Stankey v. Citizens' National Bank

209 P. 1054, 64 Mont. 309, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 163
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1922
DocketNo. 4,815
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 209 P. 1054 (Stankey v. Citizens' National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stankey v. Citizens' National Bank, 209 P. 1054, 64 Mont. 309, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 163 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF COMMISSIONER LENTZ

prepared tbe opinion for tbe court.

Tbe complaint in this action alleges that on December 1, 1916, plaintiff deposited $1,277.60 in defendant bank; that be later drew out a portion thereof, and that on December 2, 1916, be presented bis check for the balance of $755, which [311]*311was refused payment. Judgment is demanded for $755, with interest. «

Defendant in its answer denies that any deposit with it was ever made by plaintiff and admits refusal to pay the check. As a special defense defendant has alleged and presented evidence to establish that prior to December 1, 1916, one Henry Sturm and Minnie Sturm, his wife, being indebted to defendant in an amount exceeding $4,000, made a sale of personal property on their ranch to pay part of said indebtedness; that defendant, under authorization from the Sturms, clerked said sale, paid the expenses thereof, and deposited the proceeds in its sales account for the purpose of being applied on said debt; that on the evening of December 1, 1916, after regular banking hours, a conference for the purpose of checking up the sale and arriving at the exact amounts due the respective parties was held in the offices of defendant bank, there being present H. D. Kenyon and C. J. Miller, vice-president and cashier, respectively, of the bank, Henry Sturm representing his wife, Minnie, in whose name all business of the Sturms was transacted, and the plaintiff, E. H. Stankey, son-in-law of the Sturms; that, in furtherance of a conspiracy to defraud defendant, Minnie Sturm delivered to plaintiff a check on defendant bank for $1,277; that the check was without consideration and was a mere contrivance to prevent defendant from collecting its debt, and further that the proceeds of the sale, being in the sales account, were not subject to check by Minnie Sturm; that plaintiff then and there presented said check for payment and deposit with defendant bank to his credit, claiming that it represented plaintiff’s interest in the proceeds of the sale; that plaintiff falsely claimed to own certain hogs disposed of in said sale, whereas the same were in fact the property of the Sturms; that immediately after said check was so presented Miller, cashier of the defendant bank, made out a deposit slip, laying the same upon his desk; that Miller had understood that plaintiff had furnished a few items of personal property for the sale and assumed that the cheek represented the price thereof, but began [312]*312to inquire further as to plaintiff’s exact interest in the proceeds of the sale; that, without any affirmative act on the part of .said Miller, plaintiff seized the deposit slip and refused to return it; that defendant never intended to deliver the deposit slip to plaintiff, its return was immediately demanded, and plaintiff was informed that his account would not be credited with the amount of the check; that, although plaintiff refused to return the deposit slip, defendant has never cashed the said check, nor accepted it for payment or made any entry of same or extended any credit to plaintiff on the books of defendant bank on account of said cheek; that plaintiff did not on December 2, 1916, or at any subsequent time, have any money on deposit in defendant bank, and therefore payment of the $755 sued for was refused.

In reply plaintiff alleged arid presented evidence to establish that the sale was a joint disposal of the property of plaintiff and the Sturms, and was clerked by defendant through its vice-president, said H. D. Kenyon, who made out an itemized list showing the exact amount for which each article was sold;, that at said conference Kenyon, plaintiff, and Henry Sturm, representing Minnie Sturm, checked up and apportioned the items of property disposed of and the amount for which each was sold, and, after deducting the costs of the sale, agreed upon the amount which plaintiff and Minnie Sturm were each to receive; that all parties ¿greed that the amount due from the proceeds of the sale to plaintiff was $1,277.60, and the amount due Minnie Sturm was $1,321.91; that thereupon plaintiff was given a check from Minnie Sturm for said $1,277.60; that plaintiff immediately handed the check to Miller, the cashier, who then made out and handed to plaintiff a deposit slip for the amount.

The record further shows that at the time the deposit slip in question came into plaintiff’s hands he made out and delivered to defendant a check for $251.60 in payment of a note of the Sturms running to defendant; that defendant canceled the note and delivered it to plaintiff, and that plaintiff also at the same time delivered to defendant another check [313]*313for $269.50, drawn in favor of Minnie Sturm, which was later credited on her debt to defendant, although plaintiff had no deposit in defendant bank other than that involved in this dispute. In fact, plaintiff’s account at the defendant bank was overdrawn thirty-one cents, and had stood in that condition since November 16, 1916. Plaintiff paid defendant this overdraft of thirty-one cents some time after its refusal to honor his check for the $755 sued for in this action.

The record further shows that the proceeds of the sale were not credited as a whole to the individual account of Minnie Sturm. However, the bank of its own motion transferred $1,188.54 of said fund from the alleged sales account to the individual account of Minnie Sturm in order to pay her check for a like sum in discharge of a lien of third parties on the property sold. Minnie Sturm’s check for $1,277.60, which plaintiff claims to have deposited, was never marked paid and was never credited to plaintiff. This check and the two drawn by plaintiff were retained in defendant’s possession until the trial of this action; no entry of any of them having been made on defendant’s books.

Kenyon, vice-president of defendant bank, testified that $701 of the amount claimed by plaintiff-is still in defendant’s hands, and has not been applied on the Sturm debt, while Miller, the cashier, testified that the whole amount of $1,277.60 claimed to have been deposited by plaintiff has been so applied, although defendant admits that a cow which sold for $50 belonged to plaintiff.

The verdict of the jury was for the full amount demanded with interest. This appeal is from an order overruling defendant’s motion for a new trial.

Defendant’s counsel assigns as error the denial of his motion for a directed verdict. He insists that, regardless of the conflict in the testimony as to whether the deposit slip in question was delivered to plaintiff voluntarily, the record shows conclusively that no valid - deposit was ever made by plaintiff. He contends a fair interpretation of the record shows without dispute that the check for $1,277.60 offered [314]*314for deposit was never accepted for payment; that defendant bank held .the proceeds of the sale in a “sales account” or “trust fund,” and, never having entered them on the individual ledger to the credit of Minnie Sturm, there were no funds with which to pay her check; that defendant never entered the amount of the cheek on the books of the bank to plaintiff’s credit, nor charged it on Minnie Sturm’s individual account; and that it follows as a matter of law that no deposit was made.

It is well settled that a deposit slip is a mere receipt or memorandum, and is not conclusive as against the bank issuing it. Parol evidence is admissible to explain it, in the same manner as in the case of any other receipt. Standing alone, it is not proof of liability and will not support an action against the bank.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
209 P. 1054, 64 Mont. 309, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stankey-v-citizens-national-bank-mont-1922.