Leach v. City-Commercial Savings Bank

219 N.W. 496, 207 Iowa 1254
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 15, 1928
DocketNo. 38246.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 219 N.W. 496 (Leach v. City-Commercial Savings 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
Leach v. City-Commercial Savings Bank, 219 N.W. 496, 207 Iowa 1254 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

Albert, J.

— I. The claims involved herein naturally divide themselves into three classes, which we will accordingly dispose of separately.

The first is the claim of the Stratford Grain & Supply Company, which arose from the following facts: This Grain Company was engaged in business in Stratford, Iowa, and shipped grain to the North Iowa Grain Company, at Mason City. It drew a sight draft, with bill of lading attached, on the North Iowa Grain Company for $1,425.22, ordering payment to the Farmers Savings Bank of Stratford. The Stratford bank in *1257 dorsed the same to the Iowa National Bank, of Des Moines, which latter bank sent the same to- the City-Commercial Savings Bank of Mason City for collection, accompanied by a statement referring to this sight draft, saying:

“We enclose for collection and remittance in Chicago, New York or Des Moines exchange.”

On receipt thereof, the City-Commercial Savings Bank made collection on the sight draft. It was presented at the First National Bank of Mason City, where the North Iowa Grain Company had a checking account, and was paid by the First National Bank, and the City-Commercial Savings Bank issued a draft for the collection, drawn on the Hanover National Bank, of New York City, and forwarded the same to the Iowa National Bank. Before this New York draft was paid, the City-Commercial Savings Bank of Mason City went into the hands of a receiver, who directed the New York- City bank to refuse payment of the same. The New York City bank had on hand, to the credit of the City Commercial Savings Bank, a sum in excess of $7,000, over and above the outstanding drafts, on the date the receiver notified the-New York bank not to honor-any outstanding drafts, and there was returned from the New York bank to the receiver the sum-of $12,083.79.

The Stratford Grain Company filed its claim in the receivership for the amount of such sight draft in due form, and within the time required by law, claiming preference for said claim. On January 11, 1926, the receiver filed a report classifying all claims, among which he classified the claim of the Stratford Grain Company as a general creditor’s claim, and rejected the preference. On the day the receiver filed his classification of claims, the court entered an order fixing the 23d day of January, 1926, as the time for hearing on said report, and ordered that notice be given to all creditors, by publication, of the time so fixed for the hearing,- and providing that objections to said report might be filed on or before said date, which, notice was published, as provided by the order of court.- On February 8th, the court entered an order approving and adjudicating the classification so made by the receiver. Thus, under this order, the Stratford Grain Company claim was classified as that -of a general creditor.

*1258 ... On February. 15, 1926, .the attorneys, for .the Stratford Grain Company wrote the- receiver, inquiring when this matter of classification of claims would-come on for hearing, and, so far as the record shows, there was no response to this letter. On February 17th, the Stratford Grain Company filed an application for permission to file objections and make exceptions to the report of the receiver, and tendered a petition in equity, asking that, the previous order made on February 8th be vacated and set aside, and that they be permitted to prove their claim as a preferred claim. To this application or petition the receiver filed a resistance in three divisions. In the first division, the substance of the claim is that, the court having fixed a time’ for hearing thereon, and providing for notice, which was given, and the claimants not having appeared thereto, they were defaulted, and the order made was final as to them, and they cannot now be hoard to question the same. In the second division, they allege that the classification made by’ the receiver was the correct, true, legal, and' proper classification ’ of the claim, and ask that the application to reopen the- hearing on said claim and set aside the order heretofore entered be dismissed at the cost of claimants. The matter was taken up by the court on stipulated facts, and some oral testimony taken, and the court in its decree said:

“The court finds from the evidence that said claim is in fact trust funds, and that the same is entitled to be classified as a preferred claim, and the receiver is hereby directed to so classify the samé.”

.’. -. LThe receiver took exceptions to this holding, and appeals theréfrom.

The first proposition urged by. appellant is that, where one files' a..claim with .the receiver- .ofcan insolvent bank, he thereby submits himself - to The jurisdiction of- the .court, and must take of subsequent proceedings relative to the ¿uowanCe of his claim: and we are cited to the • 9 cage of Henderson v. Farmers Savings Ban k of Harper, 199 Iowa 1156, as sustaining this proposition. ’ Such is the’-holding in that case. The'-question involved therein, however; wasfwhether or not, on application to set aside an order under a similar set-of facts to those- in this ease, the court abused its discretion in refusing to set aside such, order; *1259 and it was held that such refusal on the part of the court was not an abuse of discretion. It is apparent, therefore, that, where an order of this kind is made, at least under a published notice, and application is made to set the order aside, the court has a discretion; and in the case at bar, this discretion was exercised, and the order set aside. There was no abuse of discretion in the action of the court in so doing.

There can be no question, under our holdings, that the City-Commercial Savings Bank was the agent in the collection of this sight draft; but, as heretofore shown, the instruction accompanying the sight draft was to collect and remit in Chicago, New York, or Des Moines exchange. In our recent holdings we have held that, where the instruetions to the agent are of this character, and the draft representing the collection is issued as directed in the letter of instruction, the duties of the agent are completed, under his instructions, and that, so far as the funds in the hands of the agent are concerned, they being commingled with the other funds of the bank, the trust relation ceases, and no preference is allowable under such circumstances. Leach v. Battle Creek Saw. Bank, 202 Iowa 875; Leach v. Iowa State Sav. Bank of Manning, 202 Iowa 894; Valentine v. Andrew, 203 Iowa 463. Under this line of cases, the Stratford Grain Company was not entitled to a preference, and was properly classified by the receiver as a general claimant, and the district court erred in allowing this claim as a preferred claim.

II. The claim of the Central State Bank arises from the following facts:

On the 5th day of May, 1925, the Central State Bank of Des Moines sent to the City-Commercial Savings Bank of Mason City for collection three checks, aggregating $4,240, drawn on the Security National Bank of Mason City; four checks, aggregating $415.85, drawn on the City-Commercial Savings Bank; ten checks, aggregating $1,276.58, drawn on the First National Bank of Mason City. The four checks aggregating $31-5.85, drawn.

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219 N.W. 496, 207 Iowa 1254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leach-v-city-commercial-savings-bank-iowa-1928.