Richards v. Osceola Bank

45 N.W. 294, 79 Iowa 707, 1890 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 139
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 8, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 45 N.W. 294 (Richards v. Osceola 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
Richards v. Osceola Bank, 45 N.W. 294, 79 Iowa 707, 1890 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 139 (iowa 1890).

Opinion

Beck, J.

I. The petition shows that the Osceola Bank, under Code, section 912, was selected by the supervisors of the county as a depository for county moneys, and executed a bond, as required by the statute, with Cowles and Cowles as sureties; that there is due from the bank on plaintiff’s deposit account $4,839.65, which it has failed to pay; and that in proceedings instituted upon the relation of the attorney general a receiver was appointed, who holds all the assets of the bank. The bank made default, but the defendants Cowles and Cowles answered, admitting the execution of the bond, and, in effect, all the allegations of the petition. They allege that the fact of their relation to the' case as sureties was well known to plaintiff from the beginning, and as such they are entitled to have all the property of the principal, the bank, which is solvent, first exhausted. They further allege that, before the proceedings were instituted resulting in the appointment of the receiver, the bank gave plaintiff further security, consisting of certain notes, stocks and other securities, amounting to more than nine thousand dollars, a part of which plaintiff [709]*709had collected, to the benefit of which they are entitled by the application of the avails of these securities upon the bond. The receiver filed his petition of intervention, alleging that he is entitled to the possession of the notes and securities given to plaintiff; that the transfer thereof was illegal and void, and plaintiff acquired thereby no interest therein; and he prays that the plaintiff be ordered to transfer the securities to him. The bank made default, and judgment thereon was entered; and judgment was also rendered against Cowles and Cowles upon the admissions made in their answer. The judgment contained an order in the following language: “This cause is continued as to the collateral notes mentioned, the answer of defendants and the petition of intervention of B. F. Nex, receiver.” The court in the same judgment made this further order: “The plaintiff is ordered to turn over the col-laterals to the clerk of this court for collection; and he, the clerk aforesaid, is hereby ordered to collect the same, to-wit [describing each note by name of maker, date, amount, interest and date of maturity; the total amount of notes being $9,551], and to hold the proceeds thereof subject to the orders of this court hereafter to be made.” The defendants, in their answer, allege that the notes were transferred by the bank prior to the appointment of the receiver, and were not the property of the receiver when he took possession of the bank assets; that the referee held the notes until they were turned over to the clerk, and that officer has, since they have been in his hands, collected two thousand dollars thereon. It is further averred that an execution has been issued upon the judgment and levied upon lands of one of the defendants. Defendants ask that the proceeds of the notes be applied on the judgment, and that no execution thereon be enforced until the notes be collected and applied on the judgment. The original receiver resigned, and Findley was appointed in his place. The plaintiff answered the petition of the intervenor, alleging, among other things, [710]*710that the notes were indorsed to plaintiff by the bank, and turned over in good faith. Other allegations of the answer need not be recited. By agreement the case was transferred to the equity docket, and tried as a chancery case. C. W. Cowles filed a separate answer and cross-bill alleging, after stating matters set up in the prior pleadings of the defendants, that the bank holds the title of certain real estate, and that the judgment in this case is a lien thereon, and praying that, until the judgment be enforced against such real estate, and the notes held by the clerk be collected and applied on the judgment, it be not enforced against him.

The notes were delivered to the county treasurer as security for deposits made by the county in the bank by Gf. H. Cowles, the vice-president, who appears to have transacted the business of the bank. He executed the bond sued upon in the name of the bank, by himself, as vice-president. The notes were given as security to plaintiff upon his request and the request of the county attorney. The court, upon the issues between the intervenor Findley, the receiver, and the plaintiff and defendants, found that the bond in suit is “ample security to the county, and that the county treasurer had no right, authority or power to take the promissory notes turned over as additional security,” and there was no consideration therefor, and the transfer was, therefore, illegal and void. The court further held that the judgment upon the bond is not a lien upon the real estate owned by the bank, for the reason that it was then in the hands of the receiver, and that defendants had no equities or right which require property of the bank to be exhausted before the judgment can be enforced against defendants’ property.

i Appeal• from mterveentio°n: waiver. II. It is first insisted by the intervenor and plaintiff that, as defendants did not appeal from the judgment upon the bond, and their appeal *s from the judgment upon the proceedings 0f intervention, they cannot in this appea insist that the orders and judgment -in the proceedings [711]*711of intervention are erroneous; for the reason that they could have raised the same issues and had them determined upon the trial in the main case. Let it be assumed that this could have been done. Yet the record of the judgment shows that the issues raised in the intervention proceeding were, in express language, reserved for decision' in subsequent proceedings, and the cause was continued for the purpose of trying and determining these issues. The correctness of the judgment in that regard is brought in question by some of the parties.

banking-. cure deposit fundsTsurevice president andoounty treasurer. III. The points made by the intérvenor in support of Ills claim to the notes m question, and his objections to the relief prayed for by defendants, are presented in the ar&ument ox his counsel m three points, which we shall proceed to consider. The , . . .... first is m this language :

IV. “1. The defendant George H. Cowles had no right or authority, under the circumstances, to turn over the notes in question to the treasurer (plaintiff herein) as collateral security to secure the county for said deposits, and that his act in so doing was illegal and void, and did not bind the bank, and which the bank or the receiver had the right to repudiate, and recover back the notes.” This position by counsel is disposed of, briefly, by these considerations : George H. Cowles was the vice-president of the bank, and authorized to do business for it. It cannot be denied that he was authorized to execute the bond, and it is not claimed that his authority to do business for the bank was in any manner or degree restricted. He was authorized to pay debts of the bank, and to give security for the payment of the bank debts, when such security is authorized by law; for he did execute and give, in the name of the bank, the bond in suit, and it is not shown that he was thereto empowered by the bank, by any act, consent, or any authority, iii any form, expressed or implied. If he had authority to give the [712]*712bond as security he surely was authorized to give the collaterals, if the treasurer had the right to receive them. This brings us to the consideration of the second point made by intervenor’s counsel.

■V. The second point is as follows: “2.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.W. 294, 79 Iowa 707, 1890 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richards-v-osceola-bank-iowa-1890.