Rainwater v. Merchants' National Bank

288 S.W. 388, 172 Ark. 284, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 6, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 388 (Rainwater v. Merchants' National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rainwater v. Merchants' National Bank, 288 S.W. 388, 172 Ark. 284, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 46 (Ark. 1926).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

The Bank Commissioner, as receiver in charge of the defunct Bank of Hatfield, instituted this action against the Merchants’ National Bank of Fort Smith, to recover the sum of $10,268.11, held on deposit by appellee hank to the credit of the Bank of Hatfield after the latter became insolvent, and alleged to have been wrongfully diverted from the use of the Bank of Hatfield and paid over to the T. M. Dover Mercantile Company as a preferred creditor of the Bank of Hatfield. The answer of appellee, Merchants’ National Bank, contained appropriate denials of all the allegations as to knowledge of insolvency on the part of the Bank of Hatfield, and the cross-complaint against the T. M. Dover Mercantile Company prayed for a decree over and against that concern, in the event that the court should find that the Merchants’^National Bank was liable to the Bank Commissioner as receiver for the Bank of Hatfield. The cause was heard by the court upon the pleadings and an agreed statement of facts, and a decree was rendered dismissing the complaint of appellant for. want of equity.

The Bank of Hatfield was a banking institution doina business at the town of Hatfield, in Polk County, Arkansas, and M. J. Dover was a stockholder and director of the bank. He was also the managing officer of the Dover Mercantile Company, a concern doing business at the town of Hatfield.

During the latter part of January, 1923, the Bank Commissioner discovered, on examination, that the Bank of Hatfield had permitted its cash reserve to fall below the statutory requirement (Crawford & Mioses’ Digest, § 692) of fifteen per cent, of its deposits, and he made demand on the Bank of Hatfield to comply with the statute by raising its cash reserve. Pursuant to this order of the Bank Commissioner, M. J. Dover, acting for the Bank of Hatfield, applied to its regular correspondent in Fort Smith, the First National Bank of Fort Smith, for a loan of money to be held as its cash reserve, but that institution refused to make the loan, and Dover then applied to appellee, Merchants’ National Bank, for a loan of $20,000. At that time the Dover Mercantile Company had a large sum on deposit with the Bank of Hatfield, and was interested in seeing that the solvency of the bank and its capacity to do business were preserved. The Dover Mercantile Company also had on deposit with the Merchants’ National Bank of Fort Smith the sum of $8,832.34. Appellee, Merchants’ National «Bank, agreed with Dover to make the loan, and, pursuant to that agreement, the deposit of $8,832.34 was charged to the mercantile company and credited to the.Bank of Hatfield, and the loan of $20,000 was made to the mercantile company and also credited to the account of the Bank of Hatfield, thus making a deposit to the credit of the Bank of Hatfield in the total sum of $28,832.34. In this manner the cash reserve of the Bank of Hatfield was raised to conform to the statutory requirement.

M. J. Dover, acting* for the mercantile company, executed to the appellee bank a note for $20,000 to cover the loan. At the time of these transactions it was agreed between appellee bank and M. J. Dover, acting for the Bank of Hatfield, that the money thus deposited to the credit of the Bank of Hatfield could be withdrawn only on checks signed or approved by M. J. Dover, and a deposit card was signed and delivered pursuant to that agreement. The funds were drawn against from time to time, in accordance with this agreement, from then until the time the bank closed its doors, and-the amount on deposit fluctuated, at one time the amount being reduced to about $6,000. On October 17, 1923, the balance of thé deposit on hand with appellee bank to the credit of the Bank, of Hatfield was $10,268.11, the sum sued for in this action. Prior to that date, the mercantile company had paid its note to appellee bank down to $10,000 and had executed its renewal note for that amount to appellee bank, and the note had not become due on the date last mentioned above. On the morning* of that day, October 17, 1923, at 8 o’clock, M. J. Dover called the cashier of the appellee hank over the telephone and gave verbal instructions that $10,000 of the sum remaining to the credit of the Bank of Hatfield be applied on the note of the mercantile company to the bank, that the note be canceled, and that the remaining sum of $268.11 be remitted to the mercantile company by check and charged to the Bank of Hatfield, thus entirely wiping out the deposit and balancing the account. On the day before this occurred, the Bank of Hatfield had drawn and forwarded various checks, payable to its regular customers, aggregating the sum of $5,000, the checks being drawn on the First National Bank of Fort Smith, and, on the same day, drew a check on appellee bank in favor of the First National Bank to cover those remittances to customers. And, in the telephone conversation between M. J. Dover and the cashier of appellee bank, instructions were given to refuse payment oh the $5,000 check drawn in favor of the First National Bank of Fort Smith.

Immediately after these transactions occurred between Dover and appellee bank, Dover gave instructions to the Bank of Hatfield to charge the deposit in appellee bank to the mercantile company, and also on that day appellee bank forwarded a charge ticket to the Bank of Hatfield. The Bank Commissioner was immediately notified that morning of the insolvency of the bank, which was closed and ceased to do business, and the Bank Commissioner took physical charge of the affairs of the bank two days later, that is to say," on October 19, 1923.

It is agreed in the statement of facts that the Bank of Hatfield was insolvent on October 17, 1923, and had been insolvent for a considerable time theretofore; that “the Merchants’ National Bank had no knowledge of the insolvency of the Bank of Hatfield on October 17, 1923, but the statement last made does not preclude plaintiff from arguing inferences of knowledge on the part of said Merchants’ National Bank from facts appearing in this statement.” There is also a paragraph in the agreed statement of facts which reads as follows: “It is customary for-banks to make transfers of funds on ’phone orders with the same effect as if checks were drawn. ’ ’ It was also agreed, that appellee bank was never advised of the fact that Dover had applied to the First National Bank to borrow funds, or that the funds were borrowed for the purpose of raising the cash reserve on the demand of the Bank Commissioner. It also appears in the agreed statement of facts that examinations of the Bank of Hatfield were duly and regularly made by the Bank Commissioner between the date of the deposit with appellee bank and the failure of the Bank of Hatfield, and that the bank examiner had forwarded to appellee bank a reconcilement statement to be verified by appellee bank concerning the amount of funds deposited to the credit of the Bank of Hatfield.

The statutes of this State regulating the banking business (§ 7, act No. 496, session of 1921) prohibit unlawful preferences by banks in contemplation of the Bank Commissioner taking charge of the assets and property of the bank, and this suit is maintained by the Bank Commissioner on the theory that the transactions hereinbefore set forth, in disposing of the funds deposited with appellee bank, constituted an unlawful preference in favor of the Dover Mercantile Company, and that appellee bank is liable for the funds by reason of having knowingly participated in the wrongful act.

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 388, 172 Ark. 284, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rainwater-v-merchants-national-bank-ark-1926.