State Ex Rel. Rankin v. Madison State Bank

251 P. 548, 77 Mont. 498, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 182
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1926
DocketNo. 5,969.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 251 P. 548 (State Ex Rel. Rankin v. Madison 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. Rankin v. Madison State Bank, 251 P. 548, 77 Mont. 498, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 182 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

On October 7, 1925, Alexander McKinnon filed, in the matter of the receivership of the Madison State Bank, a taxpayer’s petition seeking to require the receiver to recognize the claim of Madison county as a preferred claim; issue was joined and a hearing had. The hearing resulted in an order denying the relief sough , and from this order the petitioner has appealed.

*500 While other questions are raised in the pleadings and by counsel in their briefs, the only contention we need consider is that the funds in the bank, at the time it closed, were illegally deposited and constituted a trust fund, under the authority of Yellowstone County v. First Trust & Savings Bank, 46 Mont. 439, 128 Pac. 596.

There is no conflict in the evidence, and the facts adduced are substantially as follows: After the passage of the County Depositary. Act in 1913 (Chapter 88, Laws of 1913), the board of county commissioners of Madison county met in regular session, with the county attorney in attendance, and discussed the Act, designated all banks of the county, including the Madison State Bank, as county depositories and agreed upon the amount of bonds which should be furnished by each bank; the amount of the bond of the Madison State Bank being fixed at $50,000; they directed the county attorney to draft the form of the bond and notified the treasurer of their action. However, no record was made in the minutes of such meeting of the action taken by the board, nor do the records of the board contain a minute entry of any such action taken at any time; the designation of the bank as a depository and the direction that it should qualify by furnishing a bond in the penal sum of $50,000 being shown by the oral testimony of the then chairman of the board of county commissioners.

In conformity with the direction of the board, the bank furnished an indemnity bond on the form prepared by the county attorney and in the amount required, which bond was duly approved by the board and its approval entered in the minutes of the board and duly filed. Thereafter, continuously, and up to the time the bank closed, the county treasurer deposited the county funds, known by the bank and its officers to be public moneys, in the bank, but only after like indemnity bonds were examined and approved by the board and filed with the treasurer; in fact, the board examined and approved the bonds of the bank at each quarterly meeting of the board during all of said time. Bach bond so filed and approved contained the declaration that the bank had theretofore been *501 designated by tbe board of county commissioners as a county depository, and the amount of tbe bond fixed and determined by tbe board.

Tbe bank closed its doors in 1922, at which time tbe county bad on deposit a sum in excess of $39,000, and bad on file tbe bank’s indemnity bond in tbe sum of $50,000. Tbe claim of tbe county was allowed as that of a general creditor, and a receiver’s certificate for tbe full amount, with accrued, interest, was issued to and accepted by tbe county. Thereafter a dividend of ten per cent was declared by tbe receiver and tbe county’s portion thereof paid to and accepted by tbe county.

1. Tbe rights of tbe parties hereto attach as of tbe date tbe bank closed in 1922, and therefore, while tbe Act referred to has been since amended (Sess. Laws 1923, p. 237; Session Laws 1925, p. 239), tbe controlling statute on tbe subject is section 4767, Revised Codes of 1921, as it existed prior to tbe amendments, and which, so far as it need be quoted, reads: “It shall be tbe duty of tbe county treasurer to deposit all public moneys in bis possession and under bis control, * * * in any solvent bank or banks located in bis county * * * as tbe board of county commissioners shall designate, and no other, * * * the treasurer shall take from such bank such security in public bonds or other securities, or indemnity bonds, as the board of county commissioners of such county may prescribe, approve, and deem fully sufficient; * * * no deposit of funds shall be made, or permitted to remain in any bank, until tbe security for such deposits shall have been first approved by tbe board * * * and delivered to tbe treasurer, ” etc.

“ Tbe intent and purpose of the legislature, in passing tbe Act, was clearly to insure tbe safety of public moneys, by requiring the treasurer to deposit such moneys only in solvent banks, designated by tbe board of county commissioners as meeting the requirements of the statute and satisfying tbe board, by the furnishing of such security as the board might prescribe and deem fully sufficient, and only after such security bad been approved by tbe board, and in effect requiring tbe withdrawal *502 of the funds if thereafter the security furnished became, in the judgment of the board, valueless or insufficient.

2. The statute does not require a periodical designation, and, if the designation shown to have been made in 1913 meets with the requirements of the statute, the treasurer was justified in continuing to make deposits in the bank until such a time as he might be notified by the board that the designation had been withdrawn, so long as the required bonds were furnished and approved by the board and delivered to him prior to the making of the deposits.

3. Again, if the proof of the action of the board in 1913 was sufficient to establish compliance with the statute, the board fixed and determined the nature and amount of the security to be furnished, and the treasurer was justified in receiving such security, until notified to the contrary, and so long as the bonds furnished were approved by the board and delivered to him.

4. No question is raised as to the solvency of the bank at the time the deposits, culminating in the balance in the bank at the time it closed, were made, and the question before us is therefore narrowed to whether, under the statute, the action of the board was legal, in the absence of the recording thereof in the minutes of the board meeting.

Had the legislature intended that independent. action recorded in the records of the board’s meeting should be a prerequisite to the legality of county deposits, it would seem that it would have so declared in the Act under consideration, and, although the Act has been twice amended, as above stated, and in the amendments the legislature has declared that the action of the board in approving the bonds must be entered in the minutes, it left the reference to designation without change, thus indicating a legislative intention that the time and manner of designation were left to the discretion of the board.

The term “designate” means “to mark out and make known, to point out, to name, to indicate. * * * ” (Webster’s International Dictionary.) (State ex rel. Rocky Mt. Bell Tel. Co. v. Mayor of Red Lodge, 33 Mont. 345, 83 Pac. 642.)

*503

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Bluebook (online)
251 P. 548, 77 Mont. 498, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-rankin-v-madison-state-bank-mont-1926.