Houck v. Bank of Newport

43 P.2d 179, 150 Or. 295, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 100
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1935
StatusPublished

This text of 43 P.2d 179 (Houck v. Bank of Newport) 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
Houck v. Bank of Newport, 43 P.2d 179, 150 Or. 295, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 100 (Or. 1935).

Opinion

RAND, J.

This is a suit to impress a trust upon $1,026.07 in moneys which Andrew J. Naterlin had on deposit in his checking account with the Bank of Newport on November 4,1938, and was on said day applied by the bank in payment of past due obligations then owing by Naterlin to the bank. Prior to said application, Naterlin had issued individual checks to the plaintiffs to the amount thereof and, when these checks were duly presented to the bank for payment, payment was refused for lack of funds, caused wholly by the bank’s application of the moneys.

Until July 25, 1933, Naterlin had acted as manager for the Newport Pish Company, a corporation doing-business at Newport, Oregon, and had become personally indebted to the Bank of Newport as an indorser or otherwise on certain notes given by said company to the bank. At that time the Newport Pish Company and Naterlin were both insolvent. In order for Naterlin to engage in business for himself, he entered into a contract with the San Juan Pishing and Packing Company, a Washington concern, by which he agreed to purchase fish and process and ship the same to it for a stated commission and, in consideration thereof, that company agreed to advance him moneys from time to time to pay the costs of the fish and the expenses of processing and shipping the same, and it was agreed that all fish purchased by him should be shipped to it except a limited amount which he might buy with his own money and sell for local consumption.

Pursuant thereto and on said last-mentioned date, the San Juan Pishing and Packing Company caused an *297 order to be forwarded to the Bank of Newport directing it to credit Naterlin’s account with the sum of $400, and, upon its receipt, the bank inquired of Naterlin how the same should be deposited and was instructed to deposit it in a special account to be designated as the Newport Fish Company Special Account. At that time Naterlin, according to his own testimony, informed the bank of the character of the deposit and of the terms of his agreement with the San Juan Fishing and Packing Company. Other advances were made and deposited in said special account until September 4, 1933, when, because of certain threatened litigation by others against the Newport Fish Company, Naterlin directed the bank to change the name of the account and to thereafter deposit all moneys received from the San Juan Fishing and Packing Company in his own individual name, and all such advances thereafter received were deposited to his credit individually. The last of the advances so made was for $1,000 and was deposited and credited to his account on November 2, 1933, and the moneys so credited were included in the amount appropriated by the bank in payment of its own claims on November 4, 1933.

Between July 25,1933, and November 2,1933, when the last advance was received, the San Juan Fishing and Packing Company, had, pursuant to its said agreement, advanced to Naterlin more than $15,000, all of which sums were deposited in the bank, the last item being, as stated, a check for $1,000 which that company had issued payable to the order of Naterlin.

The bank contends that at the time it set off the amount of Naterlin’s overdue obligations against the deposit he then had in the bank, it was in ignorance of the true ownership of the moneys thus applied and, *298 therefore, was entitled to make the offset. Morse states the rule applicable to this contention as follows:

“When an agent or trustee deposits money of his principal or cestui, in his own name, in a bank to which lie is indebted, and the bank in ignorance of the true ownership applied the money upon the debt, the owner can recover such money if it can be identified. ’ ’ 2 Morse on Banks and Banking (6th Ed.), Sec. 590.

But in the footnotes, he says:

“The weight of authority is to the effect that, if funds in which third parties have an interest are deposited in the individual name of the depositor in a bank which has neither actual notice nor notice of facts sufficient to put it on inquiry as to the true character of the deposit, it may apply the deposit to the payment of the individual debt of the depositor to the bank, and may do so whether or not it made any advances or otherwise changed its position on the faith of such deposit.”

This court has never had occasion to pass upon the question as to the extent of the knowledge which will prevent a bank from rightfully applying to the payment of its own claims a deposit in which third parties have an interest, nor do we deem it necessary to do so now, since from a careful reading of the evidence we are convinced that the bank, when it made this application, if it did not have full knowledge as to the true character of the deposit, at the very least it had notice of facts sufficient to put it upon inquiry and that, if it had exercised ordinary diligence upon its part, it would have known that these funds did not belong to Naterlin and that they had been deposited for a specific purpose and that the plaintiffs in their dealings with Naterlin were dealing upon the faith of these particular funds and would have refused to have made the sales if they had not been relying thereon.

*299 Again, on July 25,1933, when Naterlin stated to the bank that the $400 it had been directed to deposit to his credit was to be deposited in the name of the Newport Pish Company Special Account, whether he explained to the bank the arrangements under which that money had been advanced and the terms of the contract under which the moneys had been advanced, as he said he did, the bank knew that the words ‘ ‘ special account ’ ’ were not descriptio personae but were a description of the fund deposited. It knew that these words imported the existence of some fiduciary relationship upon the part of Naterlin or the Newport Fish Company, and imparted notice to the bank of the character of the fund, and, in accepting the deposit, the bank impliedly, if not expressly, agreed that it would handle these funds in the manner that had been agreed upon by Naterlin and the San Juan Pishing and Packing Company. The bank, therefore, when it set off its notes against Naterlin’s deposit, knew or should have known that Naterlin was not the true owner of the deposit and that the moneys had been deposited to enable him to purchase and pay for the fish he was about to buy for the San Juan Pishing and Packing Company. And when he later changed the name of the account and had the moneys later advanced deposited to his individual credit, in its subsequent dealings with him, the bank was charged with the same notice that it had previously obtained as to the true ownership of the funds.

However, the San Juan Pishing and Packing Company is not a party to this litigation and, so far as its rights are concerned, it has already received the fish for which it had contracted. It, therefore, has no ground to complain of the action taken by the bank whether wrongful or otherwise, since it no longer possesses any beneficial ownership in the funds. The only injured *300 parties, therefore, are Naterlin, who, although a defendant in the suit, made no appearance and is asking for no relief, and the plaintiffs, who are the holders of the checks and the only parties complaining.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fourth Street Bank of Philadelphia v. Yardley
165 U.S. 634 (Supreme Court, 1897)
Joy v. Grasse
217 N.W. 365 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1927)
Gruenther v. Bank of Monkoe
133 N.W. 402 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1911)
U. S. Nat. Bank v. First Trust & Savings Bank
119 P. 343 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1911)
Hunt v. Security State Bank
179 P. 248 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1919)
Hove v. Stanhope State Bank
115 N.W. 476 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1908)
Harrison v. Simpson
17 Kan. 508 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1877)
Kansas Pacific Railway Co. v. Hopkins
18 Kan. 494 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1877)
Griffith v. Stucker
136 P. 937 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1913)
Ballard v. Home National Bank
136 P. 935 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1913)
Goeken v. Bank of Palmer
163 P. 636 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1917)
Goeken v. Bank of Palmer
179 P. 321 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1919)
People's National Bank v. Swift
134 Tenn. 175 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 P.2d 179, 150 Or. 295, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houck-v-bank-of-newport-or-1935.