Pennington v. Farmers' & Merchants' Bank

144 Tenn. 188
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 144 Tenn. 188 (Pennington v. Farmers' & Merchants' Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennington v. Farmers' & Merchants' Bank, 144 Tenn. 188 (Tenn. 1920).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Green

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Plaintiff brought this suit to recover from defendant the value of a $1,000 Victory Bond which belonged to her and had been lodged in the bank’s vault for safekeeping. The bank was robbed, its vault being blown open by burglars, and plaintiff’s bond, alone with other valuable papers, taken.

The circuit judge directed a verdict in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiff appealed in error to the court [190]*190of civil appeals. That court transferred the case to this court, conceiving that the constitutionality of an act of the legislature was involved.

The form of charter provided by our statutes for hanks and trust companies, under which statutes defendant is incorporated, contains, among* other things, the following:

“It shall have the right to construct a vault on its. real estate, or to rent any vault already constructed or to be constructed,- which, in the judgment of the directors, will provide reasonable means of safety against loss by theft, fire, or other cause, in which vault may be fixed or placed safes, boxes, or receptacles for the keeping of jewelry, diamonds, gold, bank notes, bonds, notes, and other valuables, which boxes, safes, or receptacles may be rented by the corporation to other persons or corporations, on such terms as may be agreed by the parties.”
“In no event shall the corporation be liable for any loss of said jewelry, diamonds, gold, bank notes, bonds, notes, or other valuables thus lost by theft, robbery, fire, or other cause, the said corporation not being the insurer of the safety of said property, nor in any manner liable therefor. The corporation is not required to take any note or property thus deposited, as the person who rents a safe, box, or receptacle, is, for the term of his lease, the owner thereof.”

Sections 2101, 2102, Thompson’s Shannon’s Code.

The circuit judge was of opinion that these sections were applicable to this case, and that under the provi[191]*191sions of section 2102 defendant conld not be held liable for the loss of said bond, kept as hereafter described.

We cannot agree with the learned trial judge in this conclusion.

We think such sections cover a ease where a particular bor or space in its vault is rented or leased by the bank. This is made clear by the provision that the person renting the box or receptacle is, for the term of his lease, the owner thereof. A rental contract is clearly contemplated. The customer selects his space, fills it as he pleases, and takes his chances under the statute.

We have no such a case before its. Plaintiff’s father had a tin box which the bank had presented to him. He kept his valuable papers in this box. The- bank undertook to care for the box without charge. Mr. Pennington had rented no space or receptacle in the bank’s vault, and.the bank was free to keep his box where it thought proper. The plaintiff’s bond was placed in this box belonging to her father so intrusted to the bank.

We think this bailment was undertaken by the bank under the authority of another provision of its charter, namely, the following: 1

“It shall have power to take and receive on deposit, specially as bailee, any jewelry, plate, money, specie, securities, valuable papers, or other valuables of any kind, and, upon a consideration to be agreed upon by the parties, to guarantee the safe preservation and redelivery of the same; also the power to guarantee the payment of bonds and mortgages owned by other persons, or to guarantee titles to real estate for a consideration to be agreed on by the parties.” Section 2099, Thompson’s Shannon’s Code.

[192]*192Sections 2100, 2101, of Thompson’s Shannon’s Code, relied on by defendant, are attacked as unconstitutional; it being- asserted that such legislation is arbitrary and unreasonable and discriminatory in favor of banks. We do not think this legislation is applicable to the case before us, and therefore have no occasion tó pass, on the constitutionality of the enactment.

Nevertheless, as the constitutional question was fairly raised on the record, we retain jurisdiction of the case and will dispose of the other questions.

Plaintiff’s proof tends to show that she was the daughter of a substantial farmer, who kept an account with defendant bank. She herself had a savings account at this bank,.Some months before the robbery her father determined to give her $1,000. He so informed the president of the bank, and the latter drew a check to plaintiff’s order, which the father signed and took to her.

The father testifies that the president of the bank asked him to have his daughter to do business with that institution. The father said that he could not interfere, and told the bank president that he must speak to plaintiff about the matter himself. It appears from the father’s testimony that he and the bank president had previously had some conversation about the rate of interest the bank was paying on savings deposits, which was only three per cent., and the father insisted that he should have four per cent., for his savings. The bank president would not yield, and the matter was arranged by the father buying, Liberty, Bonds from the bank with his savings.

[193]*193Plaintiff testifies that before she received the $1,000 check from her father the bank president called her np and told her he understood she was to receive this present and asked her if she would not buy a bond from him. She says that after some negotiation over the telephone she agreed to buy the bond and the bank president said he would take care of, it for her. She states that when her father gave her the check she indorsed it and sent it back to the bank by her father, and that he paid $995 to the bank for a Victory Bond and brought her back $5.

The father testified further that at the suggestion of the president of the bank the daughter’s bond was "put in his (the father’s) box by the bank official himself, and the box carried back by the latter into the vault.

It appears from the testimony of plaintiff that, although she understood the bond was to be placed in her father’s box, she relied on the promise of the bank president to take care of her bond for her and his assurance that it would be safely kept. She was not familiar with the interior of the bank’s premises.

Upon these facts we think the bank clearly became a bailee of the bond itself and not a mere bailee of the father’s box. According to plaintiff’s proof the president of the bank undertook to take care of the bond, and he himself selected the father’s box as a receptacle for the bond.

The case, therefore, is entirely different from Sawyer v. Old Lawell National Bank, 230 Mass., 342, 119 N. E., 825, 1 A. L. R., 269, and that line of cases, holding that the acceptance of a box, chest, package, or envelope, does [194]*194not charge the depository as a bailee of the contents of snch receptacle. As appears from the note to the case just mentioned (1 A. L. R., 272), there is a conflict of authority as to the liability of a bank under such circumstances. We do not get to this question in considering the propriety of the directed verdict below.

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Bluebook (online)
144 Tenn. 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennington-v-farmers-merchants-bank-tenn-1920.