Price v. Herreid

245 N.W. 689, 210 Wis. 422, 1933 Wisc. LEXIS 305
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 245 N.W. 689 (Price v. Herreid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Price v. Herreid, 245 N.W. 689, 210 Wis. 422, 1933 Wisc. LEXIS 305 (Wis. 1933).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed December 6, 1932:

Owen, J.

The plaintiff is a lawyer residing in Milwaukee. For some time prior to the 16th day of June, 1931, he had been acting as the attorney for Lewis & Leidersdorf Company in the matter of the purchase by Lewis & Leiders-[423]*423dorf Company of a drug store, located in Waukesha, owned by one John Swift, and operated under the name of Broadway Drug Shop. In the course of the negotiations, in compliance with the Bulk Sales Law, Swift made an affidavit setting forth the names of his creditors and the amount due to each. The plaintiff, acting for his client Lewis & Leiders-dorf Company, and George Aussern, an attorney, acting for Swift, negotiated with these creditors, and had arrived at the amount which each creditor rvould take in settlement of his claim against Swift. When this was done, Lewis & Leidersdorf Company, on the 16th day of June, 1931, delivered their check to Price for the sum of $5,899.34. This constituted the purchase price of the drug store and was to be devoted to the payment of the claims of Swift’s creditors.

The plaintiff banked at the Franklin State Bank. Upon receiving the check he called up Aussern and he and Aussern repaired to the Franklin State Bank with the check. Upon arriving at the bank Price proceeded to make out a deposit slip, but did not enter thereon the items which he proposed to deposit. The deposit slip was introduced in evidence, and indicates that it was filled out by Price only so far as his name and the date were concerned. Price says that when he had proceeded thus far in the making out of the deposit slip, he handed the deposit slip, together with the check, and two other small items which he intended to deposit, through the receiving teller’s window, and stated that he wanted cash on the Leidersdorf check. The teller then called up the bank upon which the check was drawn, and was informed that there were not sufficient funds to the credit of the Leiders-dorf Company to meet the check. Thereupon the teller told Price that the bank could not cash the check. Price insisted that he must have the cash because he wanted to close a deal. The teller then referred him to Mr. Maas, the assistant cashier. He then went to see Mr. Maas, whom he told that the Leidersdorf Company was a very solvent con[424]*424cern and that there would be no question about the payment of the check when it was presented. Maas told him that the only thing the Franklin State Bank could do would be to take the check for collection, and “when we collect we will call you up and you can come over and get the money.” Price then went back to the teller and told him what Maas had said. The teller took the check, and the plaintiff said “You take this for collection, then, and just as soon as you get the money call me up and I will come over and get it.” The check was left at the bank, according to the plaintiff’s testimony, under this arrangement. The plaintiff’s testimony in this respect is corroborated by Mr. Aussem and, to some extent, by the assistant cashier, and teller, of the bank.

The check was sent through the clearing house the next morning, and was paid by the bank upon which it was drawn early in the forenoon of the 17th of June.

There is a controversy in the evidence as to whether the bank informed the plaintiff when the check was paid, but, whether the plaintiff was or was not so informed, he did not appear at the bank to get the cash on the 17th, and on the morning of the 18th the bank closed, and was, by resolution of the board of directors, turned over to the banking commissioner for liquidation.

The court found “that at the time that the plaintiff intrusted the item aforesaid to the Franklin State Bank he entered into an express contract with the employees and officers of the Franklin State Bank who conducted the transaction on its behalf, to the effect that the said item was to be collected and the-cash amount thereof obtained for the plaintiff at the earliest possible moment,” and, as a conclusion of law, “that by virtue of the transaction the Franklin State Bank became an agent collecting bank for the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff was entitled to judgment for the full amount of the check together with interest thereon from the 17th day of June, 1931, together with the costs and disbursements of this action.”

[425]*425While there is a presumption that a deposit made in a bank is a general deposit, the finding of the court is to the effect that this was a special deposit. Under this finding, the check was left in the bank for the purpose of collection and not for the purpose of transferring title to the check to the Franklin State Bank and under circumstances which did not constitute the Franklin State Bank a creditor of the plaintiff. In re Warren’s Bank, 209 Wis. 121, 244 N. W. 594, and cases there cited; sec. 220.15, Stats. The principal controversy here is whether this finding is supported by the evidence. This requires an examination of the evidence for the purpose of ascertaining whether this finding of the trial court is contrary to the clear preponderance or the great weight of the evidence, as the finding must be sustained unless it so appears. See cases cited in 1 Callaghan’s Digest, p. 306.

The evidence relied on by the appellant to overcome the oral testimony in the case concerning what happened at the bank when the plaintiff left the check there on the 16th of June is based upon the actions and conduct of the plaintiff both before and after such date, it being the contention of the appellant that such course of conduct indicates conclusively that the plaintiff left the check with the bank for the purpose of deposit and not exclusively at least for the purpose of collection.

As already stated, the plaintiff and Aussem had, prior to the 16th day of June, reached an agreement with the various creditors of Swift by which the respective amounts which the respective creditors would receive in full satisfaction of their claims against Swift had been determined and agreed upon. It also appears that prior to this time Aussem had taken Price’s check book to his office and had drawn checks payable to the various creditors for the.amounts coming to them pursuant to such agreement and determination. After drawing these checks, the check book was returned to the plaintiff’s office, the checks to be signed by him and sent opt [426]*426to the various creditors when he should be supplied with the necessary funds by the Leidersdorf Company to meet the amounts of these checks.

This is most persuasive evidence that Price did not intend at that time to pay off the various creditors in cash, but that both he and Aussem had intended to conduct the transaction in the very natural and usual way of sending out checks in payment of the claims of the various creditors. It is not denied by either Price or Aussem that this was their purpose when these checks were drawn about the 15th day of June. It is claimed, however, that they changed their minds in this respect, and concluded that they might save some money for Swift, which could be applied on an account which Swift owed Aussem, by tendering the cash personally to the various creditors in the hope that, by exhibiting the cash to them, they could secure from them, or some of them, a still further reduction from the amounts which they had already agreed to accept in payment of .their claims. If this be true, it furnishes a plausible reason for the desire on the part of Price to secure the cash.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Banking Commission v. First Wisconsin National Bank of Milwaukee
290 N.W. 735 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1939)
State ex rel. Sorensen v. South Omaha State Bank
260 N.W. 815 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1935)
Ruben v. Banking Commission
256 N.W. 712 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 N.W. 689, 210 Wis. 422, 1933 Wisc. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-herreid-wis-1933.