Orlich v. Rubio Savings Bank

38 N.W.2d 622, 240 Iowa 1074, 10 A.L.R. 2d 340, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 405
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedAugust 5, 1949
DocketNo. 47472.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 38 N.W.2d 622 (Orlich v. Rubio Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orlich v. Rubio Savings Bank, 38 N.W.2d 622, 240 Iowa 1074, 10 A.L.R. 2d 340, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 405 (iowa 1949).

Opinion

Oliver, J.

— Maurice Weisz operated a produce business at Brighton, Iowa, under the name of Weisz. Produce. He bought produce from dealers, processed it, and sold it in quantities to buyers in Chicago and- elsewhere. He banked with defendant, Rubio Savings Bank of Brighton. Plaintiff, Mitch ell Orlich, bought and sold poultry and eggs at Colfax, Iowa, under the name of Orlich Produce.

Counts 1 and 2 of plaintiff’s petition allege that about June 3, 1946, defendant and Weisz orally agreed Weisz Produce would continue the produce business, would pay with checks drawn on defendant and would deposit all proceeds in defendant-bank and the bank would pay all such checks and if the Weisz Produce bank balance should be insufficient would finance such purchases by accepting demand notes of Weisz Produce; that both pai’ties performed said agreement until April 11, 1947; that relying upon the agreement Weisz Produce bought from plaintiff four shipments of poultry and eggs axxd paid therefor with checks: Exhibit 2 — April 3, 1947, $534.94; Exhibit 3— April 4, 1947, $891.31; Exhibit 4 — April 7, 1947, $2808.54; Exhibit 5 — April 8, 1947, $3013.50; that Weisz Produce thereafter sold the produce at a profit and deposited the proceeds in *1076 defendant-bank; that plaintiff deposited bis checks in First National Bank of Colfax and they were forwarded through IowaDes Moines National Bank & Trust Company, Des Moines and Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago to defendant-bank; that defendant in violation of its agreement with Weisz refused payment under the pretext the funds on deposit were insufficient and wrongfully appropriated the Weisz Produce account and set off the same to the payment of its claims; that this was a fraud upon plaintiff, was contrary to equity and good conscience and plaintiff should be granted equitable relief; that the court should construct and enforce a trust upon the proceeds received by defendant from Weisz Produce resale of plaintiff’s produce and other funds received by defendant from Weisz Produce between April 1 and 11 and for judgment for the amount of the checks plus protest fees and general equitable relief.

Count 3 is based upon the theory defendant actually paid the checks Exhibits 2 and 3 to Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and later wrongfully recalled the payment. The, other counts are predicated upon the contention defendant failed to pay or return, each check accepted or unaccepted within twenty-four hours after its receipt..

., Defendant closed out Weisz Produce account April 11, 1947. W.eisz disappeared, and was adjudicated a bankrupt.

I.. The evidence relied upon by plaintiff to prove the bank entered into the pleaded contract or agreement to- finance Weisz Produce is wholly 'circumstantial. Weisz dealt with no other bank. He was indebted to defendant on a time loan secured by a mortgage of the. Weisz Produce plant and equipment. During the ten-month period in question the bank made Weisz Produce about sixty demand loans averaging several thousand dollars. Usually these were paid within a few days but one or more of them was outstanding most of the time. “These loans were based on the.fact that he said he had checks coming from commission companies in Chicago, or elsewhere, or had produce in the process of delivery and the checks would be back to pay the notes in a short time * *

Weisz and his bookkeeper, Marston, frequently wrote checks in excess of the balance in the Weisz Produce account. If suffi *1077 cient'deposits to cover these had not .b.een made when they arrived by mail the bank would telephone Weisz Produce that a deposit of a certain amount was required and Weisz or-Maratón would make the deposit, either from the proceeds of sales of produce or from the proceeds of a demand loan made for that purpose. The records of the bank show no overdrafts but they do show about six instances where overdrafts were prevented by demand notes credited to Weisz Produce account one business day prior to the dates of the. respective notes. Witnesses for the bank testified the discrepancies in the dates of the notes and credits were due largely to a delayed posting system employed by defendant. “It happened once in awhile when we had no cash letter the day before and checks came in and were opened in the cash letter in the morning that Mr. Weisz either deposited cash,-' checks or borrowed money before the books, were balanced for the preceding day or before the posting was done on the green sheets. When that was done they were included as of the preceding day’s business.” .

Weisz had no relations with the bank other than as a customer. He owned and operated a recently enlarged storage and produce plant which employed twenty to thirty people and deposited about $1,375,000 during the period in question. That he required and secured frequent loans to handle his commitments would'not make suspect'defendant’s dealings with him. Nor was the use of demand, notes to evidence the loans necessarily significant. They were well adapted for loans of a few .days’ duration while shipments of produce by Weisz Produce'and payments by consignees were en route. True, there were some instances in which such notes were credited on the bank’s books a day- in advance of the respective dates on the face of the notes. It was defendant’s practice that when checks • arrived which would overdraw a customer’s account he was telephoned and given an opportunity to cover them. Possibly the discrepancies in dates resulted from that practice. These advance credits may have indicated temporary overdrafts on such occasions. However, this would not furnish substantial proof of the agreement pleaded by plaintiff. Nor would it require the bank to permit other overdrafts. Canal Bank & Trust Co. v. Denny, 172 *1078 La. 840, 844, 135 So. 376, 377, states' they were not under obligation to pay the checks “because they had heretofore been in the habit of allowing them to overdraw their account at times.” See Dolan v. Danbury State Bank, 207 Iowa 597, 601, 223 N. W. 400. 9 C. J. S., Banks and Banking, section 342, page 688, states: “A custom of a bank to permit a depositor to overdraw inay be discontinued by the bank at any time, in the absence of reliance thereon by a third person.”

Although plaintiff points to some others, the foregoing are the main circumstances relied upon as showing the pleaded agreement that the bank would finance all purchases of Weisz Produce and pay all checks for produce. Opposed to this evidence is testimony of representatives of the bank that it had no such contract or agreement nor any agreement with reference to financing Weisz Produce or paying checks drawn on Weisz Produce account, if the funds in the account were insufficient. Plaintiff relies largely upon Pascoe v. Franklin County State Bank, 217 Iowa 205, 251 N. W. 63. Defendant cites Andrew v. Waterville Sav. Bk., 205 Iowa 888, 219 N. W. 53. In the Pascoe case there was direct as well as circumstantial evidence of fhe bank’s agreement to finance the purchases of a customer who was also an officer and director. Here all the direct evidence was to the contrary and the circumstances were not inconsistent therewith. The trial court found plaintiff had failed to establish the contract or agreement pleaded by him. We conclude this finding was correct.

II.

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.W.2d 622, 240 Iowa 1074, 10 A.L.R. 2d 340, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orlich-v-rubio-savings-bank-iowa-1949.