Pemiscot County Bk. v. Tower Grove Bk. of St. Louis

223 S.W. 115, 204 Mo. App. 441, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 52
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 8, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 223 S.W. 115 (Pemiscot County Bk. v. Tower Grove Bk. of St. Louis) 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
Pemiscot County Bk. v. Tower Grove Bk. of St. Louis, 223 S.W. 115, 204 Mo. App. 441, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 52 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

OPINION.

REYNOLDS, P. J.

(after stating the facts as above). —Taking up the draft for $2784.04 and the action of the court in rendering judgment for the full amount of that, we think that the learned trial court was in error. The check given by Tindle for the draft went by mail from the defendant bank to the Pemiscot County Bank, with the request that it be paid. In return the Pemiscot County Bank transmitted by mail to the defendant bank the draft drawn on the Security Bank and Trust Company of Memphis, Tennessee. By mail the Pemiscot County Bank transmitted that draft to the M|em-phis Company and it was duly paid. We can look on this transaction in no other light. than as a transaction between the banks and it does not come within the rule relating to the issue of checks or drafts by a cashier in payment of his personal indebtedness. This personal indebtedness evidenced by notes, the notes secured by collateral worth something like $9000', it is true was a transaction in the name of Tindle biut it represented notes of other persons that he had put up and which he had discounted when he obtained this money. While plaintiffs allege that the defendant never gave or paid to plaintiff or either of them anything of value or any valuable consideration for the draft, it) had Tindle’s check and the notes of various parties, discounted, it is true, by Tindle, and Tindle gave his check on the :P'em'iscot County Bankl jfor that amount, which the *460 defendant bank sent by mail to the Pemiscot County Bank. When in payment of that check the draft was transmitted by mail by the Pemiscot County Bank to the defendant bank, and was transmitted by the latter to the Memphis Trust Company, on which it was drawn, and paid by the latter, the defendant, also by mail, surrendered the collateral which it held. All this was a matter in due course of business between two banks.

In Campbell v. Manufacturers National Bank, 67 N. J. L. 301, l. c. 303, it is held:

“To make the acts of the cashier valid (in issuing; a draft), the transaction in which the draft is delivered must be a bank transaction, made by the cashier, within his express or implied authority, in the conduct of the business of the bank. So long as a person deals with the cashier in a matter wherein, as between himself and the cashier, he is dealing with, or has a right to believe he is dealing with, the bank, the transaction is obligatory upon the bank.
‘ ‘ The cashier is presumed to have all the authority he exercises in dealing with executive, functions legally within the powers of the bank itself or which are usually or customarily done, or held out to be done, by such an officer.
“But the test of the transaction is whether it is with the bank and its business, orl With the cashier personally and in his business (citing cases).
“As to the former, all presumptions are in favor of its regulárity and binding force.”

This case is cited with approval by our Supreme Court in St. Charles Saving's Bank v. Edwards, 243 Mo. 553, l. c. 567, 147 S. W. 978.

There was nothing in this transaction with respect to that draft, beyond the fact that it was drawn in pay-talent of the cashier’s secured obligations, that can in any way carry notice or knowledge! to the defendant' bank that it was other than a regular bank transaction. While a principle announced as in the Edwards Case and others of like character, may be entirely correct, in *461 its application we must not lose sight of the facts to which it is to be applied, as said by our Supreme Court in Bender v. Weber, 250 Mo. 551, l. c. 561, 157 S. W. 570: “In the next place, a good rule, of every day-service, is that judgment of appellate, courts on one state of facts may not be applied automatically to another state of facts, but, contra, the general language in decision must be read in the dry light of the very case held in judgment, and not otherwise. [State ex rel. v. St. Louis, 241 Mo. l. c. 238, et seq.]” [See 145 S. W. 801.] The latter case cited by Judge Lamm, is very full on.the same proposition. The case at bar has none of the elements which appear in the Edwards case, supra, St. Charles Savings Bank v. Orthwein Investment Co., 160 Mo. App. 369, 140 S. W. 921, and some other cases relied on, where the person collecting on the cashier’s draft knew that the cashier was speculating in the market on his own account, and that they were his individual transactions in which a bank could not possibly be legally interested. The two cases cited were essentially cases where it appeared that the cashier had been speculating], gambling on the market. In the case at bar, however, so far as anything appears, regular commercial paper was discounted at the defendant bank by Tindle and the money paid over to him. When it became due he gave, first, his own check on his own bank then as cashier 'and in the ordinary course of business, issued this draft on another bank in favor of the defendant bank for the amount. This is entirely unlike the oases referred to, and in our judgment makes it a bank transaction between two' banks. The check Tindle gave for the notes he had put up-, for which the defendant bank held collateral, was on his own bank, it is true; but that fact in itself and under the circumstances in this case carried no notice of any irregularity about it. [St. Charles Savings Bank v. Edwards, supra.] It would be a curious proposition if the cashier of a bank did not have his own funds in his own bank. There must be something more than the mere fact that he drew *462 his check on Ms own bank to make that check void. Here the cashier drew Ms own check on his own account in his own bank, in connection with a transaction that so far as'defendant bank could know or was charged with knowledge, was entirely regular. This is particularly so where the defendant bank held collateral for the debt which the check was intended to pay., There was nothing-in it, under the facts here present, to carry any notice to the defendant bank of any irregularity in it. So that we think the trial court was clearly wrong in rendering a judgment against the defendant bank on that draft.

With reference to the draft for $3060.88, we are compelled to hold that the learned trial court was in error in finding against defendant on that draft for any amount. The defendant bank had in its hands notes to which Tindle was only indirectly responsible by being a member of the firm to whose order they were issued and for whose benefit they were discounted. It is true that Tindle was a member of that firm, but he had two other partners and there was nothing irregular whatever in that concern — a partnership — putting up its notes, having them discounted by the bank, and if it allowed Tin-die to receive the proceeds of the discount, the defendant bank was not concerned. The fact that the proceeds of the discount were paid to Tindle is of no substantial import. It was a regular business transaction, conducted in the ordinary and usual way and there was nothing whatever in it to convey or intimate in any way to the defendant bank that Tindle, when he discounted these notes for Ms concern, was dealing on Ms personal account any further than he was also a member of that firm.

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Bluebook (online)
223 S.W. 115, 204 Mo. App. 441, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pemiscot-county-bk-v-tower-grove-bk-of-st-louis-moctapp-1920.