Kuhl v. Farmers Bank

212 N.W. 337, 203 Iowa 71
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 15, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 212 N.W. 337 (Kuhl v. Farmers Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kuhl v. Farmers Bank, 212 N.W. 337, 203 Iowa 71 (iowa 1927).

Opinion

Albert, J.

The Farmers Bank of Bouton was a partnership. It closed its doors, and a receiver was appointed about the 22d day of January, 1925. At the time the receiver took charge, Dallas County had on deposit to its credit the sum of $4,319.24. On the 30th day of March, 1925, proof of claim was filed by McKay, county treasurer of Dallas County, with said receiver, claiming that the aforesaid amount was a special deposit and a special fund derived from taxes due and owed to Dallas County, and asking that said sum be allowed by the receiver as- a preferred claim. A stipulation was made, which covered most of the matters in the case; the aforesaid amount was agreed upon as being the amount on deposit; and it was further stipulated that the money thus in the hands of the bank was taxes collected by the bank for the county treasurer, but still remaining in the bank at the time of the receivership. On the 11th day of May, 1925, a petition was filed, elaborating the claim of the county, and the case was submitted to the court on an agreed statement of facts.

At the time this receiver was appointed, Section 12719 of the Code of 1924 was in force, which reads as follows:

“When the property of any person, partnership, company, or corporation has -been placed in the hands of a receiver for distribution, after the payment of ail costs the following claims shall be entitled to priority of payment in the order named:
“1. Taxes or other debts entitled to preference under the laws of the United States.
“2. Debts due or taxes assessed and levied for the benefit of the state, county, or other municipal corporation in this state.
. “3. Debts owing to employees for labor performed as defined by Section 11717.”

In Dickinson County v. Leach (Iowa), 211 N. W. 542 (not officially reported), we held that rights such as are asserted here by the county against the receiver were settled and fixed by the law in operation at the time of the appointment of the receiver. *73 Appellee concedes that, under this section of the statute and our decision in In re Receivership of Marathon Sav. Bank, 198 Iowa 692, the county or the treasurer would. be entitled to -have this-claim allowed as a preferred claim; and we have held, under similar circumstances, -in the ease of Leach v. Farmers & Merch. Sav. Bank of Boyer, 202 Iowa 881, that a preference should be given; under circumstances of this kind. If this were all there is in this case, it would be easily disposed of, under both the statute and the holdings of this court. The case, however, has a different angle from anything that has been heretofore' before us, in this: The forty-first general assembly passed Chapter 182, reading as follows: ;

“Section 1. Section 12719 of the Code, 1924, is hereby amended by adding thereto the following: ‘The provisions of this section shall not apply to the receivership of state banks, savings banks, loan and trust companies, or private banks, and in the receivership of state banks, savings banks,' loan and trust companies, or private banks, no such preference or priority shall be allowed as is provided in this section, except for labor as provided by statute. ’ ■ . :
“Section 2. The .provisions of this amendment are declaratory of the intent of the legislature and of its interpretation of the provisions of Section 12719 of the Code,-.1924.”

This law was in operation, under a publication clause, from and after the 9th day of April, 1925. It is therefore to be seen that, while the county filed its claim prior to the passage of this law, the matter was not tried or disposed of until after the time this law went into operation; and the question is whether or not this enactment by the legislature in any way affects the rights of the parties to this litigation. To .put it another way, at the time the receiver was appointed and the county- filed its claim, it was entitled to have said claim allowed as a preferred claim. Did the aforesaid Chapter 182, Acts of the Forty-first General Assembly, deprive it of this right?

It will be noted, by reference to that chapter, that the force and effect of Section 12719, above cited, were wholly destroyed, so far as 'receiverships of banks were concerned, and it is further provided that no such preference or priority shall be allowed as provided in the statute, “except for labor.” While the rights of the county are fixed and' determined as of the date *74 of the appointment of the receiver, yet its rights are wholly worked out on the theory that it is a part of the machinery, or an arm of the state, subject to the control and direction ■ of the state; and the question is whether or not, when it had this right to a preference, the state can take it' away from the county, or waive such right or preference.

The only case that is called to our attention is the case of McSurely v. McGrew, 140 Iowa 163. In that case, the county treasurer had deposited funds in the bank without authority, and the bank failed. The board of supervisors made settlement with the county treasurer, allowing him credit for the funds thus lost in the bank, and relieving the sureties on his bond from liability because of his default. The legislature subsequently passed an act approving the action of the board of supervisors in so making settlement with the county treasurer and relieving his bonds. A subsequent county treasurer brought an action on the bond of his predecessor in office, seeking to recover from the sureties the amount thus lost in the bank, and was met with the action of the board of supervisors, supported by the curative act of the legislature. It was practically admitted that the county treasurer had no right to make the bank deposit he did, and that the board of supervisors was without power to pass a resolution discharging the bond and releasing his sureties; hence there was left solely the question of the validity of the curative act. The question was whether or not the legislature could pass this curative act. In that case, we said:

“A county, while a body corporate under our law, is a subdivision of the State, created for administrative and other public purposes, owes its creation to the State,.and is subject at all times to legislative control and change. No citizen has any vested right in or to its revenues. These may be changed, diverted to other uses, or taken away, and no one may complain on the theory that his interests have been affected or any contract rights destroyed. The Legislature might have permitted the deposit of county funds in banks and absolved the county officers from any liability on account of such deposits. Neither the county nor any of the inhabitants thereof have any vested interest in the funds coming into the county treasurer’s hands. * * * The Legislature undoubtedly had power, in the *75 first instance, to absolve its county treasurer from liability when he deposited money in solvent banks; and, as no contract rights are involved, save as the statute created such rights, there seems to be no constitutional objection to passing a retroactive law which would operate upon past transactions.

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Related

Leach v. United State Bank
213 N.W. 528 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1927)
Leach v. Commercial Savings Bank
213 N.W. 517 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
212 N.W. 337, 203 Iowa 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuhl-v-farmers-bank-iowa-1927.