National Bank of Commerce at Hugo v. Whitten

1942 OK 113, 124 P.2d 990, 190 Okla. 449, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 114
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 17, 1942
DocketNo. 30529.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1942 OK 113 (National Bank of Commerce at Hugo v. Whitten) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Bank of Commerce at Hugo v. Whitten, 1942 OK 113, 124 P.2d 990, 190 Okla. 449, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 114 (Okla. 1942).

Opinion

GIBSON, J.

This is an action by the alleged assignee of a number of cestuis que trustent against a bank to recover the trust funds on deposit in said bank. Verdict and judgment were for plaintiff, and defendant appeals.

The record discloses that one Mrs. King conducted a business in the city of Hugo where as a factor she sold livestock for various owners at auction. On *450 April 18, 1939, she conducted one of such sales, and on the 19th and 20th of said month she deposited the proceeds to the credit of her general deposit account in defendant bank. At that time the bank held certain of Mrs. King’s checks payable to other parties and drawn on said account and which had not been paid on account of insufficient funds. These checks were charged to and paid out of the funds deposited on April 19th and 20th, as aforesaid. The account was thereby exhausted, and the bank refused to honor the checks subsequently drawn on said account by Mrs. King to the order of the various livestock owners in payment of the proceeds of the sale.

Thereupon the plaintiff, who was owner and holder of one or more of said checks as payee, took from numerous other payees an assignment of their respective checks and causes of action thereon, and, proceeding on the theory that the deposits of April 19th and 20th constituted trust funds of which the payees were owners, commenced this action against the bank to recover on separate counts the amount of each of said checks.

The form of the assignment in each instance, omitting the signature, and the date and amount of the check, was as follows:

“For value received I hereby assign to M. L. Whitten all my right, title and interest in and to a certain check drawn by Mrs. Walter King, on the National Bank of Commerce at Hugo, dated (giving date), for the sum of (specifying amount)-, and assign the Cause of Action thereon. (Signature of Assignee).”

Defendant assigns as error the action of the court in overruling its general demurrer to the petition and in overruling its objection to the introduction of any evidence.

Each count of the petition alleges, substantially, that the deposits made by Mrs. King as aforesaid belonged to the payees of the checks issued thereon by her; that said deposits constituted a trust fund of which said payees were the real owners; that the bank knew that the money was the proceeds of the sales of livestock belonging to the various owners; that the bank had extended no credit, had not changed its position, parted with anything or suffered any detriment by reason of the money having been so deposited; that the bank had wrongfully refused to pay the checks on presentation.

Assuming that the several causes of action were properly joined in the name of the plaintiff as the real party in interest, all of which defendant specifically challenged, the petition was sufficient in its allegations. Fidelity National Bank, etc., v. Copeland, 138 Okla. 19, 280 P. 273. The rule is there stated as follows:

“Where a trustee deposits money, belonging to his cestui que trust, in a bank and no credit is extended on account of such deposit and the bank in no way changes its position by reason thereof, a lack of notice of the trust character of such deposit is immaterial and the true owner may recover the amount thereof from such bank. Brady v. American Nat. Bank of Oklahoma City, 120 Okla. 159, 250 P. 1006.”

Defendant makes no serious contention that the deposits in question were not trust funds. The relationship between a factor and his principal is of a fiduciary character. 25 C. J. 342, § 5. It is there said that “the relation of principal and factor has long been regarded as beneficial in the transaction of business, and is of a fiduciary character, the factor being regarded in some instances, as where he sells in his own name, as a trustee of an express trust.” And in the same text, page 370, sec. 58, the following statement appears:

■ “Unless there is an agreement, express or implied, giving the factor the right to appropriate the proceeds of a sale to his own use, and subject to the lien of the factor for commissions, advances, and charges, the proceeds of goods sold by a factor belong to the principal and the factor is liable, and bound to account to him therefor.”

The beneficiary may follow the trust funds into the hands of any one except *451 a bona fide purchaser or holder for value. C. M. Keys Commission Co. v. Beatty, 42 Okla. 721, 142 P. 1102. The rule was there stated as follows:

“A factor holds the goods of his principal, or their proceeds when they have been sold, in the character of a trustee; and an equitable principle will permit the beneficiary to follow trust funds, whenever they can be identified, into the hands of any one but a bona fide purchaser for value, which principle is applicable to property or its proceeds held by a factor.”

Where the trust funds are deposited in a bank, the rule is as stated in Fidelity National Bank v. Copeland, supra.

In view of the law as above stated, the petition was sufficient in its allegations to charge the bank with the legal duty to pay the checks in question out of the funds so deposited.

Defendant says further that the petition was insufficient to show a primary right in the plaintiff to any of the funds or, that is to say, a right to maintain the action. The petition, it is said, pleads merely the assignment of the checks and the causes of action thereon, and that neither the checks in the hands of the original payees nor in the hands of the assignee thereof will support an action to recover. Defendant cites section 406, Title 48, O. S. 1941, which provides that “a check of itself” does not operate as an assignment of any part of the funds to the credit of the drawer with the bank, and the bank is not liable to holder, unless and until it accepts or certifies the check. This section is based on the theory that no contractual relationship exists between the- bank and the payee until acceptance or certification of the check. And it is true that a check of itself will not support an action by the payee against the bank.

But the statute operates only as to ordinary checks given by depositors on their own accounts. It does not apply in a situation like the present one. Singer v. Citizens’ Bank of Headrick, 79 Okla. 267, 193 P. 41. In that case we approved the rule announced in Goeken v. Bank of Palmer, 100 Kan. 177, 163 P. 636, wherein it was held that the provisions in a statute like those stated above have no application to a check in the hands of the owner of the trust fund as payee and drawn thereon by the trustee. The holding of the Kansas court was that “the action is not brought merely upon the check, but upon the entire transaction.” Though the holding in Singer v. Citizens’ Bank, supra, was not contained in the syllabus, the approval of the Kansas rule was necessary to the decision there reached.

The rule stated in Goeken v. Bank of Palmer, supra, reads as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
1942 OK 113, 124 P.2d 990, 190 Okla. 449, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-bank-of-commerce-at-hugo-v-whitten-okla-1942.