Merchants & Clerks Sav. Bank Co. v. Schirk

17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 125, 5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 569, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 281
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedNovember 7, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 125 (Merchants & Clerks Sav. Bank Co. v. Schirk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merchants & Clerks Sav. Bank Co. v. Schirk, 17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 125, 5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 569, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 281 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

PARKER, J.

Electa R. Stagner, in 1894, was appointed guardian of the estates of her mionr sons, John David Stagner and Joseph "William Stagner, the former aged nine and the latter seven years. She received, something like $2,000 on their account, as- guardian, and $1,000 of that she loaned to one John Stagner, her father-in-law, who gave her therefor as guardian, his note, secured -by mortgage on property in East Toledo — the mortgage running to Electa. R. Stagner as guardian -of John David and Joseph William Stagner, minors. In 1897, ea'rly in the year, Mrs. Stagner removed with her minor children, her wards, to Newton county, Missouri, and on March 12 of that year she made application to the probate court of that county under the laws of Missouri, for letters of guardianship there, and on March 19, 1897, her petition was granted and her bond given and she was duly appointed as guardian. Thereupon, in pursuance of the law, she appears to have advised the probate judge of this county of what she had done in that behalf and forwarded to him the proper evidence of her action. This should have resulted in all of her affairs as guardian being transferred to that court.

It appears, however, that the final account or statement of her affairs was not passed upon by the probate court of this county so as to formally release her sureties here until early in the year 1898. The reason for its dragging along in the court here for several months is not apparent; this matter does not appear to have been attended to as promptly as it might have been. In the meantime, along in November, 1897, Mr. M. B. Lemmon, an attorney at law who was then practicing at this bar and claiming to act for her as her attorney, sold the note and mortgage that I have mentioned to the Merchant’s & Clerk’s Savings Bank Company, it being a 6 per cent note, on which some interest had accrued, and it paid for it something over $1,100, figuring the discount in such a way that it would stand to it as 7 per cent paper. Mr. Lemmon did not account to the guardian for all the money received from this sale; he accounted for about $600 of it; and the remainder he wrongfully appropriated to his own uses and he has not made the loss good to her, and, because of that, her Missouri bondsmen instituted an action in this court to recover from the bank the amount that the attorney had wrongfully appropriated, claiming that it was a part of the estate of the heirs and that the bank had not acquired a good title to this note and that it was not justified in paying the money over to Mr. Lemmon.

The bank, on the other hand, claimed that it had bought this paper in entire good faith supposing that Lemmon was authorized as her at[128]*128torney, and that she, as guardian was authorized to dispose of the property and that therefore it ought not to be required to make the loss good; that the loss, in fact, should fall upon her. The bank invokes the principle that where one of two innocent parties must suffer from the fault or default of a third person, that one who put it in the power of such person to defraud, should suffer the loss rather than the other of the innocent parties. I may remark in passing, however, that it should be remembered that the real parties are not Electa R. Stagner on the one part, who it is claimed put it in the power of Lemmon to defraud, and the Merchant’s & Clerk’s Savings Bank on the other; if it were a question between them, the principle invoked would be applicable, but the real parties here, upon the one side are these wards who have not by any act of theirs and could not put it in the power of Lemmon to defraud themselves and on the other side the bank; so the case must be settled upon a different principle. The issues were made up in the court below and the case tried — that is to say, evidence was introduced, and then the judge of the trial court directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, upon the ground or theory that the bank had not introduced any evidence tending to support its defense.

Now there is a good deal of oral testimony and written evidence that bears upon the question of whether Lemmon in fact represented this guardian whether he was even authorized by this guardian to represent her, and a good deal of sharp conflict along that line, and a good deal of evidence as to the transactions between Lemmon and the bank and the action taken by the bank, through its officers to acquaint itself with the situation and to inform itself, in such a manner as to protect itself (and, perhaps, not'to do any wrong to anybody else), of inquiries made, investigations made, etc., and upon this it is claimed by the bank that the testimony shows that the bank exercised the best of faith, and because the evidence at least tends to establish that, it is insisted on behalf of the bank that the court should not have taken the case from the jury, but should have submitted the case to the jury. There is evidence tending to show that the bank exercised good faith, and, therefore it is for us to say whether it is a matter of any consequence — whether it is a question of good faith, whether the question of the bank having good faith should have been submitted to the jury, and whether if the jury found that the bank exercised entire good faith, that would have established a defense on the part of the bank.

In support of their contention that this would be and was a good defense, counsel for the bank have filed a brief, citing various' authorities, and among them the case of Jelke v. Goldsmith, 52 Ohio St., 499 [129]*129[40 N. E. Rep. 167; 49 Am. St. Rep. 730], which holds,, in substance, that one buying notes and mortgages from an administrator in good faith and without notice that the administrator contemplates any wrong to the estate, is to be protected.

On the other hand, counsel for the plaintiff below, the defendant in error, amongst other authorities cites the case of Strong v. Strauss, 40 Ohio 'St. 87, which is a case where a guardian made a sale of the real estate of a minor ward and took notes of the purchaser, for the deferred payments, payable to his order as guardian and secured by mortgage upon real estate, and it was held that when the purchaser found such notes bearing on their face the marks of a trust fund he is put upon his inquiry, and if he buys them from the guardian under circumstances fairly indicating that they were sold against the interest of his wards, he gets no title from the guardian who misappropriates the proceeds of the sale. In the course of the opinion by Judge Dickman, this is said, on page 94:

“Instead of an unmistakable trust fund to be regarded as sacred, the defendant treated the notes in the hands of the broker as ordinary commercial paper. We do not think the notes in question should have been so classed. Made payable as they were to the order of William Rankin, guardian of the minors respectively named in the body of the notes, they could not have the unrestricted circulation of commercial paper, or bills of exchange and promissory notes negotiable by the law merchant. Far from being treated as commercial paper, bought before maturity, in the usual course of trade, for a fair value, we consider it the better rule, to hold the defendant as charged with notice of the peculiarly trust character of the notes, and as bound to exercise that high decree of caution in purchasing the same, which the protection of such trust funds demands.”

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Bluebook (online)
17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 125, 5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 569, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-clerks-sav-bank-co-v-schirk-ohiocirct-1904.