St. Augustine Paint Co. v. McNair

59 F.2d 755, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1282
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedJune 17, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 59 F.2d 755 (St. Augustine Paint Co. v. McNair) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Augustine Paint Co. v. McNair, 59 F.2d 755, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1282 (S.D. Fla. 1932).

Opinion

STRUM, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity to establish and recover a pref erred claim against the receiver of the insolvent First National Bank' of St. Augustine.

At about 10 o’clock a. m., on July 24,1929, plaintiff made two deposits in said bank. The first consisted of a check in amount of $2,-290.57, drawn by plaintiff on another bank in the same city, the St. Augustine National, payable to plaintiff and indorsed in blank for deposit in the First National. The purpose of this deposit was to move certain of plaintiff’s funds from the St. Augustine National to the First National in order to open an account in the latter bank. The second deposit, made a few minutes after the first, consisted of cash in amount of $18.32, and a cheek for $56.05; the latter drawn by a third party on the First National, the bank of deposit, payable to1 plaintiff. Both deposits were credited on plaintiff’s passbook, but were not entered on the bank’s ledger prior to the bank’s closing. The" deposits were laid aside in the receiving teller’s cage, and were thoreafl er dealt with as hereafter stated pursuant to instructions from the president of the bank.

[756]*756Shortly after 10 o’clock on the same day, the president of the First National, knowing that heavy withdrawals had already occurred, and that'other withdrawal demands, which the bank could not meet, were imminent, called an immediate meeting of the board of directors. The meeting convened at about 10:30 a. m., adjourned at approximately 11 a. m., and the bank suspended business at 11:34 a. m. pursuant to a resolution passed by the board. Approximately an hour intervened between plaintiff’s deposits and the passage of the directors’ resolution which ordered the bank’s suspension.

The directors further resolved that all deposits made with the bank that morning should be segregated in special funds, and that such deposits should not be entered upon the books of the bank.

■ Shortly after plaintiff deposited the $2,-290.57 check drawn on the St. Augustine National, and at about 10:30 a. m., an employee of the First National, wishing to use the eheek in the morning’s clearing with the drawee bank, converted plaintiff’s eheek into cash by taking from the general funds of the First National an equivalent amount of cash, and placing it, together with plaintiff’s deposit slip, in a large envelope marked with plaintiff's name. This, of course, was prior to the First National’s suspension. After plaintiff’s cheek was thus converted into cash, the employee added the check to the regular morning’s clearing with the St. Augustine National, to which latter bank the cheek was immediately presented and by it honored as a part of the clearing between the two banks. The purpose of this maneuver is obvious. The First National wished to use plaintiff’s check in its clearing with ihe St. Augustine National so as to reduce by the amount of that check any balance in favor of the St. Augustine National which might develop at the clearing; yet it wished to leave plaintiff’s deposit intact, segregated, and identified. So the bank pursued the method just stated to acquire plaintiff’s eheek for the purpose of using it in the clearing. The clearing resulted against the First National; that bank paying the St. Augustine National $2,385.95 out of the general funds of the former, in order to balance accounts.

When plaintiff’s second deposit was made, a few minutes after the first, the cash and check constituting the same, together with the deposit and credit slips relating thereto, were placed in the same envelope which contained the cash substituted for the check first deposited, after which the envelope marked with plaintiff’s name was laid aside in the receiving teller’s cage.

The envelope, with its contents, came into the receiver’s hands intact. Thereafter, the $56.05 eheek was by the receiver charged to the account of the drawer and credited to plaintiff’s account.

When the bank closed, it had on hand cash in amount of $28,502.35.

Plaintiff’s contention is that the bank accepted plaintiff’s deposits when the bank’s officers knew it to be hopelessly and irretrievably insolvent, a condition unknown to the plaintiff,‘thereby committing a fraud which constituted the bank a trustee ex maleficio for the plaintiff, entitling plaintiff to reseis-, sion and restitution.

That the president of this bank knew it to be hopelessly insolvent when plaintiff’s deposits were made is convincingly shown by the evidence. Even if the president entertained a hope when the meeting of the board of directors was called that the bank might survive, there was no rational basis for such a belief. The president acknowledged that he had no plan to carry on when he called the directors’ meeting, and that he “knew the bank was getting pretty low” for several days before it closed. He knew that the bank’s assets to the extent of approximately $300,000 were invested in the stock of a building corporation which owned the bank building, the market value of which building had so sharply declined as to leave little, if any, equity above a mortgage in amount of approximately $200,000 to which the building was subject, by reason whereof the value of the stock in the building company, substantially all of which was held by the bank, was of doubtful value, if any, as a bank asset. The president knew that the withdrawals from the bank from July 1st to date of closing, a period of twenty-four days, were approximately $650,000. He knew of one demand which came in the morning’s mail of July 24th for $15,000, and others for $25,-000 to $30,000, which the bank would not be able to meet; the cash then in the bank being not more than $29,000. He knew that a substantial number of depositors were withdrawing their deposits and converting the proceeds into bonds. He knew that the bank’s account with a New York correspondent bank was $17,000 overdrawn, and that the latter bank would deal further with the First National only on a cash basis. The First National had on deposit with other banks certain funds which it proposed to transfer to cover this latter overdraft, but these funds [757]*757wei'e not sufficient for that purpose, and tiie transfer was never made.

When plaintiff's deposits were made it must have been clear to the president of the .First National that suspension was imminent and inevitable. Such condition appeared to be evident to the directors when they met at 10:30 o’clock that day, for their action was prompt and decisive. It is therefore held that, when plaintiff’s deposits were made, the bank was hopelessly insolvent, known to be so by its president, and that plaintiff was unaware of that condition.

It is now well settled that a bank which accepts deposits when it is hopelessly insolvent, and that condition is actually known to the bank’s officers but is unknown to the depositor, commits a fraud on the depositor for which he may rescind the contract of deposit a.nd either recover the deposit or its proceeds, or impress the assets of the bank with a trust for the amount thereof. Notwithstanding the depositor’s intention to make a general deposit, such fraud on the part of the bank vitiates the implied contract from which the relationship of debtor and creditor usually arises. Title to plaintiff’s deposits therefore never passed to the bank. The relation of debtor and creditor never arose. The relationship was that of trustee and cestui que trust. Richardson v. New Orleans Deb. Co. (C. C. A.) 102 F. 780, 52 L. R. A. 67; Western German Bank v. Norvell (C. C. A.) 134 F. 724; Butler v. Western German Bank (C. C. A.) 159 F. 116; St.

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Bluebook (online)
59 F.2d 755, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-augustine-paint-co-v-mcnair-flsd-1932.