I.C.R.R. Co. v. Peoples Bank

9 Tenn. App. 39, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 212
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 15, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 Tenn. App. 39 (I.C.R.R. Co. v. Peoples Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
I.C.R.R. Co. v. Peoples Bank, 9 Tenn. App. 39, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 212 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

The Illinois Central Railroad Company and George M. Brooks & Company have both appealed from a decree dismissing their bills and denying them any relief. The two causes were consolidated in the lower court and heard together, the bills were filed alleging that each complainant was a preferred creditor of the Peoples Bank which had been closed by the state hanking department on the evening of September 21, 1027. The Illinois Central Railroad Company was not a depositor in the Peoples Bank of Martin, Tennessee. The agent of said railroad company at Martin, Tennessee, remitted his daily collections to the treasurer of the Railroad Company in Chicago, on September 15, 16, 17, 19, 20 and 21, 1927, this, agent took his cash collections for the dajr to the Peoples Bank and purchased drafts or cheeks of the Peoples Bank drawn on the Fourth & First National Bank of Nashville, Tennessee, and payable to the Illinois Central. These drafts were sent by the railroad agent to the treasurer of the railroad of the railroad company in Chicago who deposited same in a Chicago hank and this Chicago hank sent same in due course of business to the Fourth & First National Bank of Nashville for payment. None of these drafts or checks was paid, as the Peoples Bank had no funds in the Fourth & First National Bank of Nashville to meet these drafts.

The drafts purchased were as follows:

September 35th, 3927. Draft No. 19861 $240.00

September 16th, 1927. Draft No. 19868 $140.00

September 17th, 1927. Draft No. 19879 $220.00

September 3 9th, 1927. Draft No. 19884 .$490.00

*41 September 20th, 1927. Draft No. 19891 $480.00

September 21st, 1927. Draft No. 19898 $380.00

At the time of the purchase on September 15th of the draft for $240 and on September 16th of the draft-for $140, the Peoples Bank did have a balance in the Nashville bank of more than the amount of these two drafts, but not more than the amount of these two drafts and drafts previously issued which had not reached the Nashville bank for payment. The balance was therefore only an apparent balance and not a real balance. This is shown by the state of the account of the Peoples Bank with the Nashville bank. At the close of business on September 15th the Peoples Bank had on deposit with the Nashville*bank $6,117.48. At the close, of business on September 16th the balance was $2,151.04, whereas, on September 17th the Peoples Bank had an overdraft in the Nashville bank of $1,206.42. Thereafter there was continuously an overdraft up to the time of the closing of the Peoples Bank on the 21st instant. Tt is clear, therefore, that on September 15th and 16th the date the first two di’afts were purchased, the Peoples Bank had issued more drafts or checks against its Nashville account than it had money to meet same. It is a plain case, so far as September 15th and 16th are concerned, of the bank having on deposit with its correspondent bank a balance totally insufficient to meet the drafts or checks which the Peoples Bank had drawn against this balance in the Nashville bank. On and after September 17th the checks were drawn against a positive overdraft. During all this time the bank was insolvent and known by its officers to be insolvent. Tn fact, the insolvency had continued for a long time and had been brought to the attention of the officers of the bank in sevei’al ways. It appeal’s that the Peoples Bank had attempted to consolidate with another Martin Bank a short time previous. The other bank refused the consolidation on account of the bad loans which the Peoples Bank had among its assets.

The Chancellor held that at the time of the purchase of all these drafts the bank was insolvent and known by its officers to be insolvent, the proof indicates that the bank held bills receivable for about $92.000. It is estimated by witnesses who know the value of the security, that from thirty to fifty per cent will be realized on these notes. The bank had deposits at the time it closed amounting to about $112,000. It had issued exchange or drafts on its correspondent to the extent of more, than $10,000, which drafts were not paid. Tt is the railroad’s contention that:

“This is not a case between a banker and a depositor establishing the simple relation of creditor and debtor but a case of seller and purchaser where a party was induced to part with *42 his property by fraud, thereby making the perpetrator of the fraud a trustee ex maleficio.”

The facts in the case of George M. Brooks and Company against the defendant bank, or receiver, are as follows:

Brooks drew a check on the bank of Martin for $1000, payable to a merchant at Greenfield, Tennessee, this merchant deposited the $1000 check in the bank at Greenfield which forwarded the cheek to its correspondent in Memphis, Tennessee. The Memphis correspondent forwarded the check to a bank in St. Louis, Mo., this bank sent the check to the defendant bank, the defendant bank presented the check to the bank at Martin and received $1000. The defendant bank issued its draft on the Fourth and First National Bank of Nashville, Tennessee for this $1000 and remitted the $1000 draft to the First National Bank of St. Louis, Mo. This $1000 was collected two days before the bank closed. The Fourth and First National Bank refused payment of the said $1000 draft. There is a stipulation in the record and among other things it is agreed that all the parties, except the defendant, who handled said drafts drawn on the Fourth and First National Bank of Nashville, were not guilty of any negligence. It is further agreed that the Peoples Bank at the close of business on September 14th, 1927, had on deposit with the Fourth & First National Bank $6,920.54; at the close of the day’s business on September 15th, 1927, it had on deposit to its credit a balance of $6,117.48; at the close of business on September 16th, 1927, a balance to its credit of $2,151.04; on September 17th, 1927, the Peoples Bank had an overdraft of $1,206.-42, with the Fourth & First National Bank; at the close of business on September 19th, 1927, this overdraft increased to $6,658.68; and on September 20th, 1927, the overdraft had increased to $10,745.95; and at the close of the day’s business on September 21st, 1927, the overdraft had decreased to $392.64.

One of the defenses made by the receiver and the defendant bank is that 'L. G. McMillan, agent of the Railroad Company, was a director of the Peoples Bank and that the Railroad Company, by this fact, had knowledge of the conditions of the bank. The Chancellor recognized the appellants as being general creditors but was of the opinion that neither appellant was entitled to preference and that each would have to share, on the same basis as other general creditors. The two appellants have assigned similar errors which raise the following proposition:

The Chancellor erred in dismissing complainant’s bill.

The Chancellor erred in denying preference to the claim of the appellant Illinois Central Railroad Company on the six drafts aggregating $1900 and on each of them.

*43

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Bluebook (online)
9 Tenn. App. 39, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/icrr-co-v-peoples-bank-tennctapp-1928.