McCrory Stores Corp. v. Tunnicliffe

140 So. 806, 104 Fla. 683
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 5, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 140 So. 806 (McCrory Stores Corp. v. Tunnicliffe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCrory Stores Corp. v. Tunnicliffe, 140 So. 806, 104 Fla. 683 (Fla. 1932).

Opinions

The State Bank of Orlando Trust Company were in possession of certain property in the City of Orlando under a twenty-year lease from the first day of April, 1907, executed by one T. J. Watkins, the predecessor in title to the appellant herein. On the fifth day of April, 1918, Thomas J. Watkins, the then owner of the said property, gave to the said State Bank of Orlando, the name of said bank being subsequently changed to the State Bank of Orlando Trust Company, an option "to be exercised before the close of its term to demand and receive a renewal of the said lease, for a further period of ten or twenty years at the choice of the party of the second part (said bank) from the close of the term created by the said lease upon the conditions and provisions of the original lease." Subsequently, appellant acquired title to the property.

On March 9th, 1927, some days prior to the expiration of the term under the original lease, the said bank and trust company notified the appellant, the then owner of the property, that it would exercise its option for a renewal of the said lease for a further period of twenty years from the close of the term upon the conditions and provisions of the original lease. Whereupon, the appellant notified the said bank and trust company that it refused to recognize the right of said bank and trust company to extend the lease and that it would be required to surrender and deliver up to the appellant full possession of the premises on April 1st, 1927. The said bank and trust company, prior to the expiration of its term under the original lease, forwarded to the appellant a New York draft drawn to the order of appellant in the sum of $241.43 "in payment of rent for April on office *Page 686 rooms in the Watkins Block", which draft was returned by appellant on April 1st, 1927, and at the same time, appellant advised the said bank and trust company that it would be required to surrender and deliver up the premises forthwith. The said bank and trust company acknowledged the receipt of appellant's letter under date of April 1st, 1927, and stated that it would "defend its rights in this matter and that your returned check for the rent has been placed in a special account to keep the tender good until you shall see fit to accept it." On the 22nd day of April, 1927, a bill of complaint was filed by the said bank and trust company for specific performance of the agreement of April 5th, 1918. Subsequently, the said bank and trust company was placed in the hands of a liquidator and the appellee, W. H. Tunnicliffe, as liquidator of the State Bank of Orlando Trust Company, was made a party complainant to the bill. The appellant in its answer alleged that the said bank on each and every succeeding month after April 1st, 1927, until the closing of said bank, deposited in said special account the sum of $241.43, for the particular purpose of keeping said tender of monthly rentals to the appellant good, and set up by way of counterclaim the right of appellant to a preferred claim for the aggregate of said sums and asked for priority in payment over general or common creditors of said bank and trust company. The answer also sought to establish a general claim against the liquidator of said bank for double the amount of rent to the appellant, by reason of the refusal of the bank and its successors to vacate premises which it occupied under the lease which had expired, such right being based on Section 3554, Revised General Statutes (1920). The Chancellor granted a motion to strike those portions of the answer setting up the alleged counterclaim and the right of appellant to double the amount of the rental *Page 687 value of the premises. From this order, an appeal was taken to this Court.

It is argued here in effect, on behalf of appellant, that the placing of said funds in a special account constituted a "special deposit" for a specific purpose, which made of it a trust fund for the benefit of appellant, and in consequence thereof, it has a preferred claim for said aggregate sum.

The term "deposit", when used in connection with a banking transaction, denotes a contractual relation between one who delivers money or a thing to a bank which received it with the implied agreement on the part of the bank that the deposit will be paid out on the order of the depositor or returned to him upon demand. Sayre vs. Weil, 94 Ala. 466, 10 So. 546, 15 L.R.A. 544; 7 C. J. 641; 3 R. C. L. 516.

Deposits are divided into two classes, general and special. A general deposit is a deposit generally to the credit of the depositor to be drawn upon by him in the usual course of the banking business; a special deposit is a deposit for safe keeping to be returned intact on demand, or for some specific purpose not contemplating a credit on general account. A deposit in a bank is presumed to be general in the absence of a special agreement importing a different character into the transaction. City of Miami vs. Shutts, 59 Fla. 462, 51 So. 929; Collins vs. State, 33 Fla. 429, 15 So. 214; Johnson v. Barton,79 Fla. 46, 83 So. 722; Camp vs. First Nat. Bank of Ocala,44 Fla. 497, 33 So. 241, 103 A. S. R. 173; 3 R. C. L. 516; 7 C. J. 628.

On the insolvency of the banker all of his general depositors have an equal lien on his general assets, and can have a return of no more than their proportionate share, while the special depositor may reclaim his entire deposit, if it is found intact, or under the modern *Page 688 modification of the rule, may reclaim it from the general mass with which it has been commingled, if it appears that the banker has not, subsequent to the time of the intermingling, reduced the mass to an amount less than the amount of the special deposit." Northwestern Lbr. Co. vs. Scandanavian American Bk., 130 Wn. 33, 225 P. 825, 39 A. L. R. 922.

There is nothing before us to show that the moneys that were placed in the "special account" were put there by reason of an agreement with appellant and, as a mater of course, the bank could not contract with itself. It is our conclusion that appellant has no preferred claim on the theory that the sum shown in the "special account" was a special deposit. It does not follow, however, that because said sum was not on deposit in said bank in the sense that the term is used in banking transactions that the money was not being held by the bank as a trustee, or that the funds were not trust funds in which appellant had a beneficial interest.

No particular form of words is required to create a trust. Walker vs. Close, 98 Fla. 1103, 125 So. 521; 26 R. C. L. 1180. The language must be explicit to that effect or circumstances must show with reasonable certainty that a trust was intended to be created. Bay Biscayne Company vs. Baile, 73 Fla. 1120,75 So. 860, 868-9, 26 R. C. L. 1180.

If a trust was not in contemplation, a court of equity will not impute an intention to create it. 28 Enc. Law, 2nd Ed. 892.

"The owner and donor of personal property may create a perfect or complete trust by his unequivocal declaration in writing or by parol, that he himself holds such property in trust for the purposes named.

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Bluebook (online)
140 So. 806, 104 Fla. 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccrory-stores-corp-v-tunnicliffe-fla-1932.