Merchants Bank v. Affholter

215 S.W. 648, 140 Ark. 480, 1919 Ark. LEXIS 128
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 17, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 215 S.W. 648 (Merchants Bank v. Affholter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merchants Bank v. Affholter, 215 S.W. 648, 140 Ark. 480, 1919 Ark. LEXIS 128 (Ark. 1919).

Opinion

McCULLOCH, C. J.

A. B. Affholter and his wife, Leni Affholter, instituted separate actions in the circuit court of Polk County against appellant, a banking corporation doing business at Vandervoort, in that county, to recover sums of money deposited with appellant for the purchase of United States Government bonds of the Fourth or Liberty Loan issue. The complaint of Mrs. Affholter sought recovery on another item which will be discussed separately, but on the issue referred to above the cases were identical and will be disposed of together in this opinion.

Affholter and his wife each subscribed for the purchase of bonds in the sum of $150, and the subscriptions were given through a canvasser or solicitor who procured their signatures and deposited their subscription cards with appellant bank. Each of the cards signed by appellees, Affholter and wife, contained an agreement to take a bond of the denomination of $100 and one of the denomination of $50, making a total of $150, and registered bonds were designated in the subscription cards as the kind to be purchased. The cards contained printed directions designating two kinds of bonds, one registered bonds and the other coupon bonds, and the word “coupon” had a line drawn through it, leaving the designation of registered bonds as the kind selected by the appellees.

The following day after the subscriptions were taken, Mrs. Affholter called at the bank and deposited sufficient funds to cover the subscriptions of herself and husband and received from the bank a deposit slip reciting the names of the depositors, the amount deposited, the date thereof, and the words “deposited by Fourth Liberty Loan.” The bonds were ordered by the bank and received, but before they were called for by said purchasers the bank vaults were robbed in the night time and the bonds were stolen. This occurred on November 13, 1918, three or four days after the bonds had been received by the bank. The bonds ordered and received by the bank were coupon bonds and not registered bonds, and the theory upon which appellees sought to recover the money from the bank was that they subscribed for registered bonds and deposited the funds to cover the purchase price of that kind of bonds, but that the bank failed to carry out the instructions, and that the coupon bonds received by the bank in violation of the instructions did not become the property of appellees.

On the other hand, the contention of appellants in the trial below was'that the subscription cards were not delivered to the officials of the bank for the purpose of designating the character of bonds to be ordered, but were merely left at the bank for safe-keeping for the sales director of the Liberty Loan drive, and that no directions were given to the officials of the bank by appellees as to the kind of bonds to be ordered, and that the coupon bonds were ordered pursuant to the practice there for subscribers to accept coupon bonds.

(1) That was the issue presented in the trial below, and the court submitted it to the jury on instructions which stated, in substance, that if appellees deposited the money with instructions to appellant to purchase registered bonds and appellant failed to procure that character of bonds, it was liable for the money so deposited. The evidence was the same in each case and was sufficient to sustain the findings in favor of appellees. The printed subscription cards contained an agreement on the part of the subscriber to call at the bank at once and pay the subscription, and it also designated the character of bonds to be purchased. The cashier testified that the subscription cards were not delivered to the officers of the bank for the purpose of giving directions concerning the furnishing of bonds, but were merely kept there for the benefit of the sales director. There were, however, no other directions given concerning the kinds of bonds to be purchased, and the jury were warranted in finding that the officers of the bank knew, or ought to have known, that the character of bonds desired was designated on the face of the -subscription cards. That being true, it was the duty of the bank to take notice of the designation and order the character of bonds so designated. Failure to follow the instructions in that respect made the bank responsible for the return of the money in the event the designated bonds were not delivered to the subscribers.

(2) Error of the court is assigned in giving an instruction which it is said assumed the existence of the relation of agency between th'e bank and appellees in the purchase of the bonds, but we do not think that the instruction assumed the existence of that relation. If it did, however, there was no error, for it was undisputed that the money was deposted with the bank for the purpose of purchasing bonds. It is unimportant whether the bank was acting strictly as the agent of the subscriber or whether it was acting as a promoter of the loan drive, for, if it accepted funds for the purchase of bonds, it was responsible to the subscriber either for the return of the money or for the delivery of bonds designated in the subscription contract.

There was no error of the court in the submission of the issues to the jury, nor was there any other prejudicial error occurring at the trial.

The other branch of the suit instituted by Mrs. Affholter involved the question of liability for a coupon bond of the denomination of $100, delivered by her to the bank for safe-keeping. She purchased the bond, and afterwards delivered the same to the bank for safe-keeping, and it was placed in the bank safe, which was burglarized on the night of November 13, 3918, and that bond, together with many others belonging to other persons, was stolen. The bank kept a large iron safe with a combination lock on it and inside of it was a manganese steel drawer or compartment which was burglar-proof, and was used for the safe-keeping of money. The bonds ■ — -the one belonging to Mrs. Affliolter and those belonging to numerous other persons, including officials of the hank — were not kept in the burglar-proof compartment, but were kept inside of the safe. The burglary was discovered the next morning after it occurred, and on examination it was found that the combination lock on the outside of the safe had been chopped off with an axe and that explosive material had been inserted inside the lining of the door, which, when exploded, blew off the door or lock and permitted entrance. The money drawer or compartment was not entered. The testimony introduced by appellant was to the effect that all the bonds kept by the bank, including those which were the property of the bánk itself and its officials, were kept in the same manner, and that that was the customary way to keep the bonds. There was also testimony to the effect that there was not room inside the money drawer to keep the bonds.

(3) It is earnestly insisted that there is no evidence to sustain the finding of negligence on the part of the bank for the loss of the bonds. We are of the opinion, however, that the evidence was legally sufficient. These bonds were coupon bonds, payable to bearer, and negligence is inferable from the fact that they were kept, not in the burglar-proof compartment of the safe, but in the part of the safe which was insufficient to resist the attack of a skillful burglar. Appellant was, with respect to the keeping of this particular bond for Mrs. Affholter, a gratuitous bailee and was liable only for gross negligence. Wear v.

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Bluebook (online)
215 S.W. 648, 140 Ark. 480, 1919 Ark. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-bank-v-affholter-ark-1919.