Miller v. Rosebud Bank

116 S.W.2d 267, 234 Mo. App. 647, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 75
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 3, 1938
StatusPublished

This text of 116 S.W.2d 267 (Miller v. Rosebud Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Rosebud Bank, 116 S.W.2d 267, 234 Mo. App. 647, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 75 (Mo. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

*650 McCULLEN, J.

This is a suit in equity brought by respondent, plaintiff below, to establish a claim for preference against the Rosebud Bank, an insolvent banking corporation which was in charge of O. H. Moberly, State Finance Commissioner of Missouri, for purposes of liquidation. ' After this cause was argued and submitted in this court, R. W. Holt, Commissioner of Finance of Missouri, was granted leave as such Commissioner to enter his appearance in place of O. H. Moberly, former Finance Commissioner of Missouri, and the caption of the cause was amended by inserting said Commissioner’s name in place of said O. IT. Moberly.

The amended petition of plaintiff on which the case was tried alleged that, on June 1, 1932, he had on deposit in said bank the sum of $2343, evidenced .by a certificate of deposit bearing four per cent interest, which was due and payable to him on that.date; that, shortly after June 1, 1932, he presented said certificate for payment at said bank while it was open and -doing business, but that payment was refused, although said bank at that time had sufficient assets and funds to pay said deposit.

The amended petition further alleged that plaintiff, on July 2, 1932, had on deposit in said bank the sum of $2,944.84, evidenced by. a certificate of deposit bearing four per cent interest, which was due and payable to him on that date; that on July 2, 1932, he presented said certificate of deposit to said bank while the bank was open and doing business, but that payment was refused although said bank at that time had sufficient assets and funds to. pay said deposit.

Plaintiff further alleged that on December 19, 1932, said bank was closed and all of its business and assets were placed in the hands of the Commissioner of Finance for the reason that said .bank was insolvent; that the said bank and the Commissioner of Finance now have, and at the time the bank was closed had, on hand sufficient money and assets to pay the claim of plaintiff; that a claim was duly filed with the Special Deputy Commissioner in charge of the bank, and was allowed as a common claim and certified to the circuit court for adjudication as to priority of payment. Plaintiff prayed judgment for $5,391.86, and that said amount be decreed a trust fund in the hands of the Commissioner of Finance and be paid as a preferred claim.

The answer of respondents, hereinafter referred to as defendants, was a general denial. The suit was originally filed in the Circuit Court of Gasconade County, but, on plaintiff’s application for change of venue, was transferred to the St. Louis County Circuit Court where it was tried.- After a trial, the court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $5,121.87, which sum was declared to be a trust fund in the hands of the Commissioner of Finance and was allowed and ordered paid as a preferred claim. After an unavailing motion for a new trial, defendants bring the case to this court by appeal.

*651 The evidence shows that plaintiff was the owner and holder of a six months certificate of deposit issued by the defendant Rosebud Bank in the sum of $2,343.57, which became due on June 1, 1932. It was introduced in evidence as plaintiff’s Exhibit A. Plaintiff also owned and held another six months certificate of deposit issued by said Bank in the sum of Two Thousand, Nine Hundred Forty-four Dollars and Eighty-four Cents ($2,944.84), which became due on July 2, 1932. This second certificate of deposit was introduced in evidence as plaintiff’s Exhibit C. Plaintiff went to the defendant bank about a month before the certificates of deposit were due to see if he could get his money. He was told he could not get the money until the certificates were due.

Plaintiff was a street car conductor and lived in the City of St. Louis; he was about forty-five years old, and had only an eighth grade education. Being unable to get his money at that time, he left one of the certificates of deposit (plaintiff’s Exhibit A), being the first one that would fall due, with his mother, Mrs. Emma Miller, who lived at Rosebud, Missouri. She was sixty-three years of age, and testified that she had gone only as far as the third reader in school; that she had never had any business training of any kind; had been married for forty-seven years, and had done nothing outside of being a housewife. Shortly before June 1, 1932, the date on which Exhibit A was due, plaintiff wrote to his mother to take that certificate of deposit to the Bank and get his money. About June 6, 1932, plaintiff’s mother presented said certificate of deposit at the bank to II. F. Brinkman, the bank’s cashier, while the bank was open and doing business, and demanded payment. Prior to that time the bank had been placed under restrictions by its board of directors, and the cashier had been directed by said board to permit the withdrawal in cash on account of certificates of deposit and other deposits at the rate of $10 per week only. When plaintiff’s mother presented said certificate of deposit and demanded payment, the cashier told her to indorse it, which she did by writing on the back of it the name of her son, followed by her own name. The cashier then told plaintiff’s mother that the board of directors of the bank had placed a restriction on withdrawals and that money could only be withdrawn at the rate of $10.00 per week. The cashier thereupon wrote out another certificate of deposit (introduced in evidence as plaintiff’s Exhibit B), which was made due twelve months from date with interest at four per cent per annum, and was for the sum of $2,343.57, being the same amount as plaintiff’s Exhibit A. The interest than due was deposited in plaintiff’s checking account, to be withdrawn under the $10 per week restrictive arrangement for the bank heretofore mentioned.

On July 2, 1932, plaintiff went to Rosebud, got from his mother plaintiff’s Exhibit B, which, according to the mother’s testimony, *652 she was holding merely as a receipt for the money dne on plaintiff’s Exhibit A which had not been paid. Plaintiff then personally went to the bank while it was open and doing business, and, after indorsing plaintiff’s Exhibit B as well as the certificate of deposit for $2,944.84 due on July 2, 1932, (which was introduced as plaintiff’s Exhibit C) presented both certificates to the cashier of the bank and demanded payment thereon. The cashier refused to make payment, and stated to plaintiff that he could only pay out money at the rate of $Í0 per week under the restrictions ordered by the board of directors of the bank. The cashier further told plaintiff that, in order to draw out money at the rate of $10 per week, it would be necessary to place the same in plaintiff’s checking account and then plaintiff could draw a check on it for $10 each week. Plaintiff told the cashier that he lived in St. Louis, and that it wouldn’t be convenient for him to draw money out at the rate of $10 per week; that if the bank was going to close up, it wouldn’t be worth his while to attempt to draw the money out in that way. The evidence shows that, after some discussion between plaintiff and the cashier of the bank, the latter made out a new certificate of deposit for $2950, (which was introduced in evidence as plaintiff’s Exhibit D) making it due twelve months áfter date, with interest at four per cent per annum. Plaintiff testified that he finally took this certificate of deposit only as a receipt “because that was the best he could do.

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Bluebook (online)
116 S.W.2d 267, 234 Mo. App. 647, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-rosebud-bank-moctapp-1938.