Peterson v. Citizens State Bank

290 N.W. 516, 228 Iowa 219
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 5, 1940
DocketNo. 45041.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 290 N.W. 516 (Peterson v. Citizens State 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
Peterson v. Citizens State Bank, 290 N.W. 516, 228 Iowa 219 (iowa 1940).

Opinion

Stiger, J.

E. J. Kreumpel, who commenced this suit against defendant, died prior to the trial and P. H. Peterson, administrator of his estate, was substituted as plaintiff.

The controlling question before us is whether the delivery of a check by plaintiff’s intestate, E. J. Kreumpel, at defendant bank to the bank’s assistant cashier constituted, as claimed by the plaintiff, a transaction with the bank, or as claimed by the bank, was a personal transaction between Kreumpel and the cashier. Plaintiff’s evidence is substantially as follows:

Plaintiff’s intestate was a farmer and dealer in livestock who resided near Greeley, Iowa. The defendant, Citizens State Bank of Hopkinton, Iowa, operated a branch bank at Greeley. M. J. Gaughen, an assistant cashier, was in charge of said bank. Prior to September 10, 1935, Kreumpel had executed two mortgages on his livestock to the bank to secure his indebtedness which was in the sum of about $5,000. On September 10, 1935, Kreumpel sold livestock covered by the chattel mortgages of the bank to Link Livestock Company of Dyersville, Iowa, for the sum of $1,896.20. At the direction of Kreumpel the check issued in payment for the stock was made payable to the bank. Kreumpel took the check to the bank on September 12th and delivered it to Gaughen. The check was endorsed to the Merchants National Bank of Cedar Bapids, Iowa, by “Citizens State Bank, Hopkinton, Iowa, by M. J. Gaughen, assistant cashier in charge.” The check was paid and defendant bank was credited by the Cedar Bapids bank with the said sum of $1,896.20. Plaintiff introduced in evidence a mutilated deposit slip of the Citizens State Bank issued by M. J. Gaughen as assistant cashier for $1,896.20 dated September 12, 1935.

On September 13, 1935, Gaughen deposited the amount of *221 the check in his personal account in the branch bank. On September 19, 1935, the E. J. Kreumpel notes and mortgages were sold by defendant bank to the Community Savings Bank of Edgewood, Iowa, for their face value plus accrued interest. Plaintiff, whose middle name was John, kept his account in the name of John Kreumpel. At that time he had a nephew 18 years of age named John Kreumpel who lived near Greeley.. Plaintiff’s evidence is undisputed.

When Kreumpel sold the mortgaged property, the notes were past due and he was heavily involved financially.

Mr. Wilson, a resident of Manchester, Iowa, for 24 years, a former banker and now engaged in farm management and the writing of general insurance, testified he made a trip to the defendant bank in June 1937 to see Mr. Wright, cashier of defendant bank, about an adjustment of the controversy. Mr. Wright told him that the bank was not inclined to give any credit in order to adjust Kreumpel’s account and if Kreumpel “makes too much publicity about this, it would be too bad for him.”

Defendant took the deposition of its main witness, M. J. Gaughen. From 1933 to September 1935, Gaughen was assistant cashier of defendant bank at Greeley. From 1935 to 1937, he was cashier of the Community Savings Bank of Edgewood, Iowa. In December 1937 he was convicted for embezzlement in federal court and sentenced. At the present time he is a salesman employed by the Hammond Liquor Company. He admits he expropriated the money but asserts Kreumpel was a party to the offense. We will set out the material part of his testimony.

He testified that he became acquainted with Kreumpel in 1932 and that in 1933 they carried on a livestock business under a partnership arrangement which terminated in 1937. The witness was a silent partner. A part o.f the partnership funds was deposited in the branch bank in the name of John Kreumpel, the witness not wanting to appear openly in the partnership because he did not want the officers of the bank to know that he was interested in a partnership which operated on funds *222 borrowed from the bank and because Kreumpel had several judgments against him. The remaining funds were kept in one of the deposit boxes of the bank which was not registered in any name. Gaughen also used this account for some of his personal funds and he and Kreumpel would draw on this so-called partnership account and sometimes for their personal use. Neither Kreumpel nor Gaughen told the officers of the bank of the partnership. The witness claimed the notes and mortgages executed by Kreumpel, which are described above, were partnership transactions and that the livestock sold to Link Livestock Company was partnership property and he was entitled to a one-half interest in the proceeds. He testified that on two occasions livestock which was mortgaged to the bank by Kreumpel was sold in his (Gaughen’s) name to Rath Packing Company of Waterloo, Iowa, and the two checks given in payment were made payable to him, the proceeds being placed in the partnership account. At intervals, the partners would have an accounting and determine how much each owed the partnership account. The livestock was kept on Kreumpel’s farm. Gaughen’s testimony about the partnership is material only as it may tend to support his version of the delivery of the check to him by Kreumpel which is as follows:

“The livestock for which such check or draft was issued in payment belonged to E. J. Kreumpel and myself jointly and it was made payable to the Citizens State Bank because the bank had a mortgage on the livestock. E. J. Kreumpel brought the draft to me, probably the same day it was issued. I told Kreumpel I was in need of some money for my personal use for the purchasing of some stock in a bank, which I was attempting to place in Edgewood, Iowa. Kreumpel stated that it was all right with him for me to use those funds. The proceeds of this draft or check of the Link Livestock Company, I credited to my personal checking account. At least $1,050.00 of the proceeds of said draft was repaid by me to the partnership account carried in the name of John Kreumpel on October 3, 1935, by me placing $1,050.00 to the credit of John Kreumpel. *223 This sum was money paid to me by individuals who purchased stock in the Community Savings Bank from me. I identify Defendant’s Exhibit 3 to be a duplicate deposit ticket showing the $1,050.00 credited to the John Kreumpel account.

“When E. J. Kreumpel delivered the check or draft of the Link Livestock Company to me, he did not give me any instructions to apply the same to the reduction of his indebtedness owing to the Citizens State Bank. I did not accept and receive this check or draft on behalf of the Citizen’s State Bank. I accepted it in my own personal capacity as Kreumpel’s partner in our livestock venture.

“There was an accounting of the partnership affairs had between E. J. Kreumpel and myself on October 10, 1936, in the back room of the Community Savings Bank in Edgewood, Iowa, and this particular accounting was thé last one had. I identify defendant’s Exhibit 4 to be a duplicate carbon copy of the accounting we had on October 10, 1936, signed by myself and E. J. Kreumpel and signatures thereon are the signatures of myself and E. J. Kreumpel.”

Mr. Kreumpel being deceased at the time of the trial, the testimony of Mr. Gaughen was not subject to contradiction by the plaintiff.

In’Holmes v. Connable, 111 Iowa 298, 82 N. W. 780, 781, the rule applicable under such circumstances is stated in the following language on page 301:

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Bluebook (online)
290 N.W. 516, 228 Iowa 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-citizens-state-bank-iowa-1940.