Keyes v. Security State Bank

300 F. 897, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 3059
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 11, 1924
DocketNo. 6529
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 300 F. 897 (Keyes v. Security State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keyes v. Security State Bank, 300 F. 897, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 3059 (8th Cir. 1924).

Opinion

KENYON, Circuit Judge.

The facts giving rise to this controversy briefly are as follows: Christian Vorlander was president of the First National Bank of Eureka, S. D. On January 6, 1920, he executed a note for 60 days in the sum of $5,000, payable to defendant in error, Security State Bank of Strasburg, N. D. The First National Bank of Eureka forwarded this note to the Security State Bank of Strasburg, and the same was received January 8, 1920. On the date the note was transmitted by the First National Bank of Eureka (here[898]*898inafter called tire Eureka Bank) to the Security State Bank of Strasburg (hereinafter designated the Strasburg Bank) the Eureka Bank entered a credit in the sum of $5,000 to its “loans and' discounts” account, and debited its “transit” account with the same amount. On January 9th the Eureka Bank received from the Strasburg Bank a draft for $5,000, drawn on the Security Bank of Minneapolis, which the Eureka Bank forwarded to said Minneapolis Bank for credit. The Eureka Bank credited its transit account with $5,000, and debited the Minneapolis Bank with the same sum. The Eureka Bank in due course of its business thereafter, by drafts drawn on the Minneapolis Bank, drew out the entire $5,000. The transit account of the Eureka Bank was to cover items while in transit, and was a mere matter of convenient bookkeeping.

On the 5th day of March, 1920, the Strasburg Bank forwarded the Vorlander note to the Eureka Bank for collection and credit, and on March 6th the Strasburg Bank charged the Eureka Bank on its books with $5,067.67. At that time Vorlander had a credit on the books of the Eureka Bank in excess of this charge. The Eureka Bank mailed to the Strasburg Bank a communication, signed by its cashier, Sprick, stating that the Eureka Bank credited the Strasburg Bank with $10,-210.12, covering the items in the communication of the Strasburg Bank to the Eureka Bank of March 5, 1920. Eater the Eureka Bank mailed to the Strasburg Bank what is designated as a reconcilement sheet for the month of March, 1920. It covered the business done with the Strasburg Bank during the month of March, 1920, and was the customary way between the banks of reconciling differences between their books. That this reconcilement sheet correctly stated the condition of accounts between the banks is testified to by Mr. Pufahl, who was assistant cashier, later a vice president, and then cashier, of the Eureka Bank. At the date of the entry of the debit against Vorlander’s personal account on the books of the Eureka Bank he was in fact indebted to the bank in a large sum, and the credits existing on the books were false. This was not known, apparently, to any one except Vorlander. He was in entire management of the bank, and manipulating its affairs for his personal gain. The final result was his suicide and the passing of the bank into the hands of a receiver.

At the close of all the evidence both parties moved for a directed verdict. The court sustained the motion of defendant in error, the Strasburg Bank, and entered judgment in its favor. Under this situation the finding of the court has the effect of a verdict of a jury. A number of assignments of error are presented, the consideration of two of which is determinative of the case. These are assignments of error No. 3 and No. 4 as follows:

“III. It was error of the trial court to hold as a matter of fact that the note in suit was not the personal note of Christian Vorlander, but the note of the Eureka Bank, of which he was president.
“IV. It was error of the trial court to hold in deciding the case that the directors of the Eureka Bank were negligent in permitting Vorlander to use the funds of the said hank in payment of his personal obligations, and as a matter of law holding that this estopped this plaintiff in this action.”

[899]*899The theory of plaintiff in error is that the Strasburg Bank purchased the personal note of Vorlander, and then charged it to the Eureka Bank’s account without any authority from said Eureka Bank; in other words, that Vorlander obtained $5,000 from the Strasburg Bank, and that the same was paid out of the Eureka Bank’s funds without authority. On the other hand, defendant in error’s theory is that the debt represented by the note in question was in fact the debt of .the Eureka Bank, and not of Vorlander personally; that if it was the personal note of Vorlander, and, if paid with Eureka Bank funds, the record fails to show any knowledge on the part of the Strasburg Bank or any of its officers that the funds used to pay the obligation were those of the Eureka Bank, and that there is nothing in the record to in any way put the Strasburg Bank on notice that funds were so used; that the Eureka Bank, through Vorlander, guaranteed the payment of the note, and that, as the money was received by the Eureka Bank, its funds could properly be used to pay the same; further that the Eureka Bank is estopped to deny the collection of the Vorlander note by virtue of a statement from it to the Strasburg Bank with reference'thereto, and the reconcilement sheet for March, 1920.

The court, in passing on the motion to instruct the verdict, said that in its opinion the plaintiff had not proven that the note in suit was the personal note of Christian Vorlander, but was in fact the note of the bank. It may be suggested that this was pleaded as .a defense by defendant in error and was claimed in the trial to be inconsistent with the other defense pleaded, viz. that the Strasburg Bank had an agreement with the Eureka Bank by virtue of which the Eureka Bank would send all the paper it chose to them under a guaranty of payment. Defendant in error elected to stand upon the defense of an express agreement entered into between the Eureka Bank and the Strasburg Bank, guaranteeing this note and other similar notes sent by one bank to the other. While the defense that the note was in fact the note of the bank, and not the personal note of Vorlander, was eliminated by such election, nevertheless it was a necessary part of plaintiff in error’s case to prove that the note was in fact the personal note of Vorlander.

The transaction was not a personal one, even though the note was signed by Vorlander. It was clearly a transaction between the banks, carried on in the way the business of the Eureka Bank was customarily conducted where loans were made for its benefit. The business of the bank seems to have been entirely in the hands of Vorlander. The directors who testified knew little or nothing of the bank’s affairs. They were seemingly mere dummies, acting under the direction of Vorlander. Whatever he did was apparently acquiesced in by the directors. The money borrowed on the Vorlander note was for the benefit of the bank. It was received by it in a draft from the Strasburg Bank, and, as we have heretofore indicated, was sent to the bank’s correspondent at Minneapolis, and the proceeds placed to the credit of the Eureka Bank, and later drawn out on its drafts.

It may be true, as suggested, that Vorlander had theretofore abstracted sums from the bank greatly in excess of the $5,000 received [900]*900from the Strasburg Bank; but even then the Eureka Bank was benefited by the receipt of this $5,000, though the amount may have taken the place in part of what Vorlander owed the bank by reason of his defalcations. Our opinion coincides with that expressed by the court that the evidence fails to show that the transaction involving the Vorlander note was a personal one. It was in fact a bank transaction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
300 F. 897, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 3059, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keyes-v-security-state-bank-ca8-1924.