Hill Syrup Co. v. Marine National Bank

223 P. 595, 128 Wash. 509, 1924 Wash. LEXIS 551
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1924
DocketNo. 18087
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 223 P. 595 (Hill Syrup Co. v. Marine National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill Syrup Co. v. Marine National Bank, 223 P. 595, 128 Wash. 509, 1924 Wash. LEXIS 551 (Wash. 1924).

Opinions

Parker, J.

The plaintiff syrup company seeks recovery from the defendant bank of the sum of $5,007.77, claimed by the company to have been paid to the bank by W. E. Sander, president and general manager of the company, from its funds without authority from its trustees, upon a debt owing by him personally to the bank, under circumstances charging the bank with notice of such want of authority and of the fact that the funds so paid were the property of the company. A trial in the superior court for King county, sitting without a jury, resulted in findings and judgment awarding to the company recovery as prayed for, from which the bank has appealed to this court.

The controversy in the .superior court and here has to do with the affirmative defenses set up by the bank, in substance: (1) That the payment so made by Sander was authorized by the trustees of the company, and when made was ratified by them by the amount thereof being charged against Sander upon the books of the company, with their knowledge and assent; the company being then indebted to Sander, as it is claimed, in an amount nearly equal to the amount of [511]*511the payment so made; and (2) that thereafter, upon the auditing of the hooks of the company, including Sander’s accounts with the company, it executed a full satisfaction of all its claims against Sander, including any sum which may have become chargeable to him by reason of this payment from its funds in satisfaction of his personal indebtedness to the bank; which release, as it is claimed, was executed for valuable considerations passing from Sander to the company.

Counsel for the company have moved to strike the statement of facts from the record. It is argued that we should ignore the statement of facts because the findings made and requests for findings refused to be made by the trial court were not properly excepted to; and that since no question is presented which can be considered without the aid of the statement of facts, the judgment should be affirmed. It may be conceded that it appears from the record, in so far as the exceptions are evidenced by indorsement thereon by the trial judge, such exceptions are so general in form as to not be sufficient under our decisions. It appears, however, from the statement of facts certified by the trial judge that, at the time of the taking of the exceptions by counsel for the bank, being the time of the signing of the findings by the trial judge, the several findings made, as well as the requests for those refused, were referred to in counsel’s orally stated exceptions by number separately. This court has repeatedly held that exceptions so taken are sufficient to bring to this court the claim of error or errors thereon. Ranahan v. Gibbons, 23 Wash. 255, 62 Pac. 773; Young v. Borzone, 26 Wash. 4, 66 Pac. 135, 421; Burrows v. Kinsley, 27 Wash. 694, 68 Pac. 332; Pickford v. Borland, 76 Wash. 339, 136 Pac. 128; Wright v. Tacoma, 87 Wash. 334, 151 Pac. 837. We do not lose sight of [512]*512the provisions of § 383, Rem. Comp. Stat. [P. C. § 7811], reading, in part, as follows:

“Exceptions to . . . findings of fact or conclusions of law . . . may be taken by any party, either by stating to the judge, . . . when the . . . decision is signed, that such party excepts to the same, specifying the part or parts excepted to (whereupon the judge, . . . shall note the exceptions in the margin or at the foot of the . . . decision); or by filing like written exceptions within five days after the filing of the . . . decision, ...”

When counsel orally take exceptions to findings at the time they are made, or requests for findings at the time they are refused, it manifestly becomes the duty of the judge to make proper record thereof by indorsement .upon the findings and requests for findings. In this particular case such indorsement of the judge, it may be conceded, was too general in terms; but manifestly counsel taking the exceptions, having properly stated the exceptions, were not to blame for that. We think that, where the indorsement of the trial judge evidencing the taking of exceptions, read in the light of a statement in the statement of facts, plainly shows that such exceptions were directed to each finding separately by number, and to each refused request separately by number, such record of the exceptions sufficiently evidences their proper taking. We therefore conclude that we cannot ignore the statement of facts. This calls for our consideration of the cause upon the merits.

For many years past, the Hill Syrup Company has been a corporation of this state with its principal place of business at Seattle. W. E. Sander was its president and general manager for several years prior to June, 1921. He and two others then constituted its board of trustees. By common consent of the other two, he had [513]*513entire charge of the company’s finances and entire supervision of the keeping of its books of account. . The other two were engaged practically exclusively in the manufacture and marketing of the company’s products. One of them was secretary, but performed no duties of such office other than to sign such minutes of meetings of the trustees as were kept; such meetings being of very rare occurrence, and formal action thereat touching the company’s affairs being of equally rare occurrence. Even the formulation of such minutes as were kept was seemingly the work of Sander. Some of the meetings, as the testimony shows, were supposed, rather than actual, meetings, though evidenced by minutes apparently proper in form. Sander was, up to about June or July, 1921, the owner of a majority of the capital stock of the company, but a substantial quantity of the stock was also then owned by others.

For sometime prior to January, 1921, Sander had been in the habit of paying his personal obligations with checks signed by the company by him as president against the bank account of the company, and causing the amount thereof to be charged against himself upon the books of the company. Such issuance of the company’s checks here in question in January, February and May, 1921, was but a continuation of that habit. From time to time he made reimbursements in form to the company, so that upon the books of the company on May 31, 1921, he appeared to be indebted to the company in the sum of $246.77 only. The reimbursements so made in form by Sander to the company consisted of property of very questionable value, but for the most part of his own promissory notes, which in turn were in form satisfied by turning over to the company property of very questionable value. No for[514]*514mal action was ever taken by tbe trustees of the company authorizing Sander to so use the funds of the company. Nor does the evidence show any implied acquiescence by the other trustees of such use of the company’s funds by Sander. The bank was never a depository of the funds of the company, and none of its officers had any knowledge whatever that Sander had ever paid with the funds of the company any of his personal debts. So, of course, the bank’s officers had no reason whatever to suppose that Sander had any authority to use the funds of the company in paying his personal debts. One of the by-laws of the company, evidently of long standing, reads as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
223 P. 595, 128 Wash. 509, 1924 Wash. LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-syrup-co-v-marine-national-bank-wash-1924.