Indiana Trust Co. v. International Building & Loan Ass'n

74 N.E. 633, 36 Ind. App. 685, 1905 Ind. App. LEXIS 239
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 1905
DocketNo. 5,232; No. 5,233
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 74 N.E. 633 (Indiana Trust Co. v. International Building & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indiana Trust Co. v. International Building & Loan Ass'n, 74 N.E. 633, 36 Ind. App. 685, 1905 Ind. App. LEXIS 239 (Ind. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Koby, J.

Appellee in each of the above-entitled cases began proceedings by filing claims against the estate of Norman S. Byram, deceased, of which appellant was executor, each of which claims was disallowed and thereafter came upon the trial docket. The claim filed by the International Building & Loan Association was for $4,914.90. That filed by the International Building & Loan Association No. 2 was for $8,741.48. A number of identical paragraphs of answer were filed in each case for money had and [687]*687received, all of them being based upon the $5,000 transaction hereafter detailed.

Special findings, with conclusions of law thereon, were made and stated in each case in accordance with which judgment was rendered in appellees’ favor, without any credit on account of said transaction being given. The findings are, so far as controverted questions are concerned, in the same terms, and closely follow the evidence. It is made to appear that the International Building & Loan Association was incorporated in 1889, and that the International Building & Loan Association No. 2 was incorporated in 1891. The decedent was treasurer and Charles Schurmann was secretary of both said associations from the time they were formed, decedent’s service terminating with his death, and that of Schurmann continuing up to the time of the trials. • Both treasurer and secretary were directors in each association, the boards of directors of which were filled by the same persons, arid the by-laws of which were in all respects uniform.

The duties of the secretary, so far as relevant, were to receive all moneys paid into said associations; to pay the same out at the end of each day to the treasurer, taking his receipt therefor; to keep all accounts of the associations; to draw and sign all orders on the treasurer; keep the books at all times sirbject to the inspection of the board; to see to the settlement of all claims and bills; to have the appointment and general supervision over all employes, agents and agencies; to be the custodian of all mortgages, deeds, etc., and once each quarter to compare his books with those kept by the treasurer, reporting discrepancies to the board.

The duties of the treasurer were to receive all moneys from the secretary; to pay all orders drawn upon him by the president and secretary; to keep a correct account of all moneys received and paid out; to be the custodian of all bonds received for loans and of other securities not in the [688]*688custody of the secretary; to,make a statement of the business of the office to the board, when required, and to compare his books once each quarter with those kept by the secretary, reporting discrepancies to the board.

On June 4, 1894, decedent was in poor health, and had arranged to sojourn indefinitely in California. The directors of both associations on said day by formal resolution granted an indefinite leave of absence to him. No record was made as to the manner in which the business of the associations should be carried on during his absence. On the following day, June 5, decedent made-his check against association funds in his hands as follows: “Indianapolis, Indiana, June 5, 1894. No. 6. Merchants National Bank: Pay to the order of Charles Schurmann $5,000. N. S. Byram, treas’r.” At the same time he wrote on the back of said check as follows: “This check was given by me to Mr. Schurmann against the funds of the Nat. Bldg. Assn, for which he gave me no receipt, and he is indebted to me or to the association to that amount;. he has a memo, of same in tin box in secretary’s office. N. S. Byram.” He delivered said check to Schurmann, and they together went to the barde, where Schurmann indorsed it by writing his name across the back, and thereupon opened a deposit account with said bank as “Charles Schurmann, secy.,” and in decedent’s presence deposited said check as a credit thereto, stating to the bankers that the account was a building and loan account, which they always supposed it to be. Schurmann thereafter, up to October 14, 1903, deposited sums and balances in his hands as secretary of each of said associations in said account (which covers many pages of the bank ledger) without separating the funds of one association from those of’ the other, or from other funds deposited by him. After June 4, aforesaid, he drew checks on said account in payment of the expenses of said associations, in the payment of warrants turned over to the treas[689]*689urer as cash, and in payment of balances due from him in sundry settlements with the treasurer. Decedent was not credited with the proceeds of said check, nor was Schurmann charged with the same upon any of the books of said associations. On June 5, 1894, decedent, as such treasurer, had of the funds of the International Building & Loan Association $18,854.18, and of those belonging to the International Building & Loan Association No. 2, $4,861.91.

After June 4, 1894, and for some time prior thereto, the secretary did not pay over at the end of each day to the treasurer all money paid into the association, but from time to time out of the money received he paid warrants drawn on the treasurer, which warrants were afterward turned over to the treasurer as cash, he receipting therefor. The secretary kept account of his receipts and of his payments, treating warrants paid by him as aforesaid as money, kept all the accounts of the associations, including an account between the treasurer and the associations made up from his payments to the treasurer and the reports of the latter. He kept the books of the associations which were at all proper times subject to the inspection of the board. The treasurer also kept an account in what is designated as “Byram’s ledger,” in which the paid warrants received by him were treated as cash.

The findings omit to state in direct terms whether the associations had notice or knowledge of this manner of conducting the affairs of said associations, but the circumstances axe of such a nature as to preclude any possible claim of'want of notice thereof. Indeed, it may be said that the associations must have known that the treasurer, absent on indefinite leave, was not receiving funds each night or. paying warrants in Indianapolis, as they were issued, while the payment of their own salaries in this manner to the board members conveyed definite information thereof to them.

[690]*6901. The rule of a corporation’s action is found in its by-laws. The power to amend the by-laws of these associations was expressly vested in the board of directors thereof. 3 Clark & Marshall, Priv. Corp., §641. The effect of a departure from the written rule, acquiesced in by the board of directors is tersely stated as follows: “When the power to make by-laws is vested in the stockholders or members, and they have made by-laws for the protection of the corporation, they can not be waived by the directors or other officers of the corporation. But the stockholders may permit the directors or other officers to act in disregard of such a by-law, or they may ratify their action, and in such a case there is a waiver of the by-law by the stockholders.” 3 Clark & Marshall, Priv. Corp., §640.

2. Appellees’ position is that the payment to Schurmann was a personal and purely private transaction between him and decedent in which they were not concerned.

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Bluebook (online)
74 N.E. 633, 36 Ind. App. 685, 1905 Ind. App. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indiana-trust-co-v-international-building-loan-assn-indctapp-1905.