State Bank & Trust Co. v. Commercial Trust & Savings Bank

21 N.E.2d 157, 300 Ill. App. 435, 1939 Ill. App. LEXIS 822
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 22, 1939
DocketGen. No. 40,443
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 21 N.E.2d 157 (State Bank & Trust Co. v. Commercial Trust & Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Bank & Trust Co. v. Commercial Trust & Savings Bank, 21 N.E.2d 157, 300 Ill. App. 435, 1939 Ill. App. LEXIS 822 (Ill. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinions

Mr. Presiding Justice McSurely

delivered the opinion of the court.

By their bill in chancery complainants alleged that as sureties upon the bond of C. A. Rogers, collector of the town of the city of Evanston, they paid the amount of his defalcation and sought to have defendant Commercial Trust & Savings Bank held liable, asserting that they had become subrogated to the rights of the city of Evanston, and that this defendant had permitted Rogers to withdraw the funds of the town and use them for his own purposes; upon reference to a master in chancery it was decreed that the Commercial bank was liable and that complainants were entitled to recover from it and Rogers $29,307.05, together with the master’s fees and costs. The Commercial bank appeals.

The principal points raised by the Commercial bank are that the giving of the surety bonds was so tainted with illegality as to bar complainants from any recovery, that the liability of complainants as sureties to the town has not been established, that when Rogers withdrew the town funds from the Commercial bank it was obliged under the law to turn these moneys over to him on demand, that complainants never paid out any money or became obligated to do so on account of these bonds, and that the statute of limitations had run against any claim before this suit was filed.

C. A. Rogers was elected town collector for the town of the city of Evanston for a two-year term commencing in April, 1923; during this time he collected the 1923 and 1924 taxes; for each of these years he executed, as principal, the official bond prescribed by statute conditioned upon the faithful performance of all the duties required by law; the four complainants, William A. Dyche, Frank J. Scheidenhelm, Joseph L, McNab and Clayton Mitchell, with others, went surety on these bonds; the respective sureties were severally directors of four banks then doing business in Evans-ton ; Rogers deposited his tax collections in each of the four banks in certain proportions in ordinary checking accounts, upon which interest was credited.

It is stipulated that Rogers collected in excess of $2,000,000 in taxes for the years 1923 and 1924; he deducted from that sum and retained $44,348.63, which was commissions at the rate of 2 per cent per annum on taxes collected. Under par. 50, sec. 36, ch. 53, Ca-hill’s St. 1921, Rogers was entitled to retain $6,000 of this amount as compensation for his services. He therefore should have turned over to the town treasurer $38,348.63. It is stipulated that Rogers did not account to the city of Evanston for any part of this amount.

In January, 1927, Rogers filed a bill of interpleader disclaiming any personal interest in part of these funds and offered to pay them into court; this interpleader was dismissed on his own motion in February, 3932. The town of the city of Evanston then filed suits against Rogers’ bondsmen, who filed a bill to enjoin the prosecution of these suits; the town filed a cross bill to enforce the liability of the sureties on Rogers’ bonds. This cross bill was sustained and a decree was entered against the sureties for sums totalling $24,946.32. Thereafter this amount was paid on behalf of Dychc, Scheidenhelm, McNab and Mitchell, sureties, and an order was entered satisfying the decree as to them and subrogating them to the rights of the town of the city of Evanston.

January 25, 1926, Rogers was elected cashier of the Commercial bank and on January 11,1927, became vice president; his successor as collector qualified February 3, 1926.

December 15, 1925, Rogers first deposited $14,000 of the town funds in the Commercial bank in an account designated by himself “C. A. Rogers, Jr., Town Collector”; June 11, 1927, the balance in this account was $22,964.35, and on that day Rogers transferred this balance to a certificate of deposit issued in his own name; the' bank ticket or memorandum showing this transfer is in the handwriting of Frank C. McCabe, then assistant cashier and assistant secretary of the Commercial bank, who knew when he drafted the debit ticket that Rogers had'been town collector; subsequently Rogers deposited the entire amount of $22,964.35 in his personal checking account in the Commercial bank and thereafter expended it for his personal uses.

When complainants were sued for Rogers’ defalcation they learned of this transaction of Rogers with the Commercial bank; at conferences between the sureties and the representatives of the four depository banks it was agreed that Floyd E. Thompson should represent all the sureties and defend them against the claims of the town and that the four banks would advance on behalf of the sureties the sums of money necessary to discharge their liability to the town on condition that the sureties would institute suit against Rogers and the Commercial bank and repay such advances out of moneys recovered thereby.

Although able counsel for the defendant bank earnestly argues that the bonds given by plaintiffs, directors of the Evanston banks, for the purpose of securing the deposit of public funds are illegal and void, we are not disposed to agree. Manifestly Rogers must make deposits of his collections in a bank or banks, and what more natural than that these deposits be made in the Evanston banks. In Lamb v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland, 257 Ill. App. 262, 277, certiorari denied by the Supreme Court, it was held that it was not unlawful for a surety to designate the bank where the funds secured by the bonds be deposited. The fact that the instant sureties were directors of the depository banks is not important. It would be a natural thing for a surety to designate as a depository a bank with which he had some official connection, that he might observe whether the funds were properly handled. McCollister v. Bishop, 78 Minn. 228, 231.

It also may be conceded as in accord with common experience that the banks would credit these accounts with interest, but there was no agreement or understanding that this interest belonged to Rogers personally. This is not, as is claimed by defendant, a violation of section 81 of the Criminal Code, ch. 38, par. 193, Cahill’s St. 1921, which condemns the investment of public funds by a public officer for his own personal enrichment. It has been held that a deposit of public funds in a bank in the name of the officer, as such, is not an investment or loan in violation of section 81 of the Criminal Code. McCormick v. Hopkins, 287 Ill. 66, 75; Gits v. Foreman, 360 Ill. 461, 470.

The facts in this case are not like those in Estate of Ramsay v. Whitbeck, 183 Ill. 550, upon which counsel for defendant place great stress. In that case the sureties were trying to recover after having made good the defalcation of a public officer; but the public funds in that case were lent to the banks and not placed on deposit in the name of the public officer. Moreover, the public received no interest whatsoever as, pursuant to an agreement between the bank and Ramsay, the interest went to Ramsay personally. The opinion says that the consideration moving from the sureties included pecuniary gain and advantage to Ramsay by the unlawful agreement to pay the interest to him. That this is the important distinction was pointed out in McCormick v. Hopkins, 287 Ill. 66, 75, and Miller v. Ousley, 334 Ill. 183, 192.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.E.2d 157, 300 Ill. App. 435, 1939 Ill. App. LEXIS 822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-bank-trust-co-v-commercial-trust-savings-bank-illappct-1939.