Kean v. National City Bank

294 F. 214, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 2480
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 12, 1923
DocketNo. 3797
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 294 F. 214 (Kean v. National City Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kean v. National City Bank, 294 F. 214, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 2480 (6th Cir. 1923).

Opinions

HICKENLOOPER, District Judge.

The only question presented by the record is the alleged error of the court below in directing a verdict for the defendant at the close of plaintiffs’ evidence. The plaintiffs in error were therefore plaintiffs below.

It appears from the evidence that in November, 1920, $466,000 par value of Uiberty Bonds, the property of the plaintiffs, were stolen from an employé of the plaintiffs in the city of New York. The bonds involved in this case were part of those so stolen. Thereafter, in January, 1921, one PI. Diggs Nolen, of the city of Memphis, Tenn., a depositor at the National City Bank of Memphis, defendant herein, and a [217]*217man of apparently bad reputation, called at the bank and stated that he desired to sell ,$100,000 of Liberty Bonds. He was told that the bank did not buy or sell bonds, and was referred to the Bank of Commerce & Trust Company, of Memphis, where a list of the bonds was left for investigation of title; but, no purchase being made, the bonds were then returned to Nolen. A request for a loan of $80,000 upon the bonds was also_ refused by the defendant. These transactions all took place on Saturday afternoon, January IS, 1921, during the absence of W. L. Huntley, Jr., the active vice president of the defendant bank.

On Monday, January 17th, Huntley returned to his duties and was at once cautioned by the president of the bank to have nothing to do with the bonds, should Nolen again offer them for sale. Shortly after this caution Huntley instructed the teller at the bank to prepare to cash a draft for between $80,000 and $90,000 with currency of large denomination, and shortly before the hour of closing Huntley presented to the teller a draft for $85,000 drawn by the Union & Planters’ Bank & Trust Company, of Memphis, Term., on its New York correspondent, payable to the order of A. K. Tigrett & Co. and indorsed in blank by that firm and by Nolen. The teller, who was also an assistant cashier, cashed the draft for its face value, less $56.70 exchange charged by the bank. This draft was given in payment of the purchase price of bonds sold to the Union & Planters’ Bank & Trust Company by Tigrett & Co., presumably for the account of Nolen, and the draft was cashed by Huntley, through the bank, for Nolen.

Nine days laLer, or on January 26th, Huntley procured a personal friend of his, one M. B. Joseph, to sell $65,000 par value of Liberty Bonds through Priddy & Williams, dealers in securities, cautioning Joseph not to disclose his (Huntley’s) connection with the transaction, and telling him that the sale was made on behalf of a friend or client. These bonds Priddy & Williams likewise sold to the Union & Planters’ Bank & Trust Company, and delivered to Joseph a draft payable to Joseph-Myers, Itic., for $54,000. Joseph then took this draft to Huntley, and indorsed it, “Joscpb-Myers, Inc., by M. B. Joseph, Pres.,” and Huntley immediately presented it to the teller, requesting that it be cashed, and the teller delivered to him the currency for the face of the draft, less exchange in the amount of $33.

On the same day, January 26, 1921, a sale of $10,000 par value of similar Liberty Bonds was made by Huntley to the firm of PI. & B. Beer, of New Orleans, La., through P',. Perkins, of Memphis, a correspondent of the purchaser. In completion of this sale Huntley drew the draft of the defendant bank upon II. & B. Beer, of New Orleans, for the purchase price, $9,202.76, attached $10,000 par value of Liberty Bonds thereto, and, the draft being to drawer’s order, the indorsement of the bank was stamped upon the back. • This draft Huntley presented to the teller, who then paid him the face value thereof in currency.

There were other facts presented, such as the attempt of Huntley to procure the sale of some of the bonds through one C. Samuel Black, and an introduction of Mr. Black as “Mr. Wood,” and Black’s subsequent refusal to have anything to do with the bonds, because of this, and because of the apparent secrecy or mystery surrounding the sale, [218]*218and the fact that the bonds sold by Joseph were sold for almost $4,000 less than the market price, with an apparent indifference upon Huntley’s párt as to details of price. Evidence was also introduced to the effect that H. Diggs Nolen was known generally in the city of Memphis as a man of bad reputation, a frequent violator of the Harrison narcotic law and the liquor laws, and an associate of men of ill repute. These and other incidental facts were introduced, and tended to prove that the circumstances surrounding the sales by Nolen were such as would place a reasonably prudent man upon inquiry, and, for the purposes of the motion involved, must be considered as having this effect.

As has been stated, it subsequently developed that the bonds sold in the foregoing transactions were part of the bonds originally stolen frqm the plaintiffs, and on January 11, 1922, the plaintiffs filed their declaration, seeking to recover from the defendant bank upon three grounds, namely: (1) That the defendant bank had participated in a conspiracy to defraud the plaintiffs by disposing of these stolen securities to innocent purchasers for value and without notice, after notice to the bank of plaintiffs’ equities; (2) that the several drafts were purchased by the defendant bank mala fide and with notice; and (3) that in these transactions the bank converted the property of the plaintiffs to its use, and that plaintiffs might recover as for a conversion.

Treating these several alleged grounds for recovery in their inverse order, and considering for the present only the first two drafts, the proceeds of bonds sold to good-faith purchasers, the third ground may be disposed of by the observation that the plaintiffs were not parties to the several bills of exchange, and under the most favorable view cannot be said to have had more than an equitable right in the drafts. We have been cited to no case, and we know of none, in which a mere equitable' title has been held sufficient to sustain an action for conversion. If, under such circumstances, the party has a remedy, it is in a court of equity. Gilmore v. Watson, 23 Ga. 63; Farrow v. Wooley & Jordan, 149 Ala. 373, 377, 43 South. 144; Baker v. Seavey, 163 Mass. 522, 525, 40 N. E. 863, 47 Am. St. Rep. 475. The case of Newton v. Porter, 69 N. Y. 133, upon which plaintiff somewhat relies, is an action in equity, and the case at bar is clearly distinguishable from actions in trover, based upon a conversion of chattel property in its changed or improved form, or actions, as for conversion, against a former holder of a note or draft, who negotiates it to an innocent pur-1 chaser, contrary to the purposes for which it was placed in his custody. As was held in Metropolitan Elevated R. R. Co. v. Kneeland, 120 N. Y. 134, 24 N. E. 381, 8 L. R. A. 253, 17 Am. St. Rep. 619, the essential injury, common to all such latter class of cases, is the fraudulent imposition of liability upon a party’to an instrument who would not otherwise have been liable. Here no such liability fraudulently imposed upon any party to the several bills is shown, or at least no previous party in any way complains of the imposition of such liability. There can be no liability at law, as for a conversion, either as to the draft for $85,000, or as to the one for $54,000.

The second contention of the plaintiffs, namely, that the bank purchased, and subsequently collected the proceeds of, these [219]

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Bluebook (online)
294 F. 214, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 2480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kean-v-national-city-bank-ca6-1923.