Puget Sound State Bank v. Washington Paving Co.

162 P. 870, 94 Wash. 504, 1917 Wash. LEXIS 726
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1917
DocketNo. 13607
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 162 P. 870 (Puget Sound State Bank v. Washington Paving Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Puget Sound State Bank v. Washington Paving Co., 162 P. 870, 94 Wash. 504, 1917 Wash. LEXIS 726 (Wash. 1917).

Opinion

Parker, J. —

The Puget Sound State Bank seeks recovery upon two promissory notes executed by the defendant Washington Paving Company, payable to its own order, thereafter transferred by it to the Olympia Bank & Trust Company by indorsements making them payable to its order, and thereafter transferred by that bank by delivery only, without indorsement, to the plaintiff. George Milton Savage and D. I. Cornell were made defendants because they indorsed the notes at the time they were transferred by the Washington Paving Company to the Olympia Bank & Trust Company. Trial in the superior court without a jury resulted in findings and judgment in favor of the defendants, upon the ground that, while the notes evidenced legal obligations of the defendants, they were entitled to set off against the amount due thereon to the plaintiff a greater amount which was owing to the Washington Paving Company from the Olympia Bank & Trust Company upon a deposit credit [506]*506at the time of the transfer of the notes by that bank to the plaintiff. From this disposition of the case, the plaintiff has appealed to this court.

Appellant, Puget Sound State Bank, has been, at all times here involved, a banking corporation of this state engaged in the banking business in the city of Tacoma, with H. N. Tinker as its president and manager. We shall hereafter refer to it as the Puget Sound Bank. Respondent Washington Paving Company is a corporation of this state engaged .in street paving and other contract work, and, at the time of the execution of the notes in question, had a contract for the paving of certain streets in the city of Olympia. Respondent George Milton Savage was then, and is now, its president and manager. We shall hereafter refer to it as the paving company. The Olympia Bank & Trust Company was, at the time of the execution and transfer of the notes in question, a banking corporation of this state engaged in the banking business, in the city of Olympia, with W. D. Hayes as its cashier and manager. We shall hereafter refer to it as the Olympia Bank. It ceased to do business, because of its insolvency, on September 22, 1914.

About September 2 or 3, 1914, Mr. Hayes, cashier of the Olympia Bank, knowing that the paying company was about to enter upon the execution of a large paving contract in Olympia, solicited Mr. Savage, its president, to open an account and do its banking business with the Olympia Bank. The conversations occurring between Mr. Hayes and Mr. Savage at that time, and a few days later when the notes were executed, constitute an agreement with reference to which the trial court found as follows:

“At the time of the discount of said notes by the Olympia Bank & Trust Company, it was agreed between said bank and the Washington Paving Company that the same should be held by the Olympia Bank & Trust Company and not sold, hypothecated or otherwise disposed of to any other bank or banker without first notifying the Washington Paving Company and giving the Washington Paving Company an op[507]*507portunity to pay said notes, or the one of them proposed to be sold, hypothecated or otherwise disposed of.”

This finding, we think, is amply supported by the evidence. Indeed, it seems not to be seriously disputed by Hayes or any other witness. In pursuance of this agreement, on September 5, 1914, at the Olympia Bank, four notes for $5,000 each, payable ninety days after date, with seven per cent interest, after maturity, were executed by respondent paving company by Savage, its president, the notes being made payable to its own order and immediately transferred to the Olympia Bank by indorsement making them payable “to the order of Olympia Bank & Trust Co.” Thereupon the paving company was given credit as a general depositor of the Olympia Bank for the sum of $20,000, less the amount of discount charged by the bank. This was the only deposit ever made by the paving company with the Olympia Bank. We have, then, as this single transaction, united in all its parts, the execution of the notes; their transfer to, and discount by, the Olympia Bank; the agreement on the part of that bank not to transfer them; and the deposit credit given to the paving company for the proceeds of the notes less the discount charge. Each of these notes contains, among other provisions, the following : “This note shall become due and payable on demand at the option of the payee, when it deems itself insecure.” Up to and including September 22, 1914, the paving company had drawn checks upon its deposit credit in the Olympia Bank reducing that credit to approximately $9,650. One of these checks, constituting nearly the whole of such reduction, was given to the Olympia Bank for the surrender of two of the notes on that day. This balance has never been further reduced, and is now claimed by the paving company as an off set against, and as greater in amount than, the balance due the Puget Sound Bank upon the notes.

On Saturday, September 19, 1914, the Olympia Bank became indebted by overdraft to its Tacoma correspondent, the Puget Sound Bank, in the sum of approximately $3,600. [508]*508Thereafter on that day, in a telephone communication, Mr. Hayes of the Olympia Bank promised Mr. Tinker of the Puget Sound Bank that this overdraft would be cared for “either with exchange or in a manner satisfactory to” the Puget Sound Bank. But in no communication between the banks or their officers on that day was reference made to the notes of the paving company, all of which were still held by the Olympia Bank. On Monday, September 21, at about eight o’clock in the morning, Mr. Tinker again called Mr. Hayes by telephone, informing him that nothing had yet come to the Puget Sound Bank from the Olympia Bank to take care of this overdraft. It was then agreed that the Puget Sound Bank would purchase one of the paving company’s notes from the Olympia Bank. Mr. Hayes accordingly then sent by mail to the Puget Sound Bank not only the note agreed to be purchased, but also the three other notes. None of these notes were ever indorsed by the Olympia Bank, so that they were acquired by the Puget Sound Bank by delivery only. About noon on that day, the Puget Sound Bank received from the Olympia Bank a telegram requesting that $2,000 in gold be sent to it. The paving company’s notes had not yet arrived at the Puget Sound Bank and Mr. Tinker called Mr. Hayes by telephone and so informed him, and reminded him that the $5,000 note agreed to be purchased would not cover the then existing overdraft and $2,000 additional. Mr. Hayes then informed Mr. Tinker that he had sent not only the note which was agreed to be purchased by the Puget Sound Bank, but also the other three notes of the paving company, requesting that they be retained until the Puget Sound Bank should otherwise be reimbursed. Soon thereafter, early in the afternoon, the four notes were received by the Puget Sound Bank through the mail. When the notes were received, Mr. Tinker called Mr. Savage of the paving company by telephone, when a conversation was had between them, concerning which Mr. Savage testified as follows:

[509]*509“I was called to the telephone and the man at the other end said he was Mr. Tinker of the Puget Sound State Bank, and wanted to know if we had executed some notes and deposited with the Olympia Bank & Trust Company; I told him we had, that we had executed four $5,000 notes. He said, ‘Have you received the money?’ I said, ‘Not exactly; we have received credit in the hank, and checked out less than $200.’ That was all the conversation we had in regard to the notes.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 P. 870, 94 Wash. 504, 1917 Wash. LEXIS 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/puget-sound-state-bank-v-washington-paving-co-wash-1917.