Manhattan Bank of Memphis v. Walker

130 U.S. 267, 9 S. Ct. 519, 32 L. Ed. 959, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1747
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 8, 1889
Docket205, 682
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 130 U.S. 267 (Manhattan Bank of Memphis v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manhattan Bank of Memphis v. Walker, 130 U.S. 267, 9 S. Ct. 519, 32 L. Ed. 959, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1747 (1889).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Blatchfoed

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit originally brought in the Chancery Court of Shelby County, Tennessee, by Eliza Walker, against the Manhattan Bank of Memphis, a Tennessee banking corporation. The suit was removed by the plaintiff into the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western District of Tennessee. The bill oif complaint and the answer were both of them put in before, and the replication was filed after, the removal of the cause. -

The bill prays for a decree for the return- to the plaintiff of $3000 of the' second-mortgage bonds of the Memphis and Charleston Railroad Company," and $2200 of the secondmiort: g%ge bonds of the Mississippi Central Railroad Company, and of "a promissory note for $5000, made by Edward Goldsmith, and-of certain shares-of the capital stock of the defendant, amounting to $6000, attached to the' said promissory note as security^ therefor. The bill alleges that the defendant, in the course of its btísiness, and on the 27th of November, 1880, receivedym special deposit the above-named bonds, promissory note and shares of stock, belonging to bhe plaintiff, together with a certificate of the stock of the People’s Insurance Company, for $1100, and four promissory notes for $325 in the aggregate; that the said bonds had coupons attached thereto *269 for the interest payable thereon at certain stated periods; that the defendant gave its obligation in writing, as evidence of the receipt on special deposit, from the plaintiff, of the said securities, and was bound to deliver them to the plaintiff on demand; and that the stock of the People’s Insurance Company, and the $325 of notes, were returned to her, but the bonds and the coupons attached thereto, and the note of Goldsmith, and' the-bank stock were never' returned to her, although she made demand upon, the defendant for them. The bill prays for a decree for the return of the property, and for the amount of the decline in its value from the time when she demanded it until the time when it shall be restored; and, if not' restored; then for a personal decree against the defendant for the highest value of it at any time since she first made demand for it to the date of the decree, with interest.

The answer sets up in defence, that, for some time prior to November, 1880, Mr. G. H. Judah, a brother-in-law of the plaintiff, kept an account and had transactions with the defendant, in which he styled himself sometimes agent, and some? times guardian, but without disclosing for whom hp was agent or guardian; that .he made deposits and drew checks in that way on his account, as the other depositors with the defendant did, and, at different times, prior to November, 1880, bought the bonds and insurance company’s stock named in the bill, and paid for them by. checks on his account with the defendant ; that, as he would buy those securities, he would leave them on deposit with the defendant, without taking any receipt for them; that, in the fall of 1880, he left with'the defendant the Goldsmith note and the collateral therefor, and the four other notes mentioned in-the bill; that those notes were payable to the said G. H. Judah as agent simply, without saying for whom he was agent; that,'prior to November 27, 188.0, he had never told the defendant whether he had any principal or not, or who his principal was, or for whom he was guardian, if for any one; that on or about that date, he asked the defendant to give to him, as agent for the plaintiff, a receipt for the bonds, stocks and notes, telling it at the' time that,he was the plaintiff’s general agent for the management and control .of *270 those securities and notes; that the defendant gave to. him'.a receipt as-such -agent; .that, after the. receipt was given, some of the notes described in it were paid while they were on deposit with the. defendant, and the said Judah, as agent of the plaintiff, drew out the money in the,: ordinary way, and from time; to time, as. agent of the plaintiff, withdrew from -the cus-tody of the defendant the items mentioned in the receipt, until he had withdrawn them all, when .he gave, to the defendant a receipt -for them, in which he ..acknowledged having received them as agent for the plaintiff; that,- if the' plaintiff owned the items, Judah had authority from, her to control and manage •them, as fully as, she could have- done as owner, .if they had been .in her .actual possession, instead of in his possession as her. agent.; that he was her general agent with reference to them, and had power' not only to deposit them, but also to withdraws them from deposit, if he saw fit; that, when he demanded them from the' defendant, his agency was still in force, and the defendant-could not legally have refused to give them uptohim as the agent of the plaintiff; that, upon returning them to Judah, as such agent, all liability of the defendant with reference to them ceased; and that the defendant is not indebted to the plaintiff on account of said securities.

Proofs were taken on-both,sides, and the cause was heard,; and the court made a decree adjudging to the plaintiff a recovery against the defendant of $5000, being the amount of the Goldsmith note, with $1175 interest thereon from the date of its maturity, November 1,. 1881,' on the ground that the defendant had collected the amount- of that note and appropriated the ,-same to its. own use, and further decreeing that the defendant, was not hable to the plaintiff for any of- the other items; mentioned in the bill, and that neither party should recover costs.front the other. • Each party has taken a separate appeal to this court. '■

The answer does not set up, as a defence, that the defendant was not authorized to. receive the property in question as a special deposit, or to give the receipt therefor. It was stipulated between the parties that the defendant received no compensation,' as bailee, for the custody of the property:sued for; *271 that the Memphis and Charleston Railroad bonds bore seven per cent interest, payable semi-annually, and evidenced by interest coupons maturing January 1 and July 1 in each year, the bonds maturing on. the 1st of January, 1885; and that the Mississippi Central Railroad bonds bore eight per cent interest, payable semi-annually, and evidenced by coupons maturing February 1 and August 1 in each year, the bonds maturing on the 1st of February, 1885. '

The suit is plainly one of equitable .cognizance, the bill being filed to charge the defendant, as a trustee, for a breach of - trust in regard to a special deposit.

The opinion of the Circuit Court, reported in 25 Fed. Rep. 247, contains so full and accurate-a statement, in the main, of the facts of the case, developed-by the proofs, that wé repeat and adopt it, as follows: “ The firm of Walker Bros. & Co., composed of the plaintiff’s husband, his brother and G¡ H. Judah, was a large mercantile house in Memphis that •disastrously failed' and made an assignment.- The plaintiff and the wife of the other brother, being creditors of the firm for large amounts due them for loans to the firm, owned the book accounts, which were bought for their use by Judah in the name of Maas, the book-keeper, at the assignee’s sale, the husband of plaintiff paying for her share.

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Bluebook (online)
130 U.S. 267, 9 S. Ct. 519, 32 L. Ed. 959, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manhattan-bank-of-memphis-v-walker-scotus-1889.