Livingstain v. Columbian Banking & Trust Co.

57 S.E. 182, 77 S.C. 305, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 96
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 9, 1907
Docket6580
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 57 S.E. 182 (Livingstain v. Columbian Banking & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Livingstain v. Columbian Banking & Trust Co., 57 S.E. 182, 77 S.C. 305, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 96 (S.C. 1907).

Opinion

The opinion on this case was first handed down on March 27, 1907, but on petition for rehearing it was ordered reargued at April Term, 1907.

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

The Columbian Banking & Trust Company of Charleston, 'afterwards to be referred to in this opinion as the Columbian Bank, on January 5th, 1906, gave its promissory note to the National Bank of Commerce of New York, afterwards to be referred to as the Bank of Commerce, for five thousand dollars, due ninety days after date. Certain bills receivable were deposited as collateral, but no- overdrafts were to be allowed and the collateral was to secure the note only. The note provided that upon certain contingencies, such as failure of the Columbian Bank, the National Bank of Commerce should have the right immediately tO' declare the note due and to sell the collaterals arid apply the net proceeds of the sale to the payment of the note, and that any money on deposit at the National Bank of Commerce belonging to the Columbian Bank might, at the option of the National Bank of Commerce, be held and treated as collateral security and set off against the said' note.

On February 8th, 1906, the Columbian Bank had to the credit of its account in the Bank of Commerce fifty-one hundred thirty-four dollars and forty-three cents. On the same day M. K. Berger and Harris Livingstain, having on deposit in the Columbian Bank tw'o thousand fifteen dollars and seventy-five cents and twenty-six hundred dollars, respectively, presented checks for the full amount of their deposits and the bank, being without cash, gave them in payment checks or drafts on the Bank of Commerce. The Columbian Bank was in fact insolvent when these checks were given, and later in the day suspended payment. The checks were presented for payment on February the 10th, *307 1906, but were refused, because the Bank of Commerce exercising the right contracted for in the note in case of insolvency of the Columbian Bank, had charged the whole of the five thousand dollar note to the account of the Columbian Bank, thus paying its note and reducing its credit balance to. three hundred and fourteen dollars and forty-three cents. E. W. Hughes and B. A. Hagood were appointed receivers of the Columbian Bank, and the Bank of Commerce turned over to them the cash balance of three hundred fourteen dollars and forty-three cents and the collateral notes held to secure the five thousand dollar loan. Thereupon Berger and Eivingstain filed their petition, claiming under the doctrine of subrogation the right to stand in the place of the Bank of Commerce, and to be paid from the cash and collateral surrendered to the receivers. The master, Mr. Sass, reported the petitioners entitled to the cash balance of three hundred fourteen dollars and forty-three cents, but denied their right of subrogation as to the collateral. The Circuit Judge, Hon. James Aldrich, reached a different conclusion, and held the petitioners entitled in equity to the payment of the dishonored checks from both the cash and the collateral turned over by the Bank of Commerce to the receivers. We think, with the master, that subrogation should not be allowed, because it would be prejudicial to the other depositors of the Columbian Bank, whose equitable right to equal distribution of the assets among creditors is clearly superior to any claim set up by the petitioners to the collateral.

The checks given to the petitioners in payment of their deposits operated as assignments pro tanto of the balance to the credit of the Columbian Bank in the hands of the Bank of Commerce. Fogarties & Stillman v. State Bank, 12 Rich., 518; Simmons v. Bank, 41 S. C., 189, 19 S. E., 502; Loan & Savings Bank v. Farmers & Merchants Bank, 74 S. C., 210. But the legal assignment of the deposit to the petitioners, evidenced by the checks, was subject to the prior assignment of the deposit to the Bank of Commerce, which was conditional on the insolvency of the Columbian Bank. *308 When the condition of the prior assignment was fulfilled by the insolvency of the Columbian Bank, and the 'deposit was rightfully appropriated by the prior assignee, any legal right of the petitioners under their assignment was as completely gone, except as to the balance of three hundred and fourteen dollars, as if the deposit had been- paid out on another check presented at the counter of the Bank of Commerce.

This statement of the legal relation of the parties to the deposit is self-evident. For there is no basis in reason or authority for the position taken in argument, that the Columbian Bank could not contract with the Bank of Commerce that the money held by the Bank of Commerce to the credit of the Columbian Bank should be applied to its note. The cases in this State give no countenance to such a proposition. The extent to which the Court has gone is thus correctly stated in the syllabus of Callahan v. The Bank, 69 S. C., 374, 48 S. E., 293 : “A depositor has a right of action against a bank for damages resulting from its refusal to pay his check in favor of a third party, in absence of notice to the depositor that bank had applied his funds to' his past due obligations to the bank, when he had on deposit sufficient funds to pay the check.” The decision in that case is rested on an implied contract that the bank will hold the deposit to be paid out on checks of the depositor. Mr. Justice Gary quotes with approval the language of Chief Justice Mclver in Simmons v. Bank, 41 S. C., 177, saying: “The Court in the case last cited, in speaking of the principles decided in Stillman v. Bank, uses this language: ‘That case shows just what the Circuit Court held in this case, that the true theory is, that when a bank received the money of a depostior and places the amount to the credit of such depositor on his deposit account, the implied contract on the part of the bank is, that it will pay all checks drawn, by the depositor, in such amounts and to such persons as may be mentioned in such checks, as long as there remains to the credit of the depositor on such account an amount sufficient to pay such checks.’ Again the Court says: ‘The fifth ques *309 tion involves the inquiry whether the bank had the right to set up the past due notes of Jervey & Co., and the balance against them on the cotton account. If, as we have seen, the bank received the deposits on the merchandise account under an implied promise to' pay the checks of Jervey & Co. on that account, as they were presented, then there was an application of that fund to that purpose, and the bank could not afterwards apply the same to any other purpose, certainly not without the consent of, or previous notice to Jervey & Co.”

Neither this case nor any other affords the slightest ground for imputing to the Court an intention to deny to a depositor the right to make an express contract with the bank that his deposit account shall be applied to' his debts to the bank or to any other legitimate purpose.

Such a restriction upon the right of an individual to contract with respect to his property would hardly be attempted by any Court.

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Bluebook (online)
57 S.E. 182, 77 S.C. 305, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/livingstain-v-columbian-banking-trust-co-sc-1907.