State Ex Rel. Robertson v. First State Bank of Ripley

91 S.W.2d 1039, 19 Tenn. App. 556, 1935 Tenn. App. LEXIS 67
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 3, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 91 S.W.2d 1039 (State Ex Rel. Robertson v. First State Bank of Ripley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Robertson v. First State Bank of Ripley, 91 S.W.2d 1039, 19 Tenn. App. 556, 1935 Tenn. App. LEXIS 67 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinions

KETCHUM, J.

These are four intervening petitions in which the petitioners seek to impress a trust upon the cash assets of the defunct First State Bank of Ripley in the hands of D. D. Robertson, superintendent of banks, as receiver. The First State Bank of Ripley failed on December 21, 1932, and shortly thereafter its assets were taken in charge by the superintendent of banks as receiver under a decree of the chancery court of Lauderdale county. This bank was organized in December, 1931, for the purpose of taking over the assets and assuming the liabilities of the First National Bank of Ripley and the First Savings Bank of Ripley. This merger or consolidation was authorized and made under the supervision of the superintendent of banks, pursuant to the provisions of section 6030.1 et seq., of Williams’ Code (Pub. Acts 1931, chap. 29). The officers, directors, and shareholders in the new bank were the same persons who were officers, directors, and shareholders in the two old banks.

Prior to this merger of banks, the First Savings Bank of Ripley had qualified in the county court of Lauderdale county as guardian of the estates of Sammy Ward Lacy, May Carmen Rice, and Joe Henry Woodard, all of whom were minors; and in the probate court of Shelby county as guardian of Tennie Partee, a non compos mentis. Upon its qualification as such guardian, the First Savings Bank received certain funds belonging to each of its said wards which it deposited in its own bank in separate accounts in its name as guardian for each of said wards. The funds belonging to its said wards were never loaned out or invested by said bank in the manner required of guardians by law, but were commingled with the other deposits and funds of said bank, and used by it in its own business. By appropriate proceedings had in the chancery court the said guardian was allowed to encroach upon the estate of the said Joe Henry Woodard for his support and maintenance not to exceed $35 per month.

Upon the merger of said banks, the First National Bank and First Saving Bank ceased to do business, and the First State Bank *559 took over all the assets and assumed all the liabilities and obligations of the old banks, including the management of said guardian funds; the ledger sheets of the First Savings Bank, including those containing the guardianship accounts in its name as guardian for these four wards, were transferred to the ledger of the new bank; so the accounts in the new bank stood in the name of the First Savings Bank as guardian for said several wards. The First State B'ank qualified as guardian of Tennie Partee in the probate court of Shelby county on April 18, 1932, but did not qualify as guardian of the other three wards in the county court of Lauderdale county; the officers of the new bank handled and managed the funds belonging to said wards in all respects as they had done as officers of the First Savings Bank, even to the extent of making settlements in court, and encroaching on the corpus in the case of the said Joe Henry Woodard.

By their four intervening petitions filed in the main receivership case, the petitioners seek to impress a trust upon the cash assets of the First State Bank which came into the hands of the receiver to the extent of their several claims; this upon the ground that a trust relation existed between the First Savings Bank and its said wards, and the bank had breached its trust by commingling the funds belonging to its said wards with its own funds; that the officers of the new bank were familiar with all the facts, so that the new bank took the assets of the First Savings Bank impressed with this trust; and, further, because the new bank itself, by taking over said guardianships and managing same, and continuing to commingle said funds with its own funds, likewise, itself breached said trust, so that upon its failure its cash assets which passed into the hands of the receiver were impressed with the same trust.

The amounts due said several wards at the time the First State Bank took over said guardianship accounts were as follows:

Samuel Ward Lacy.$1,261.54

May Carmen Rice . 4,092.56

Joe Henry Woodard . 957.45

Tennie Partee . 2,589.25

Total .$8,900.80

At the time the First State Bank failed the amount due Joe Henry Woodard had been reduced to $688.94. The amounts due the other petitioners were unchanged. So, at the time of the failure of the First State Bank, the total amount owing to said wards was $8632.29.

It is the contention of the receiver, first, that the new bank simply took over the deposit accounts of the First Savings Bank as guardian for its said wards, and became a simple creditor of the said guardian, and that it did not become a trustee of said wards; *560 and, second, that at the time it took over the assets of the First Savings Bank, the latter had only $1,286.18 in actnal cash in its vaults, and its total cash assets, including funds on deposit in other banks, amounted to only $8,678.09; while the amount due said wards was $8,900.80; so that before the merger of the banks, at least a portion of the wards’ money had been converted and used by the guardian, and none of the wards could trace their funds into the hands of the new bank.

The chancellor was of opinion and found as a fact that the First State Bank, by assuming control over said guardianships, occupied a fiduciary relationship towards said wards, and that it breached. its trust and was therefore liable as a guardian de son tort; but he held that the petitioners had failed to trace their funds into the hands of the receiver, because only $1,286.18 in actual cash had been turned over to the First State Bank when the banks were merged; and further, because they had not shown that the cash assets of the First State Bank had not at any time been less than the aggregate amount of their claims. He accordingly denied the petitioners any preference under their petitions.

There are five assignments of error which complain of the action of the chancellor in finding and holding: (1) That the petitioners-are not entitled to a preference; (2) that the petitioners had failed. to trace their funds into the hands of the First State Bank; (3) that the petitioners had failed to show that the cash reserve at all times exceeded the amount of the trust funds; (4) that the-aggregate amount of petitioners’ claims exceeded the cash reserve' of the bank; and (5) that the petitions of May Carmen Rice and Joe Henry "Woodard must be denied upon the further ground that the sureties on their bonds were the officers and directors of the-bank which breached the trust, and were therefore responsible for the breach.

The first four assignments may be considered together.

The first (appellants’ No. 3) is in such general terms that, it need not be considered. As to the second, we think the chancellor was correct in his conclusion that the First State Bank, by assuming the management and control of the estates of said wards, assumed a trust relation toward them, and became liable to them as a trustee or guardian de son tort to the extent of their funds which came into its hands.

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Bluebook (online)
91 S.W.2d 1039, 19 Tenn. App. 556, 1935 Tenn. App. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-robertson-v-first-state-bank-of-ripley-tennctapp-1935.