Harper v. Merchants' & Planters' Nat. Bank of Mt. Vernon

68 S.W.2d 351
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 1, 1934
DocketNo. 4471.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 68 S.W.2d 351 (Harper v. Merchants' & Planters' Nat. Bank of Mt. Vernon) 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
Harper v. Merchants' & Planters' Nat. Bank of Mt. Vernon, 68 S.W.2d 351 (Tex. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

LEV'S, Justice

(after stating the case as above).

The first and principal point for decision is that of whether or not the alleged transaction was in the circumstances a bailment to the bank as such, imposing a relation of •duty or trust in respect to the bonds and with legal responsibility for their loss.

The material facts affirmatively appear without dispute that the guardian, a general depositor in the bank, requested the cashier of the bank to purchase for his ward’s estate United States Liberty bonds to the amount of $2,500; that the cashier purchased the bonds, and the guardian as such paid “the bank” therefor through a check drawn by him against the deposit account of the funds of the estate; that the guardian, upon paying for the bonds, did not take over the same, but left them in the bank in possession of the cashier to be kept in the bank vault for him as guardian for safekeeping merely, and to be returned to him when he should require it; that the bank provided and maintained, in connection with the banking business, a safety vault for use by general depositors free of charge to store valuables for safe-keeping merely. It appears from the undisputed evidence in relation thereto by necessary inference, as a matter of pure fact, that the cashier of the bank by intention and purpose was acting at the time for and in behalf of the bank in receiving and placing the bonds of the guardian in the bank for safe-keeping merely.

It is clear from the facts stated that the Liberty bonds were the absolute property of the estate of the ward of which appellant was the duly appointed and qualified guardian. The bank had no lien upon them or special property in them. They were not deposited or held as security for or in connection with any business transaction of the bank as a banking corporation, either present or prospective. It was a simple delivery of the particular government bonds to be kept for the guardian as such as the proper legal custodian thereof without recompense, and to be returned when "the true legal owner or holder entitled to possession should require it. This is the legal definition of a naked bailment. 3 R. O. L. § 187, p. 560; Shouler on Bailments, pp. 55-57; Kegan v. Park Bank, 320 Mo. 623, 8 S.W.(2d) 858, 15 S.W. (2d) 333; Thornton v. Bank (Tex. Civ. App.) 252 S. W. 278. The mere fact that the guardian was a general depositor in the bank would not, as is made clear in the cited cases, determine the character of the bailment to be that of one for hire rather than gratuitous. The transaction by which the guardian claims that the bank had become a bailee of the government bonds being wholly with the cashier of the bank, an officer of the bank, the effect to charge the bank would rest entirely upon his power in that direction. The rule is general and uniform, limiting the responsibility of corporations for the acts of their officers and agents, in the absence of express authority to do the particular act, to those performed in the discharge of their *356 ordinary duties in the usual course of business, and within the sphere and scope of such duties. The power to bind the corporation can only be presumed to exist in its officers and agents within the scope of its ordinary business and their ordinary duties or the incidental powers of the corporation. 8 Tex. Jur. § 37, p. 422; 2 Clark & Styles on Agency, § 209, p. 497 ; 7 C. X § 646, p. 783. Cashiers of banks are duly authorized agents for the transaction of such business as pertains to their office. Receiving deposits is peculiarly the business of cashiers. By the National Bank Act the powers of the defendant bank are confined' and limited to banking powers only with such incidental powers as shall be necessary to carry on the business of banking. 12 U. S. Code Ann. § 24, p. 13; Logan County Nat. Bank v. Townsend, 139 U. S. 67, 11 S. Ct. 496, 35 L. Ed. 107; California Bank v. Kennedy, 167 U. S. 362, 17 S. Ct. 831, 42 L. Ed. 198; Commercial Nat’l Bank v. First Nat’l Bank, 97 Tex. 536, 80 S. W. 601, 104 Am. St. Rep. 879. And it may be deemed to be settled that the receipt of “special deposits," within the scope and meaning of the term, is within the powers of a national bank. 12 U. S. Code Ann. § 133, p. 252; First Nat. Bank v. Graham, 100 U. S. 699, 25 L. Ed. 750. As defined in Tuckerman v. Mearns, 49 App. D. C. 153, 262 F. 607, 610: “A special deposit implies the custody of property without authority in the custodian to use it, and the right of the owner to receive back the identical thing deposited." Quoting from 3 R. O. L. 522, as to a special deposit: “The relation created is that of bailor and bailee, and not. that of debtor and creditor.” The phrase “special deposits” has been held to embrace bonds of the United States. First Nat’l Bank v. Graham, 100 U. S. 699, 25 L. Ed. 750; Whitney v. First Nat’l Bank, 154 U. S. 664, 14 S. Ct. 1215, 26 L. Ed. 212; and other state cases. The handling and receiving for special deposit of United States bonds and public securities may in their very nature come, or partially come, within the regular line of banking business. National banks have uses for government bonds. And it is profitable to banks to be the custodian of their depositors’ government securities. The interest coupons of such bonds are the subject-matter of deposit in the bank as money, and is incident to the banking business. Therefore there cannot properly be any controversy, but that, if the taking of the bonds to safely keep, as they were taken by the cashier, was within the corporative business of the bank, then the effect would be to make the bank the depository of them, subject to the liabilities of that relation. The transaction on the part of the bank was not ultra vires, and was not one which the bank as such had no authority to undertake to perform. The receiving of the bonds for safe-keeping merely was within the sphere and scope of the duties of the cashier as such, and was a transaction in which he had authority to undertake to perform for the bank as such. The evidence is without conflict that the guardian “did not deliver those bonds to Mr. Moore* (the cashier) for safe keeping” but he “left them in the bank for safe keeping,” i and that “they were not kept in Mr. Moore’s (cashier) private box," and they were not kept “in your (appellant) private box.” Appellant clipped the interest coupons twice from the bonds, and each time “Mr. Moore (the cashier) would get them” from the vault for appellant Therefore there cannot properly be any controversy, as it appears as a fact without dispute that the cashier did put and keep the bonds in the vault of the bank, as the guardian expected he would, and that the cashier did so, not individually, but as an official for and in behalf of the bank as such. In such facts it could not be held, as claimed by the appellee bank, that the cashier was the guardian’s agent in putting the bonds in the vanity and that they were there in possession and in charge of the guardian’s agent and at the guardian’s risk, inasmuch as the cashier was not himself individually and distinctively apart from his official duties receiving and handling the bonds 'for safe-keeping.

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68 S.W.2d 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harper-v-merchants-planters-nat-bank-of-mt-vernon-texapp-1934.