetent, immaterial, irrelevant and in no way affecting the issues involved in this action, which objection was overruled and the instruments were read in evidence over the exception of the defendant. There was no tes[47]*47timony tending to show that the defendant sanctioned either of the papers in question. So far as the allusion to Sheridan’s continuing in the banking business with the Douglas National Bank is concerned, it was pure hearsay and not admissible. In order to charge the defendant with any of the statements contained in those documents or the deductions to be drawn therefrom, it would be necessary to show that they were authorized by the defendant. In principle it is like the Goodhart letter alluded to in nearly all the cases against the defendant, cited at the close of this opinion. Goodhart was a national bank examiner and in auditing the books and accounts of the defendant in his official capacity he found entries where the president of the bank had drawn memorandum checks against the accounts of depositors diminishing their deposits by so much, even as in the present case. In such instances he addressed a letter to the depositor stating that such memorandum checks of the president had been honored and the amount charged to the account of the depositor and called upon the latter to state whether he authorized or approved the action thus narrated. In some of those cases the depositor answered avowing the action of Sheridan in so doing and attempts were made to predicate estoppels upon the correspondence; but, as held in Doerstler v. First National Bank of Roseburg, 82 Or. 92 (161 Pac. 386), the bank examiner was in no sense the agent or authorized to speak for the defendant and, hence, no estoppel could be grounded upon his letter and the answer thereto. So, here, it is not shown that the president of the Douglas National Bank was the agent of or had authority to speak for the defendant. Neither does it appear that by its authority the printed circular was mailed to the plaintiff 5 and hence by a parity of reasoning, as employed [48]*48with reference to the G-oodhart letters, it was error to receive in evidence the letter and circular here involved.

2. The defendant requested a variety of instructions too numerous and lengthy to he quoted at large in this opinion. One element apparent in them is that they were framed upon the theory that Sheridan withdrew the money and loaned it for the plaintiff; but although this is alleged there is nothing in evidence even tending to show that T. R. Sheridan loaned the money to anybody. In this state of the testimony an instruction involving that feature was properly refused.

3. Again, another element of the denied instructions is to the effect that Sheridan acted as agent for the plaintiff; but it leaves out of view the necessary ingredient that his agency must have been with the plaintiff’s previous consent or subsequent ratification with-knowledge of all the facts pertaining to his action. Of course, as stated in the Doerstler case, if, indeed, the plaintiff appointed Sheridan individually to be his agent to draw the money out of the bank for any purpose whatsoever and, acting under such authority Sheridan had taken out the money, the bank would not be responsible for the same. The argument of the defendant in the present juncture is that the plaintiff must be charged with a knowledge of the law that no national bank can act as broker or agent for another person in loaning money which it has on deposit, and that being so legally informed, he must be held to have dealt with Sheridan as an individual. It does not follow, however, that because Sheridan could not as a matter of law commit his bank to an agency for the plaintiff for any purpose of the kind mentioned, negotiations to that end would constitute an appointment of Sheridan the individual to be such agent. [49]*49Under the circumstances no legitimate result in favor of the bank could grow out of an attempted illegal transaction such as would result if the bank undertook to act as the broker for the purpose of effecting a loan for anyone. However contrary to the law it would be to arrange for the bank to loan money for the plaintiff the scheme cannot be pruned of its illegality without his consent so as to make Sheridan, the individual, an agent for him.

4. As stated, there is no. evidence in the record that Sheridan loaned any of the money. On the contrary the construction most favorable to the defendant is that he borrowed it. Indeed, there is the testimony of two witnesses who declare that the plaintiff told them that he had loaned his money to Sheridan. Then, too, even if he was appointed by the plaintiff to be the agent of the latter to loan the money it would not be authority to Sheridan to borrow the money for himself. The reason is that an agent cannot assume a position where he is at once' acting for himself and adversely to his principal. His duty to his principal in such a case would require him to act as lender and he could not at the same time act as borrower, for the two relations are inconsistent with each other. True it is, that if the principal was aware of all the facts it would be competent for him to ratify the transaction. But the evidence is all one' way that the plaintiff had no knowledge that Sheridan himself had taken the money for his own purposes until about the time he commenced this action.

5, 6. Among the refused -instructions was one containing this language:

“If you find from the evidence that the defendant bank rendered to the plaintiff a statement of account [50]

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Bluebook (online)
172 P. 505, 89 Or. 42, 1918 Ore. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haines-v-first-nat-bank-or-1918.