Pierce Petroleum Corp. v. Guaranty Bond State Bank of Mt. Pleasant

22 S.W.2d 520
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 21, 1929
DocketNo. 3722.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 22 S.W.2d 520 (Pierce Petroleum Corp. v. Guaranty Bond State Bank of Mt. Pleasant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pierce Petroleum Corp. v. Guaranty Bond State Bank of Mt. Pleasant, 22 S.W.2d 520 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

HODGES, J.

The appellant is a foreign corporation, and has a permit to do business in the state of Texas. Some time prior to January 1, 1926, it established an agency at Mt. Pleasant, in Titus county, Tex., for the purpose of selling petroleum products, such as gasoline, oil, and similar articles. During the year 1925 and part of 1926 G. H. Reidout was the representative in charge of that agency., Reidout,was authorized to sell appellant’s goods for cash and on time. He was required to report his sales and make remittances periodically to the appellant’s Dallas office. He received as compensation for Ms services a commission on the sales made. He was instructed, when making collections by check, payable to the appellant, to indorse those checks for exchange only. He was fur *522 nished a rubber stamp with the following words: “For Exchange Only to the Order of the Pierce Petroleum Corporation. -, Agent.” It was his duty to apply the proceeds of such checks to the purchase of exchange payable to the order of the appellant, and immediately forward the same to its Dallas office. I-Ie had no authority to indorse, checks payable to the appellant for any other purpose, or to open an account for the appellant with any bank at Mt. Pleasant or elsewhere.

In May, 1926, the books and accounts of 'Reidout showing his dealings with the appellant and its customers were examined by one of the appellant’s auditors; and it was found that Reidout owed the appellant the sum of $4,095.88 which had not been accounted for.

The evidence showed that, when Reidout took charge of appellant’s agency at Mt. Pleasant, he opened ■ an account in his own name with the Guaranty Bond State Bank, the appellee in this case. During that time he was permitted by the bank to deposit to his personal credit in that account certain checks which had been received by him as collections for the sale of petroleum products, and which were made' payable to the appellant. After the discovery of the shortage, Reidout was discharged, and a demand was made upon the bank by the appellant for the payment of the amount of its funds which had been placed to the credit of Reidout during the months of March, April, and May, 1926. Upon the refusal of the bank to comply with that demand, the appellant filed this suit, against the bank alone, alleging a conversion of its funds. In its amended original petition the appellant listed the following cheeks, which it claimed had been wrongfully deposited by the'bank to the personal credit of Reidout:

This was followed by a general averment that during the months' of March, April, and May, 1926, Reidout collected for appellant large sums of money in cash and in checks payable to &e appellant, which had been deposited by the bank to the personal credit of Reidout with full notice of appellant’s interest in such funds. The prayer was for judgment for the sum of $2,887.32, the value of the checks converted, and interest thereon, aggregating $3,500. The bank answered, in substance, that full restitution had been made of all the funds belonging to the appellant which had been wrongfully deposited to the personal credit of Reidout during the term of his agency. The bank specially pleaded that it had issued and delivered to Reidout cashiers’ checks, and exchange payable to the appellant, in different sums, aggregating $6,815.J4, an amount largely in excess of the value of the checks which it is charged with having converted.

There was practically no conflict in the evidence, and, when the introduction of testimony was concluded, the court gave a pereanp* tory instruction in favor of the bank, as defendant.

The appellant contends in this appeal that the state of the evidence was such that the court not only should have refused the in. struction given, but should have peremptorily directed a verdict in its favor.

The proof showed that the fourteen checks -listed by the appellant in its amended original petition were, upon their face, payable to the appellant, and had been received by Reidout as collections from customers who had purchased appellant’s goods; that Reid-out presented those checks to the bank indorsed “Pierce Petroleum Corporation by H. Reidout, Agent,” and that the bank then placed the amount of those checks to his personal credit on its books. It is conceded that in' thus giving Reidout a personal credit for the amount of the checks, which the bank knew belonged to the appellant, appellee bank was guilty of a misapplication of funds, and thereby became liable to the appellant for the amount so misapplied. It therefore becomes unnecessary to discuss th'e authorities cited by the appellant on that proposition. The question before us is, does the proof relied on conclusively show that the bank thereafter made restitution? Upon that issue the burden of proof rested on the bank.

*523 It is undisputed that during the period beginning March 1, 1926, and ending May 19 following, Reidout made the following remittances to the appellant:

March 1, 1926. $1,305 24

March 11, 1926. 379 01

March 19, 1926. 1,008

April 2, 1926. 1,147 29

April 13, 1926. 764 07

April 22 1926. 78 95

April 28, 1926. 605 78

May 3, 1926.•. 598 87

May 11, 1926. 129 31

May 14, 1926. 300 58

May 19, 1926. 497 65

Total . $6,815 74

The remittances were in the form of drafts payable to the appellant, drawn by the Guaranty Bond State Bank on banks at Dallas. Those drafts were delivered to Reidout, and by him sent to appellant’s Dallas office and there received. The proof also shows that in payment for those drafts Reidout drew his personal checks for amounts aggregating $4.-764.58 against his account with the appellee bank. It thus appears that during the months of March, April, and May, 1926, Reidout withdrew and paid over to the appellant, from his personal account, more money than it is claimed was wrongfully deposited to the credit of that account. Whether or not that fact was sufficient to exonerate the hank from its liability incurred by improperly crediting appellant’s funds to that account depends on the connection between the deposits and remittances.

When the bank, upon the unauthorized indorsement of Reidout, deposited to his credit checks which upon their face were payable to the appellant, the bank not only became liable for the conversion of those checks, but also assumed the status of a trustee holding those funds in trust for the true owner. In prosecuting this suit it devolved upon'the appellant to trace its funds into that account. After that was done, it then devolved upon the bank to trace those trust funds into the hands of the appellant, through the medium of those drafts. If it appeared that all of the funds deposited to the credit of Reidout, except those here sued for, belonged to him individually, or that all of the money and checks that went into that account bad been withdrawn and paid over to the appellant, the situation would be materially different. But the evidence was, we-think, sufficient to support a finding, had the issue been submitted to a jury, that the greater part of the cash and checks credited to Reidout’s personal account were collections made by him as appellant’s agent.

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22 S.W.2d 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierce-petroleum-corp-v-guaranty-bond-state-bank-of-mt-pleasant-texapp-1929.