Nichols v. Bank of Syracuse

278 S.W. 793, 220 Mo. App. 1019, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 152
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 278 S.W. 793 (Nichols v. Bank of Syracuse) 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
Nichols v. Bank of Syracuse, 278 S.W. 793, 220 Mo. App. 1019, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 152 (Mo. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

— This is a claim against the Bank of Syracuse and the Commissioner of Finance who took charge of the affairs of the bank on April 7, 1924, because said bank was insolvent. The bank is now being liquidated and wound up by the commissioner. Plaintiff seeks to have a preferred claim allowed to be paid out of the general assets of the bank in the hands of the commissioner. The court below allowed the full amount of the demand, to-wit, $6183, as a preferred claim. Defendants have appealed.

The facts show that sometime prior to September 25, 1923, one E. L. Nichols, of Morgan county, negotiated with one John Koenke, of said county, in reference to the sale of the former’s farm to the latter for $6183. E. E. Poe, president of the Bank of Syracuse, had agreed with Koenke to obtain a loan on the property. The abstract of title had been delivered to Mr. Jones, an attorney at Versailles, Mr. Jones had examined the abstract and found a flaw in the title. It was not a serious defect and could be corrected by bringing a suit to quiet the title. On September 25, 1923, E. L. Nichols, Koenke and Poe were in Jones’s office at Versailles when Jones suggested that a suit to quiet the title should not interfere with the sale and that $50 of the purchase price be retained to cover the expense of clearing the title. Poe had negotiated with the Crawford Loan and Abstract Company of Sedalia for a loan of $8,000 on the property. Jones’s suggestion was unsatisfactory to *1021 Poe, tlie latter stating that he conld not get the money until the title Avas quieted. A Avritten contract of sale of the property was thereupon executed between E. L. Nichols and Koenke wherein it Avas provided that the purchase price should be $6183; $500 of this money was to be deposited in escroAv with the First National Bank of Versailles in the form of a certified check, the remainder was to be paid by Koenke as soon as the title should be shown in E. L. Nichols, at which time a warranty deed from said Nichols to Koenke Avas to be delivered and the certified check cashed by said Nichols. At the time the contract Avas entered into the property was owned by plaintiff, J. T. Nichols, who was the son of E. L. Nichols, but the record title appeared to be in E. L. Nichols. The deed.conveying the farm from father to son was recorded on October 8, 1923, and it is admitted that the contract between the father and Koenke Avas carried out by the son.

From and after September 25, 1923, Koenke does not appear personally ; his part of the transaction being looked after by Poe. On November 24, 1923, plaintiff was in the Bank of Syracuse and there talked with Poe about the matter. Poe told him that he had been unable to get the money from the loan company with whieh to pay for the property for the reason that the title was not cleared, that he could not get the money until a suit to quiet title had been brought and determined. Whereupon it was agreed between Poe and plaintiff that the latter should sign a deed to the property in favor of Koenke to be deposited in escroAv with the Bank of Syracuse to be held by that bank until the title was cleared and the money received by the bank, at which time the money to the extent of the purchase price Avas to be paid to plaintiff by the bank. The deed Avas signed and deposited and Poe delivered to plaintiff what plaintiff refers to as a “paper,” which was in the form of a promissory note for $6183, in Avhich the Bank of Syracuse agreed to pay plaintiff that sum five months after date with six per cent interest. The note Avas evidently made out on a printed form with the folioAving in typeAvriting inserted at the bottom: “This note is to be taken up and interest paid — when abstract is completed and delivered for the E. L. Nichols farm.” Plaintiff testified that Poe explained that it would take about five months to cure the title by suit. AfterAvards Poe told plaintiff in the presence of Jones- that the title Avould have to be perfected before the money would be paid by the loan company. Plaintiff’s deed recited a consideration of $15,000. Poe dreAV the deed, dating it September 14, 1923, and plaintiff signed it, trusting Poe, without reading it or knowing of this recital. The recital of the false consideration was after the loan company had made the loan and could not have affected that matter. The loan papers were executed on October 1, 1923. The *1022 books and Minutes of tbe Bank of Syracuse did not show that the bank had ever borrowed any money from plaintiff, on November 24, 1923, plaintiff was not doing any business with this bank. There was no understanding that the bank was to have the use of the money when it arrived.

On October 1, 1923, a deed of trust on the farm was executed by Koenke and wife in favor of Grant Crawford of the loan company. This was acknowledged before Poe, a notary public. This deed of trust was filed on November 27, 1923. The warranty deed from plaintiff to Koenke was placed on record on February 25, 1924. This was apparently done by Poe. About that time Poe brought the deed to Jones and instructed him to go ahead and bring suit to quiet the title. The suit was brought on the day the deed was recorded and the decree quieting the title was taken on the 23rd of April, 1924. While this proceeding was brought by Jones as attorney representing plaintiff, it was brought in the name of Koenke because the title at that time was in him. As a matter of fact the statement by Poe that the loan company would not make the loan until the title was clear, was false as will immediately hereinafter appear.

On September 29, 1923, the loan company sent to the Bank of Syracuse the sum of $3500 and on October 4th the sum of $4100, making a total of $7600, which represented the loan on the farm less a commission for making the loan. Although the loan company had done some banking business with the Bank of Syracuse, this was not a general deposit (Harrison v. Smith, 83 Mo. 210; 7 C. J., pp. 631, 632) but the checks were made payable to the Bank of Syracuse and were for the specific purpose of paying Koenke. At the time of the deposit of October 4th, the books of the bank showed that the loan company had a balance of $12,450 in the bank to its credit and on November 24, 1923, at the time plaintiff’s deed was deposited in the bank, the books showed that the loan company had to its credit in the bank the sum of $4777.05. At the time the bank closed, the books showed a balance to the credit of the loan company of $296.43. In connection with this we will later show that at the time the deed was deposited by Nichols the $7600 remitted by the loan company to the bank was in the bank. On December 13, 1923, the bank paid Koenke the difference between the $7600 and the amount coming to Nichols. E. L. Nichols never received the $500 placed in the bank at Versailles and neither he nor plaintiff knew1 that the Bank of Syracuse had received the money to pay off plaintiff until after the bank closed its doors.

• It is plaintiff’s contention that the bank held the amount, of money that was received by the two checks of the loan company, *1023 to the extent of the purchase price of the farm, in trust for plaintiff. We think there is no question but that this was the relation between the parties, at least after the happenings on November 24, 1923. There is no contention but that Poe, as president of the bank, was acting as agent for Koenke in these transactions as this is. admitted by the defendants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
278 S.W. 793, 220 Mo. App. 1019, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-bank-of-syracuse-moctapp-1925.