Indiana Quarries Co. v. Angier Bank & Trust Co.

190 N.C. 277
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 14, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 190 N.C. 277 (Indiana Quarries Co. v. Angier Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indiana Quarries Co. v. Angier Bank & Trust Co., 190 N.C. 277 (N.C. 1925).

Opinion

CoNNOR, J.

In its complaint, plaintiff alleges that P. S. Cooper and J. E. Williams were President and Yice-President and Cashier, respectively, of defendant, Angier Bank and Trust Company, a corporation, engaged in the general banking business in the town of Angier, N. C.; that on 24 October, 1921, said corporation was planning and about to undertake the erection of a new building in Angier to be used partly as a bank; that P. S. Cooper, President, and J. E. Williams, Yice-President and Cashier, as officers of said corporation, were in complete charge and control of its business, and were acting for the corporation in the matter of erecting said building. It further alleges that defendants had employed M. O. Cole as “its cut stone contractor for the said building” and that said Cole had made out the specifications for the cut stone required for the said building; that defendants “sent in said order to the plaintiff, and authorized and instructed this plaintiff to ship to the defendants the amount of cut stone specified in said order, and signed a written guarantee by and for defendant bank, guaranteeing unto the plaintiff to make payment for all stone required for the bank building at Angier, N. C., according to the order placed by M. O. Cole.” Plaintiff then alleges the shipment of said stone, and failure of defendants to pay for same, on demand of plaintiff.

There are no allegations in this complaint, upon which either P. S. Cooper or J". ,E. Williams can be held liable to plaintiff for the stone shipped by plaintiff. It is alleged specifically that they were acting as [279]*279officers of defendant, Angier Bank and Trust Co., a corporation. There was no error in sustaining the demurrer.

The evidence offered at the trial, to sustain plaintiff’s action against Angier Bank and Trust Co., tends to show the following facts:

A short time prior to 24 October, 1921, plaintiff, whose place of business is in Chicago, Ill., received from M. 0. Cole, of Durham, N. C., a written order for cut stone to be shipped .to Angier, N. C.; before accepting said order, plaintiff sent the manager of its eastern sales office to Angier, N. C., where he saw J. E. Williams; said Williams was in charge of defendant bank as cashier. He stated to plaintiff’s manager that “the bank was to have a new building”; relying upon this statement, plaintiff’s manager asked Mr. Williams as cashier, to guarantee payment by Cole of the stone which Cole had ordered from plaintiff.

Thereupon, Mr. Williams signed and delivered to plaintiff’s manager a letter as follows:
W. H. Geegoet, Yice-Pres. J. E. Williams, Yice-Pres. and Cashier.
“Angier Bane and Trust Company,
Angier, North Carolina.
P. S. Cooper, President,
Dunn, N. C.
October 24, 1921.
The Indiana Quarries Company,
Chicago, Ill.
Gentlemen:
This is to certify that we will guarantee payment for all stone required for our bank at Angier, N. C., per order placed by Mr. M. O. Cole, who is our cut stone contractor on this operation. The terms are sixty days from date of invoice. Yours truly,
J. E. Williams, Cashier

Upon receipt of this letter plaintiff accepted Cole’s order and shipped the stone ordered by him to Angier, N. C.; invoices were mailed to Cole dated 5 and 19 November, 1921, respectively; the total amount of these invoices was $1,238.98; no payment has been made on the account for this stone by any one, and same is now past due.

At the time the letter was signed and delivered by J. E. Williams to the manager of plaintiff, the Williams Supply Company, a corporation, was engaged in the erection of a building in Angier, N. C.; this building wás planned partly as a bank; J. E. Williams, cashier, of [280]*280Angier Bank and Trust Company, was secretary of tbe 'Williams Supply Company; all tbe stock in said company was owned by P. S. Cooper, J. E. Williams and,Mrs. J. E. Williams; tbe stone shipped by plaintiff, upon Cole’s order, was ordered for and was used in tbe construction of tbis building; Angier Bank and Trust Company bad no interest in said building or in its erection; its board of directors bad not authorized J. E. Williams, cashier, to write tbe letter purporting to be a guarantee by tbe bank of payment for tbe stone shipped by plaintiff; it did not contemplate at tbe time tbe erection of a bank building.

Plaintiff relied upon tbe letter offered in evidence in good faith as tbe guarantee by defendant of its account against Cole for tbe stone; it bad no notice that defendant bad no interest in said building, or that Williams, its cashier, bad a personal interest in tbe shipment of tbe stone.

At tbe close of all tbe evidence, tbe motion of defendant, Angier Bank and Trust Company, for judgment as of nonsuit was allowed. Plaintiff excepted, and assigns tbis as error.

If there bad been evidence, from which tbe jury could find that plaintiff bad notice, at tbe time it shipped tbe stone to Cole, at Angier, N. C., that defendant, Angier Bank and Trust Company, bad no interest in tbe building in which tbe stone was to be used, and that J. E. Williams, its cashier, bad a personal interest in tbe purchase of tbe stone, Grady v. Bank, 184 N. C., 158; Bank v. West, 184 N. C., 220, and Stansell v. Payne, 189 N. C., 647, would be conclusive of tbis appeal. If plaintiff bad bad notice of .these facts before it shipped tbe stone, clearly tbe defendant, Angier Bank and Trust Company, could not be held liable upon tbe letter written and signed by tbe cashier, and purporting to be its guarantee of payment of tbe stone. Tbe authority of a cashier is confined to transactions which are for tbe benefit of tbe bank. It does not extend to a transaction which is for tbe benefit of tbe cashier personally, and one dealing with him with notice that such is tbe character of tbe transaction can acquire no rights thereby against tbe bank, unless tbe transaction was actually authorized, expressly or by implication. Tiffany on Banks and Banking, p. 325.

In Grady v. Bank, supra, Chief Justice Clark, writing tbe opinion for tbe Court, says: “Upon all tbe evidence, and in tbe light of tbe above cited authorities, Grady was not an innocent party to tbe transaction.” Grady knew that tbe cashier bad a personal interest in tbe note which be alleged tbe cashier bad taken in part payment of bis note held by tbe bank. Although tbe cashier bad authority to receive payments on notes held by tbe bank, be bad no authority, as cashier, to take a note, which was virtually bis own note, held by Grady for [281]*281a loan made to a corporation of wbicb tbe casbier was an officer, and on wbicb be was an endorser, in payment of Grady’s note to tbe bank.

In Bank v. West, supra, tbe casbier of plaintiff bank bad bought an automobile of defendant, wbo was a customer of tbe bank. Pursuant to tbe cashier's instruction, defendant drew bis check on tbe bank for tbe purchase price of tbe automobile. This check was paid by tbe casbier, wbo, however, failed to deposit to tbe credit of defendant money for tbe payment of tbe check as be bad agreed with West to do.

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

Related

Schott v. Bank of Elmore Co.
22 N.E.2d 996 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 N.C. 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indiana-quarries-co-v-angier-bank-trust-co-nc-1925.