State ex rel. Kelly v. Farmers' State Bank

172 P. 130, 54 Mont. 515, 1918 Mont. LEXIS 32
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1918
DocketNo. 3,885
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 172 P. 130 (State ex rel. Kelly v. Farmers' State 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
State ex rel. Kelly v. Farmers' State Bank, 172 P. 130, 54 Mont. 515, 1918 Mont. LEXIS 32 (Mo. 1918).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BRANTLY

delivered the opinion of the court.

On March 26, 1915, the action in which this proceeding is entitled was brought by the attorney general of the state in the district court of Carbon county to have the Farmers ’ State Bank at Bridger (hereafter referred to as the bank) declared insolvent and to obtain the appointment of a receiver to take charge of its assets and wind up its affairs. H. B. Miller, the respondent herein, was appointed receiver and has been acting as such until the present time. On November 15, 1915, James S. Tebbs [519]*519and C. W. Taggart, the appellants herein, doing business as copartners under the firm name of Tebbs & Taggart, filed their petition in the action, asking that the receiver be required to recognize as a preferred claim the sum of $3,000, in which amount the bank was indebted to them, and to obtain an order directing him to pay the same in full out of the assets of the bank, together with accrued interest. The receiver joined issue by answer upon the allegations of the petition. A hearing by the court resulted in an order denying the relief demanded and directing the receiver to recognize the debt due to the appellants as a general claim and to make payment thereof accordingly. The proceeding comes before this court on appeals from this order and from an order denying appellants’ motion for a new trial.

It is open to question whether the method of procedure adopted by the appellants to secure the relief sought was not in some respects inappropriate. There is grave doubt whether the district court could entertain a motion for a new trial and whether an appeal lies from the order disposing of the motion. Counsel for the respondent having by their silence assumed that the procedure was in all respects appropriate and that both appeals are properly before this court, we refrain from considering and deciding any question in this behalf, and proceed at once to answer the single inquiry presented, viz.: Are the appellants entitled to the relief demanded ?

There is no substantial controversy as to the facts: During the year 1915 the appellants kept moneys on deposit with the bank subject to their check. They also borrowed moneys from the bank from time to time, as the exigencies of their business required. On November 12 they mailed to the bank a certificate of deposit for $3,000, issued by the Central State Bank, at White Sulphur Springs, Montana, on March. 6, due four months after date, in favor of E. J. Anderson, and indorsed by him to the appellants, with these instructions: “If you can collect same credit our account with the $3,000 and oblige.” Mr. Trumbo, the cashier, at once acknowledged receipt of the certificate; stating that it had been “entered for collection.” In fact, [520]*520appellants’ cheeking account had been credited with the amount of the certificate as cash. Of this appellants knew nothing until they received a letter from Mr. Trumbo on March 22, in which he wrote them as follows: o“We are in receipt of advice from our correspondent that certificate for $3,000' payment was refused on as not being due, and your account has been charged with that amount. We could give you credit on your note for the amount of the certificate. Awaiting your early reply regarding this matter, we remain,” etc. On March 13, Mr. Trumbo had forwarded the certificate for collection to the Union Bank & Trust Company, at Helena (hereafter referred to as the Helena bank). On March 20 the Helena bank wrote Mr. Trumbo as follows: “We received from you the other day a certificate of $3,000, issued by the Central State Bank of White Sulphur Springs, dated March 6 and due four months after date. This has now been returned to us from White Sulphur Springs, as they refuse to pay it until maturity and we have accordingly charged the amount back to your account. It occurs to us that possibly you would prefer to have us carry this for you on an 8% basis and if so, will be glad to do this, otherwise will return it to you. ’ ’ In response to this letter Mr. Trumbo wrote on March 22: “We are in receipt of yours of March 20 relative to certificate of deposit for $3,000. We will be glad to let you have this at the rate of 8% mentioned in your letter. Trusting to receive immediate credit for same, we re"main,” etc. On the following day the Helena bank wrote to Mr. Trumbo: “As requested in yours of the 22, we have credited your account $3,000 for the White Sulphur Springs certificate and have charged your account for the discount on same at 4% for three months and a half, $35.” The record does not disclose the fact, but we may presume from the form in which the offer of the Helena bank was made and the result of the negotiations, that the certificate bore interest at the rate of 4%. On March 24 after the appellants had received from Mr. Trumbo the latter of March 22, Mr. Taggart went to Bridger intending to obtain the certificate. He was told by Mr. Trumbo that the bank’s correspondent at Helena had kept it there until it should [521]*521be advised by the bank what disposition to make of it. There was some conversation between them in regard to a loan by the bank to appellants and also a proposal by the bank to credit appellants’ note then held by it, but this conversation resulted in nothing definite. The note referred to was in the sum of $2,000. At the time this conversation occurred it had been negotiated by the bank and was in the hands of the Helena bank. This the appellants did not ascertain until they were called upon by the Helena bank to make payment. Mr. Taggart at that time signified his intention to take up the matter of the loan with Mr. Tebbs upon his return home and inform Mr. Trumbo by telephone later what the appellants would do, but nothing further was done before the bank closed. The appellants did not know until after the bank had closed that the amount of the certificate had not been charged back to their account; nor did they know that the certificate had been discounted by the Helena bank. When the receiver took charge of the bank he found cash on hand and on deposit in correspondent banks amounting to between $3,000 and $3,600. The amount in the bank was $1,200. There was on deposit in the Helena bank a balance of about $900. The balance-of the total was on deposit in other correspondent banks. What the exact amount of this balance was cannot be stated, because the accounts of the bank with the Helena bank were in confusion, and at the time of the hearing of the petition the receiver had not been able to reach a final adjustment of them. When the Helena bank discounted the certificate it gave the bank credit for the proceeds, $2,965. The bank was at that time indebted to the Helena bank. This accounts for the comparatively small balance due it from the Helena bank. There were no other transactions between the two banks before the receiver took charge.

It is the rule, recognized by the courts generally, that the [1] owner of property intrusted to one who occupies a fiduciary relation with him, such as his agent, may follow and retake it from the agent or anyone in privity with him, not a bona fide holder for value, whether it remains in its original [522]*522form or in a different or substituted form, provided it can be identified as the same property or the product or proceeds of it. The rule extends to and includes moneys as well as other property, even though it appears prima facie that they have been mingled with private moneys of the agent, or his privy, who has knowledge of. the source from which they have been obtained.

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Bluebook (online)
172 P. 130, 54 Mont. 515, 1918 Mont. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-kelly-v-farmers-state-bank-mont-1918.