Harrisburg National Bank v. Skinner

73 P.2d 363, 157 Or. 569, 1937 Ore. LEXIS 134
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 73 P.2d 363 (Harrisburg National Bank v. Skinner) 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
Harrisburg National Bank v. Skinner, 73 P.2d 363, 157 Or. 569, 1937 Ore. LEXIS 134 (Or. 1937).

Opinion

*572 LUSK, J.

In the Anew that we take of the legal question arising under the affirmative allegations of the answer, the substance, of which has been stated, we find it unnecessary to determine whether or not the contract or the conduct of the. defendant bank under the *573 contract created a trust relationship between the two banks with respect to moneys received by the Junction City Bank in excess of the deposit liability and not accounted for to the plaintiffs. The undisputed testimony established that the plaintiffs have never filed a claim with the superintendent of banks and have not, in any other respect, brought themselves within the exclusive provisions of the 1931 statute governing the liquidation of insolvent banks and the proof and allowance or rejection of claims against such banks and the bringing of suit on such claims. In our opinion, these provisions are controlling, even though it appeared that the money claimed by the plaintiffs is held in trust for them by the state superintendent of banks. For the purpose of this .decision, we may assume that that is the case.'

The statute in effect at the time the Junction City Bank was taken over by the state superintendent of banks was section 29, chapter 278, Oregon Laws 1931, amending section 22-2009, Oregon Code 1930, and read in part as follows:

“The superintendent of banks shall cause notice to be given by advertisement, in such newspaper as he may direct, weekly for three consecutive months, calling on all persons who may have claims against such bank or trust company to present the same to the superintendent of banks and to make legal proof thereof at a designated place and within 90 days from the first day of publication. The superintendent of banks shall mail a similar notice to all persons whose names appear as creditors upon the books of the bank or trust company. All claims of any land or nature must be filed with the superintendent of banks, and if a claimant asserts a preference, he shall file in addition to his said verified claim a verified petition for preference which must state the grounds for preference. Any such petition for preference or prior lien on any of the assets of such bank or *574 trust company over the claims of other depositors or creditors must be filed with the superintendent of banks and the circuit court for the judicial district in which the office of such bank or trust company was located before the expiration of the time fixed in the notice to creditors, and if not so filed shall be forever barred and shall not be approved or allowed as a preferred claim.

“If the superintendent of banks doubts the justice and validity of any claim or petition for preference, he may reject the same within a reasonable time thereafter and serve notice of such rejection upon the claimants, either by mail or personally, and an affidavit of the service of such notice, which shall be prima facie evidence thereof, shall be filed in his office.

“An action upon a legal claim so rejected must be brought in the circuit court for the judicial district in which the office of such bank or trust company was located within three months after such service and notice of intention to commence such action must be served 10 days prior to the commencement thereof upon the superintendent of banks.

‘ ‘ Any petitioner who is dissatisfied with the decision of the superintendent of banks in rejecting a petition for preference must, within 30 days thereafter, present said petition, together with the decision of the superintendent of banks, to such circuit court for review, whereupon such circuit court shall fix a date for the hearing of any such petition, giving reasonable notice thereof to the petitioner and to the superintendent of banks, and shall determine said matter upon the evidence produced by all concerned, and the burden of proof in such proceeding shall be upon the petitioner. An appeal from the decision of such circuit court to the supreme court may be taken by either party as from any other judgment or decree of such circuit court.

“The summary procedure of filing of claims and petitions for preference, and of the determination thereof by the superintendent of banks, and of the commencement of actions thereof, and of review on petitions for preference by the said circuit court, and of appeals *575 therefrom to the supreme court, shall be exclusive of all other legal or equitable remedies, either by action or suit, which previously hereto prevailed under the common law.”

The legislature has thus provided the remedies which may be pursued by persons having claims against an insolvent bank, which has passed into the hands of the state superintendent of banks, and has, in terms, made those remedies exclusive, evidently for the purpose of furthering the expeditious liquidation and distribution of the assets of the defunct institution, which this court in the case of Svenson v. Schramm, 139 Or. 573, 578 (11 P. (2d) 1062), said that the interest of the depositors demands. Whatever the nature of the claim, it must be verified and filed with the superintendent of banks within the prescribed time. If it be a claim for preference, the ground of preference must be stated and the claim must be filed with the circuit court as well as with the superintendent of banks, and if not so filed it is forever barred as a preferred claim. If a claim is rejected, action must be commenced thereon in the proper circuit court within three months after service of notice of rejection on the claimant, and 10 days’ notice of intention to commence such action must be given to the superintendent of banks. If the claimant is dissatisfied with the superintendent’s decision on a petition for preference, he may obtain a review of such decision by presenting his petition to the circuit court.

It is the position of the plaintiffs, however, that these provisions have no application to them; that they are not creditors seeking a preference, but owners of money in the hands of another, which they are attempting to reclaim, and they cite the cases of Beck v. Junction City State Bank, 149 Or. 352 (37 (2d) 1089, 40 P. *576 (2d) 1017), and American Can Company v. Schramm, 137 Or. 328 (2 P. (2d) 924), in support of this position. These decisions are not in point. The Beck case was brought to recover specific bonds, which had been left in the bank for safe keeping, and the court held that the summary proceeding of the statute ‘ ‘ was not intended to apply to such claims as plaintiff presented in his complaint”. The American Can Company case was brought before the 1931 enactment, and the decision that the plaintiff in seeking to establish a trust in assets of an insolvent bank could proceed by suit in equity without regard to the statute was based on the omission from the law as it then stood (section 22-2009, Oregon Code 1930), of any language indicating that the legislature intended to make the statutory remedies exclusive. The plaintiff, in that case, moreover, had filed its claim with the state superintendent of banks.

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143 P.2d 243 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 P.2d 363, 157 Or. 569, 1937 Ore. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrisburg-national-bank-v-skinner-or-1937.