Salem Elevator Works, Inc. v. Commissioner of Banks

252 Mass. 366
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 21, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 252 Mass. 366 (Salem Elevator Works, Inc. v. Commissioner of Banks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salem Elevator Works, Inc. v. Commissioner of Banks, 252 Mass. 366 (Mass. 1925).

Opinion

Rugg, C.J.

The Cosmopolitan Trust Company, although conducting a general banking business in Boston up to the time when it was. closed, September 25, 1920, was not a member of the Clearing House Association and cleared all its checks through the National Union Bank of Boston, which acted as its agent in this respect. The plaintiff, the Salem Elevator Works, Inc., for some time prior to September 25, 1920, had been a depositor with the Cosmopolitan Trust Company, to whom it had forwarded by mail checks for various sums on sundry dates. On the afternoon of September 24, 1920, it mailed to the trust company a check drawn by a third person on another Boston bank. Receipt of it was acknowledged on the day following. This check reached the trust company in the usual course of mail at about eight fifteen o’clock in the morning of September 25, 1920. With other checks it was indorsed according to custom by an employee of the trust company to the order of the National Union Bank of Boston and sent by messenger to that bank for collection through clearing before the commissioner of banks took possession of the property and business of the trust company at two minutes past nine o’clock in the forenoon of the same day. The National Union Bank of Boston presented the check for clearing at ten o’clock of the same morning and received payment thereof. The amount of the check was credited to the account of the Salem Elevator Works, Inc., by the trust company and constituted part of an item entered to the credit of the trust company in its general account with the National Union Bank of Boston.

[370]*370The plaintiff Fraser on and before September 24,1920, had a checking account with the Cosmopolitan Trust Company. He sent by mail two checks drawn on a New York bank-to the Cosmopolitan Trust Company, which were received by it on September 24, 1920, and on the same day deposited by it in its general account with the National Union Bank of Boston. That bank collected them of the bank on which they were drawn at some time on September 25, 1920, after the commissioner of banks had taken possession of the property and business of the trust company.

It appears in the Fraser case that the trust company issued to each of its general banking depositors a pass book upon which was printed with other matter a statement that the trust company, “in collecting notes and drafts received from its customers, whether the same be placed to their credit or not, acts only as their agent,” and a notice to depositors that checks are entered in their accounts subject to payment. The defendants in their answer also aver that the trust company “followed the general custom of banks and trust companies in Boston of refusing to allow depositors to draw against checks or other credit items until the same had been collected from the bank or person upon which such checks were drawn.” Although these facts do not distinctly appear in the record in the case of the Salem Elevator Works, Inc., they must be assumed to be equally true of that case also. These facts are stated as constituting a general practice. The defendants have argued the cases on the footing that there is no material difference in the facts in the two cases. They are considered on that footing.

When a bank receives upon deposit a check indorsed without restriction and gives credit for it to its depositor as cash in a drawing account, so that the depositor may draw against the credit at once, and there are no notices upon pass books or statements in deposit slips or other circumstances indicating a different understanding, title passes at once to the bank, it becomes the purchaser and the check becomes its absolute property immediately upon deposit. Taft v. Quinsigamond National Bank, 172 Mass. 363. Brooks v. Bigelow, 142 Mass. 6. Burton v. United States, 196 U. S. 283, 302, 303. [371]*371Heinrich v. First National Bank of Middletown, New York, 219 N. Y. 1, 5, 6.

Where checks are not finally credited to the account of a customer until collected, where the customer cannot as of right draw against checks until collected, and where checks are entered in the accounts of customers subject to payment, the collecting bank acts only as agent of the customer. The relation of debtor and creditor does not arise until the check has been collected. Manufacturers’ National Bank v. Continental Bank, 148 Mass. 553. Freeman’s National Bank v. National Tube Works Co. 151 Mass. 413. Moors v. Goddard, 147 Mass. 287.

It is manifest from the facts already stated that the checks here in question come within the operation of the principle last stated. The relation between the depositor plaintiffs and the trust company was not that of debtor and creditor, but that of principal and agent, until after the checks were actually collected. The trust company became the agent of the plaintiffs for the collection of the checks. The relation of debtor and creditor did not arise until the checks were collected and finally credited to the depositor.

It was an implied condition of that contract of principal and agent that the trust company should continue to do its ordinary business of banking according to custom. When the commissioner of banks took possession of the property and business of the Cosmopolitan Trust Company, he closed' its doors and caused it to cease to do business in the usual course. He did not continue the banking business of the trust company in all its branches. It is unnecessary to consider questions which might have arisen in that event.

The same principle applies under these circumstances as has been applied to national banks in a similar situation. It is not practicable to establish any sound distinction based on the somewhat differing powers of the comptroller of the currency in liquidating a national bank and those of the commissioner of banks in liquidating trust companies. It is equally implied in one instance as in the other that the banking agent for collection of checks shall continue to do business in the customary way in order that the agency may [372]*372continue. If it ceases to do so, the agency to collect the check, to appropriate the proceeds to itself and to substitute for the money its own liability as for a debt, has come to an end. Manufacturers’ National Bank v. Continental Bank, 148 Mass. 553. It was conceded in Hecker-Jones-Jewell Milling Co. v. Cosmopolitan Trust Co. 242 Mass. 181, 184, that the trust company was the agent for the collection of the check.

The agency of the trust company to collect the checks having come to an end when the commissioner of banks took possession of its property and business and closed its doors, the commissioner in receiving the money proceeds of the checks, provided they can be traced into any particular fund, holds them for the benefit of the true owner. The depositors can follow the proceeds of their checks wherever they can find them, in the absence of superior rights. In re Jarmulowsky, 243 Fed. Rep. 632; affirmed, 249 Fed. Rep. 319. Beal v. Somerville, 50 Fed. Rep. 647; 1 C. C. A. 598.

Other facts beyond the revocation of the agency to collect must be established before the plaintiffs can prevail. The plaintiffs must be able to trace their property into some particular fund before they can reclaim it or gain a priority over general creditors in the event of the insolvency of the trust company.

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Bluebook (online)
252 Mass. 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salem-elevator-works-inc-v-commissioner-of-banks-mass-1925.