Keyes v. First Nat. Bank

20 F.2d 678
CourtDistrict Court, D. South Dakota
DecidedJune 15, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 20 F.2d 678 (Keyes v. First Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. South Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keyes v. First Nat. Bank, 20 F.2d 678 (D.S.D. 1927).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, District Judge.

I have reviewed tbe record and briefs in tbe above-entitled matter and find tbe facts in this record undisputed. I find. no contention on tbe part of counsel as to any material facts in tbe record.

Plaintiff states its five separate causes of action as receiver of tbe First National Bank of Eureka, successor to tbe German Bank of Eureka, and against tbe First National Bank of Aberdeen, to recover $37,466.70, wbieb plaintiff alleges was paid to tbe defendant bank by tbe First National Bank of-[679]*679Eureka and the German Bank of Eureka, which the former succeeded, in payment of the personal indebtedness of one Christian Vorlander, president of the said German Bank and thereafter of the First National Bank of Eureka. The first four causes of action are, for practical purposes, alike, and the fifth is for interest paid upon what is conceded to have been a personal obligation of said Vorlander, president of the Eureka Bank, to the defendant bank..

While the facts are undisputed, counsel for the respective parties do not agree with the inferences naturally and legitimately to be drawn from the undisputed facts, and therefore disagree as to the conclusions of law applicable thereto. In my view of the situation presented, in the light of the uniform decisions of the courts, not only in this judicial circuit, but of the different circuits and the United States Supreme Court as well, the rights of the parties are determined largely by a proper interpretation of the real intent and purpose of the parties to the transactions made the basis of plaintiff’s causes of action.

Plaintiff urges a recovery upon the theory that Vorlander was indebted to the Eureka Bank by reason of hidden defalcations, and urges that he gave his personal and individual note to, and borrowed money from, the defendant bank which he placed to his credit in the Eureka Bank, and urge further that this credit was applied by operation of law upon the existing indebtedness of Vorlander to the Eureka bank. It is further urged that upon maturity of the notes so given upon the authority of Vorlander the defendant bank charged the amount of the notes, respectively, with interest, against the account of the Eureka bank, there being at the time a credit .balance in favor of the Eureka bank on the books of- the defendant bank which was a depository of the Eureka bank. Upon this situation it is urged by the plaintiff that the defendant bank thereby took funds of the Eureka bank in payment of Vorlander’s personal obligation, knowing the funds to be the property of the Eureka bank.

The defendant urges as a defense to the first four causes of action of the plaintiff:

(1) That the loans were made to the Eureka bank, in the first instance, secured by notes of Vorlander, and in the other transactions by other officers of the bank, and that in each of these transactions the note was given by, and the credit extended to, the Eureka bank and the money credited to its account, and thereafter paid out upon the cheeks and drafts and for the benefit of the Eureka bank.

(2) That the Eureka bank having obtained and used the proceeds of the loans, respectively, was liable for money had and received.

(3) That the Eureka bank, accepting the charges against its account by its postcards assenting to such charges, and by permitting payments of such obligations to be made by bank funds over a period of years, including a time long prior to the transactions named in plaintiff’s complaint, during all of which time the defendant bank was the depository of the Eureka bank, the Eureka bank thereby represented that the transaction was a bank obligation, and further represented thereby that Vorlander had authority to use bank funds in the payment of such obligations; that the defendant bank relied upon these representations to its prejudice; that it made the loans involved upon the strength of these representations and did not pursue its remedies against Vorlander or the other signers of the different notes, and defendant urges that the Eureka bank is therefore estopped from showing that the obligation is not a bank obligation, or that the use of bank funds was not authorized in payment of these obligations.

(4) That by its reconcilement sheets, approval of cash letters, and the entire correspondence between the defendant bank and the Eureka bank whereby the defendant bank sent to the Eureka bank monthly statements of the account of the Eureka bank as it appeared upon its books, obtaining a reconcilement from the Eureka bank, the latter forwarding to the defendant bank in eaeh instance a statement admitting the correctness of the account, except for discrepancies noted thereon, there was an account stated between the banks; that this course of dealing had for its intent and purpose and actually constituted an account stated between the banks, and in the absence of fraud or mutual mistake this account stated cannot be impeached.

(5) Defendant urges that upon the undisputed facts in this cáse, considering the correspondence which was the basis of each of the transactions in the first four causes of action stated in the complaint, considering the long course of dealing between the defendant, as the depository, and the Eureka bank as the depositor, involving similar loans that had been paid by the Eureka bank, not only to the defendant bank but to other banks to the knowledge of the defendant bank, the directors of the Eureka bank were and are chargeable with notice of this course of dealing, first, because it had continued over such a long period, and, seeond, because of the [680]*680knowledge of other officers, particularly of those officers, including'the cashiers, who had the entire'..charge and management of the business of the Eureka bank, and there was conferred upon Yorlander apparent authority to use bank funds in payment of these obligations.

(6) Defendant urges that, even though the obligations set forth in plaintiff’s first four causes of action were personal obligations- of Yorlander, and conceding that the defendant bank knowingly received the Eureka bank’s funds in payment, notwithstanding all of this, upon the face of this-record, as between the defendant bank- and Yorlander, it was Yorlander’s primary obligation to the Eureka bank, and it was his duty to- pay the amount of money so used. Defendant urges that Yorlander did- so by applying a part of his credit on the books of the Eureka bank in paymerit of these obligations. '

(7) ’ The defendant further urges that, assuming that the defendant bank took funds belonging to the Eureka bank, knowing them to be bank funds, in the transaction of all of the business between the Eureka bank and the defendant bank, it was the practice, and in each instance, as a matter of fact, the defendant bank did charge against the account of -the Eureka bank, in the transaction of their business and in the regular course of their dealing, certain items, including items within the causes of action set forth in the complaint, which charges on the books of the defendant bank were only tentative, and a cash letter was in every instance at once mailed by the defendant bank to.

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Bluebook (online)
20 F.2d 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keyes-v-first-nat-bank-sdd-1927.