People Ex Rel. Russell v. Farmers State & Savings Bank of Grant Park

170 N.E. 236, 338 Ill. 134
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1930
DocketNo. 19838. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 170 N.E. 236 (People Ex Rel. Russell v. Farmers State & Savings Bank of Grant Park) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People Ex Rel. Russell v. Farmers State & Savings Bank of Grant Park, 170 N.E. 236, 338 Ill. 134 (Ill. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

The Farmers State and Savings Bank of Grant Park, Illinois, was closed by the Auditor of Public Accounts during the latter part of March, 1920. A bill in chancery was thereafter filed in the circuit court of Kankakee county by the State Auditor for the purpose of liquidating the affairs of the bank and Harry S. Streeter was appointed receiver. During April, 1928, Robert B. Hamman filed an intervening sworn petition in the same court, alleging that he was the duly appointed and qualified school treasurer of township 32 in Kankakee county; that he had previously filed with the receiver a claim against the bank for the sum of $5632, which amount was school moneys deposited by him in the bank as a trust fund belonging to the trustees of schools of that township; that the receiver had paid one-half of the amount claimed, and the petition prayed for an order of court directing the payment of the balance. The receiver filed a cross-petition, alleging, in substance, that various individuals, organizations and groups of persons, among whom was Hamman, claimed they had deposited money in the bank which should be preferred claims and have priority over all other claims filed because such deposits were trust funds. The cross-petition prayed that a hearing be had and that the court direct the receiver in making payment of the claims. A hearing was had and a decree entered finding the claim of Hamman was not a preferred claim and hence not entitled to any priority as to payment. From that decree Hamman perfected an appeal to the Appellate Court for the Second District, where the decree of the circuit court was affirmed. Upon application of Hamman this court granted a writ of certiorari to review the record.

There is no dispute as to the facts. The bank issued a pass-book to “Robert B. Hamman, Treasurer.” Upon it appeared the words “Savings department,” “Savings account,” and “Four per cent interest on savings deposits compounded semi-annually.” The- pass-book shows two deposits, one of $5893.40 made on March 30, 1917, and another in amount of $880 made on April 13, 1918. There were five credits for interest, totaling $534.86, during the years 1917, 1918 and 1919, and six withdrawals of money during the same period. Three of the withdrawals were in the exact amount of three interest credits shown. The balance shown to the credit of the account on July 15, 1919, was $5632.73. Each time a deposit was made by Hamman the cashier of the bank was told that the money belonged to the school fund, and the school treasurer stated he kept his own money separate and apart from the school money.

It is the contention of Hamman, to whom we shall hereafter refer as plaintiff in error, that he was entitled to preference or priority in payment over other creditors, first, because the moneys deposited by him constituted a trust fund, and second, because the title to the money was in the State, which is entitled to payment in full by virtue of its sovereign right. As to whether or not the account was a trust fund under the facts of this case depends primarily upon the kind of deposits made by plaintiff in error. There are but two kinds of deposits: special and general. The former include those where the bank becomes a trustee for a depositor by special agreement or under circumstances sufficient to create a trust, and general deposits are those where the bank merely becomes the debtor of the depositor. As a rule, when money is deposited in a bank, title to such money passes to the bank. - The bank becomes the debtor of the depositor to the extent of the deposit, and to that extent the depositor becomes the creditor of the bank. Such deposit then constitutes a part of the assets of the bank, and in case of insolvency of the bank that deposit belongs to the creditors of the bank in proportion to the amount of their respective claims. Well recognized exceptions to this rule are, first, where money or other thing is deposited with the understanding that that particm lar money or thing is to be returned to the depositor; second, where the money or thing deposited is to be used for a specifically designated purpose; and third, where the deposit itself was wrongful or unlawful. In the instant case the deposits made by plaintiff in error were known to be. composed of school funds, but there was no request or direction on the part of the township treasurer to the bank that it should keep the funds separate from other money in the bank. The funds were placed in a savings account, and the fact that the bank agreed to, and did, pay interest upon the account tends to show the bank’s privilege of using the money without restriction. The record discloses no agreement whatever between the bank and plaintiff in error as to keeping the funds intact or their use and application for any particular purpose. The mere fact that a depositor makes a deposit in a fiduciary rather than an individual capacity does not make the deposit a special one. An affix to the name of the depositor in an account with the bank indicating that he holds the funds in a fiduciary character, such as the word “trustee,” “agent,” “guardian,” “administrator,” or the like, does not itself render the deposit a special one as distinguished from a general deposit. Moneys deposited in an account kept in that form would be more readily traced, and the bank, perhaps, would be chargeable with notice of the source from which the depositor derived funds which he directed to be credited to him in that way, but the addition of such words does not operate to change the character of the deposit from a general to a special one. (3 R. C. L. sec. 147, p. 518.) The question between the depositor and the bank is not what relation the depositor or his fund bears to some third party, but rather whether a trust relation has been created between the bank and the depositor in connection with the fund. In order to make a deposit a special one the bank must be made an agent rather than a debtor, and its agency or trusteeship cannot be created by mere external relationship of the debtor unless the deposit is wrongful or the law forbids the bank becoming a debtor.

Counsel for plaintiff in error cite School Trustees v. Kirwin, 25 Ill. 73, and Woodhouse v. Crandall, 197 id. 104, in support of the contention that a trust was created. In the Kirwin case a bill was filed by certain school trustees in Kane county to recover from the estate of a banker named Kirwin school funds "deposited by one French, the township treasurer, in his own name. The school treasurer was also clerk and teller in the bank of Kirwin, who knew that the deposits made were township school money and that they were mixed with the general moneys of the bank. One of the later amounts received and deposited by French to his credit was $1292.37. French died insolvent two days after Kirwin’s death. Only $715.45 was found in the bank vault thereafter, none of which was identified as school funds except $275 in silver in a certain tagged or marked bag. This latter amount was preferred and awarded to the school trustees. The court made the statement that Kirwin was a voluntary trustee of the funds deposited by the school treasurer, but refused to permit recovery of the funds on general deposit in the bank. The court said, in substance, that the facts did not establish the identity of the fund, as it never appeared on the books of the bank as a part of the school fund or school money; that the deposit was mixed with other money belonging to the bank; that its identity had been lost, and the right to pursue the fund must fail.

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Bluebook (online)
170 N.E. 236, 338 Ill. 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-russell-v-farmers-state-savings-bank-of-grant-park-ill-1930.