Nomland v. First Nat. Bank of Kansas City, Mo.

64 F.2d 399, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4107
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 3, 1933
DocketNo. 9368
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 64 F.2d 399 (Nomland v. First Nat. Bank of Kansas City, Mo.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nomland v. First Nat. Bank of Kansas City, Mo., 64 F.2d 399, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4107 (8th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

BOOTH, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered against appellant, plaintiff below, after a trial in a law action, in which a jury was waived and the case tried to the court.

Most of the facts are undisputed — among them the following: The National State Bank of Stockton, Kan. (hereafter called the Stockton Bank), became insolvent and suspended business on November 14, 1927, and appellant was. duly appointed, and is still acting, as its receiver. On November 10, 1927, the defendant, the First National Bank of Kansas City, Mo. (hereafter called the Kansas City Bank), mailed a cash letter to the Stockton Bank containing cheeks amounting, to $1,460.94 drawn upon the latter bank by certain of its depositors. These cheeks the Kansas City Bank had received from a number of its own depositors, and had given to such depositors credit upon their respective accounts. The form of deposit slip used by the Kansas City Bank for said depositors was the usual form in use by said bank, and is set out in the margin.1 In sending these checks to the Stockton Bank, the Kansas City Bank handled them through its transit department, and not through its collection department. On November 12, 1927, the Stockton Bank received said cheeks and charged the same on the respective accounts of its depositors who had issued them. On the same day, the Stockton Bank mailed to the Kansas City Bank a cash letter containing a draft for $1,460.94 drawn by the Stockton Bank on the Kansas City Bank in.remit-tanee for said checks; and debited its own account with the Kansas City Bank with that amount. The Stockton Bank prior to the time of drawing the draft had to its credit with the Kansas City Bank the sum of $3,-592.62. Monday morning, November 14, 1927, the Kansas City Bank received the cash letter and the draft from the Stockton Bank; but before it had made any entry or record of the receipt of the draft, the Kansas City Bank received a telegram from R. [401]*401B. Hewitt, a national bank examiner, reading* as follows:

. -vT i t> i Tz- nu- -¡vT/. “First National Bank Kansas City Mo. c,, , *n -i / “National State Bank Stockton Kansas
, , . -xx^jTi i i , ,«, » closed stop withhold payment on ail outstanding ¿afta stop Forward statement «R. B. Hewitt,
“National Bank Examiner.”

This telegram was received at the telegraph office in Kansas City at 9:07 a. m. on November 14, 1927. The time of the re- , ,, ,, n.. eeipt of the telegram by the Kansas City ,, J , • if j Bank is not shown m the record.

Tke Stockton Bank did not open for business on November 14-, 1927. On the same day, but after the telegram had been reeeiv-ed from the national bank examiner, the Kansas City Bank charged the account of the Stockton Bank with the amount ol the draft. On November 15 the Kansas City Bank charged back to its customers the Stockton Bank checks which they had deposited; and advised them that the Stockton Bank had ejos(1(j

Early in December, the Kansas City Bank reported to the receiver of the Stockton Bank that it had to the credit of the receiver the sum of $2,131.68; and on De-comber 7 the bank paid this sum to the re-eeiver. This amount did not include the amount of the draft which the Stockton Bank had sent to the Kansas City Bank.

On December 12 the Kansas City Bank reeredited the accounts of its customers re-sneetively with the amounts of the cheeks which had been originally credited to them on November 10, but which had been cliarg-ed back on November 15. The bank, however, reserved the right to recharge the same.

When the receiver of the Stockton Bank received from the Kansas City Bank the amount of $2,131.68 he did not know that the bank had received the telegram of November 14 before it had actually charged on its books the draft of the Stockton Bank; nor did the receiver know that on November 15 the Kansas City Bank had charged back to its customers the checks on the Stockton Bank which they had deposited on Novem-her 10. These facts were learned by the re-eeiver on December 15, and thereafter cor-respondenee was had by the receiver with the Comptroller of the Currency and with the Kansas City Bank relative to the various transactions above mentioned and the resulting situation.

In this correspondence, one of the officers of the Kansas Bank asserted the right of the bank to hold the amount of the draft $1,460.94, on the ground that the draft had been paid before the Kansas City Bank te- . ; ,xl . /,, ox , notice or the suspension of the Stoek- . *] ton Bank; and said oiliccr of the Kansas n . Clty f ^id correspondence disclaimed any right of set-off.

_ On February 14, 1928, the receiver made formal demand on the Kansas City Bank for ^ pay]ncnj; 0f $1,460.94. The demand was an(j the present suit followed.

, . n., „ , The checks which the Kansas City Bank „ . , , ,T 4 ,A sent to the Stockton Bank on November 10, , , , , , .. T, 7 1927, have never been returned to the Kansas City Bank, presumably because they had been turned over by the Stockton Bank to the respective drawers.

The trial court found the foregoing1 facts substantially, and held for the defendant, the Kansas City Bank; and judgment was enter-G(j aeeol.cti¿o-lv.

Various contentions are made on this apPea^ by ^be aPPeUant and appellee respeetively. We do not find it necessary to determine or discuss all of them. In the view we take Gf the ease, the vital questions are few.

The suggestion of the appellant that the Kansas City Bank, by recharging the checks to its customers, or by the remarks of one of its officers as to offset, has determined the rights of that bank as against the Stockton Bank and its receiver, we lay to one side, ** ‘he remark that such acts of the Kansas City Bank-would not operate as an estoppel the clear reason that the receiver did not rel{ "P°f t!l®m ^ Ptete<hce; and the materiality _ of such acts would he confined to tbe boa™? they might possibly have up- f6 /e]^1011. exfü^ botweon tbe *1° banks at and prior to the suspension o± the Stockton Bank,

We also pass by the contention of appelleo that the amount of the checks in question, $1,460.94, became a trust fund in the hands of the Stockton Bank. The contrary doctrine has become strongly entrenched in ^his court, and we see no reason for a change °£ position.

There was no augmentation of assets* of the Stockton Bank, and hence the trust fund doctrine is not available. This rule is announced in the following cases in this circuit: Beard v. Ind. Dist. of Pella City (C. C. A.) 88 F. 375; Empire State Surety Co. v. Carroll County (C. C. A.) 194 F. 593; Mechanics & Metals Nat. Bank v. Buchanan (C. C. A.) 12 F.(2d) 891; Larabee Flour Mills v. First Nat. Bank (C. C. A.) 13 F.(2d) 330; [402]*402Hirning v. Fed. Reserve Bank of Mpls. (C. C. A.) 52 F.(2d) 382.

The crucial question, as we view the ease, ■ is whether the right of set-off existed in the Kansas City Bank at the time when it debited the account on its books of the Stockton Bank with the draft sent by that bank in payment of the cheeks theretofore transmitted to it by the Kansas City Bank.

We shall assume for the purposes of this ease that a mutuality of debtor-creditor relation is a prerequisite to the right of set-off, although the necessity of such a relationship is contested by appellee.

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Bluebook (online)
64 F.2d 399, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nomland-v-first-nat-bank-of-kansas-city-mo-ca8-1933.