Independent School District, Class A, Number One v. Porter

228 P. 253, 39 Idaho 340, 1924 Ida. LEXIS 48
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 228 P. 253 (Independent School District, Class A, Number One v. Porter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Independent School District, Class A, Number One v. Porter, 228 P. 253, 39 Idaho 340, 1924 Ida. LEXIS 48 (Idaho 1924).

Opinion

ENSIGN, District Judge.

This is an action brought by the respondent, Independent School District, Class A, No. 1, in Cassia county, in accordance with the provisions of sec. 2, page 60, chap. 42, Sess. Laws 1921, to enforce a trust in the sum of $21,518.18, upon the general fund and estate of the insolvent Commercial State Bank of Burley, Idaho, and now, under the provisions of said chap. 42, in the hands and under the direction and control of the appellant, commissioner of finance and industry of the state of Idaho, and to require said appellant to forthwith proceed to list said claim for payment out of the funds of said Commercial State Bank under subd. 2, sec. 13, of said chap. 42, and to pay said claim in its order of priority. Upon the hearing of the matter before this court, and upon motion of appellant the name of E. W. Porter was substituted for that of J. G. Fralick, as commissioner of finance and industry.

The facts in this case were stipulated, and are in substance as follows:

1. Plaintiff now is and at all times herein mentioned was a body corporate, organized and existing for school purposes, under and by virtue of the laws of the state; that prior to the passing of chap. 215, Sess. Laws 1921, plaintiff was a body corporate organized and existing for school purposes under and by virtue of the laws of the state, under the name of Burley Independent School District No. 1 of Cassia County, and that the plaintiff is the successor in interest of said Burley School District No. 1.

2. That the defendant, J. G. Fralick, now is and at all times hereafter mentioned was the duly appointed, qualified and acting commissioner of commerce and industry of the state of Idaho.

*343 3. That the Burley State Bank of Burley, Idaho, on January 17, 1921, and for a long time prior thereto, was a corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the state of Idaho; that the said Burley State Bank was engaged in and conducting a general banking business in the state of Idaho, with its principal place of business at Burley, Cassia county; that on January 17, 1921, the said Burley State Bank closed its doors and suspended payment, at which time, and ever since, such bank has been and now is insolvent.

4. That the defendant, J. G. Fralick, commissioner of commerce and industry, on January 17, 1921, took possession of the assets and business of said Burley State Bank, as required by law.

5. That on January 17, 1921, the plaintiff herein had on special deposit in the said Burley State Bank, in the name of Burley Independent School District No. 1, subject to withdrawal by said plaintiff upon its check, the sum of $22,147,21, which said funds were the property of this plaintiff and were obtained for general school purposes within said school district, and said sum stood to the credit of this plaintiff on the 'books of said Burley State Bank at the date said ibank was closed, to wit, January 17, 1921.

6. That thereafter on or about May 20, 1921, the Commercial State Bank was duly organized and charter granted thereto by the state of Idaho, and said Commercial State Bank now is, and at all times since has been, a domestic corporation; that thereafter on May 28, 1921, the said Commercial State Bank, acting by and through its duly authorized board of directors, “unanimously adopted” a resolution to the effect that it be proposed to the directors of the Burley State Bank that the Commei’cial State Bank take over all the assets of said Burley State Bank, and in consideration thex’eof that the former will assume, agree to pay and pay the liabilities of the latter as shown by its books; that the Burley State Bank accepted said offer and empowered its officers to deliver to the Commercial State Bank all of its assets, and that the proper officers of the Commercial *344 State Bank, in accordance with the agreement, took possession of the same.

7. That thereafter, and on June 6, 1921, the said Commercial State Bank opened its doors for business at Burley, Idaho, up to and including the 8th day of December, 1921, on which date said bank was by its officers placed in the hands of said commissioner of commerce and industry under the provisions of chap. 42, Sess. Laws 1921, and during all of the time since and now is in his hands and under his control.

8. That the records of said Commercial State Bank, from June 6, 1921, to December 8, 1921, show that said Independent School District, the plaintiff and respondent in this case, maintained an account with said bank, to wit: A debit in the sum of $1,264.50 of date of August 21, 1921, representing- the face of a certain warrant issued by said school district to Mr. A. C. Fouts, which warrant, at the time of said debit, had not been called by said school district; certain debits to said account in the sums of $425, $420, $15, $15, and $118.01, respectively, between December 3, and December 8, 1921, inclusive, representing checks drawn on said account by said school district; certain items for interest accrued between the dates of August 11, 1921, and November 1, 1921, and two items of credit in the sums of $708.88 and $425, respectively, of dates of December 1, 1921, and December 3, 1921, representing actual deposits by said school district in said bank.

9. That on or about June 1, 1921, said Commercial State Bank executed a bond, with several sureties, for the purpose of securing the deposit of said school district in said bank, and that some time between June 1, 1921, and August 8, 1921, said bond was delivered by said bank to the board of trustees of said school district; that prior to August 8, 1921, said board of trustees delivered said bond to their attorneys for an opinion as to its legality and on August 6, 1921, said attorneys rendered an opinion to the effect that said bond was insufficient in amount and that there was no justification of the sureties thereto, and advising said board *345 of trustees, in conformity with certain statutory provisions, to make proper investigation of the security offered by said bank, before accepting the same; that said bond was returned by said school district to said bank for correction; that said bond is attached to the stipulation as exhibit “A” and appears to be in the sum of $25,000, whereas the minutes of said bank show the same to be in the sum of $22,000; that the records of said bank do not show that said bond was again presented to the trustees of said school district after being corrected, or that any other 'bond was thereafter submitted to said school district, nor do the records of said school district show that the bond submitted as aforesaid was ever approved by said district.

10. That on May 20, 1922, the plaintiff and respondent school district presented its unpaid claim to the defendant and appellant for the amount it had on deposit in said Burley State Bank on the date said bank passed into the hands and under the control of appellant, and in which claim no request for specific classification, as provided by law, was made. On August 1, 1922, appellant notified respondent in writing that said claim had been allowed in the sum of $21,518.39, and had been given priority under subd. 3, sec. 13, chap. 42, Sess. Laws 1921; that on October 7, 1922, respondent presented to appellant an amended creditor’s claim and demanded that it be given priority under subd.

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Bluebook (online)
228 P. 253, 39 Idaho 340, 1924 Ida. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/independent-school-district-class-a-number-one-v-porter-idaho-1924.