State ex rel. Sorensen v. First State Bank

240 N.W. 747, 122 Neb. 502, 79 A.L.R. 576, 1932 Neb. LEXIS 72
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1932
DocketNo. 28139
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 240 N.W. 747 (State ex rel. Sorensen v. First State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska 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. Sorensen v. First State Bank, 240 N.W. 747, 122 Neb. 502, 79 A.L.R. 576, 1932 Neb. LEXIS 72 (Neb. 1932).

Opinion

Good, J.

' From a judgment of the district court, classifying the claim of intervener against defendant, an insolvent state bank, as a general rather than a preferred claim, intervener has appealed. There is no controverted issue of fact. Only questions of law are involved.

The defendant bank became insolvent and was placed in the hands of a receiver in February, 1930. At the time the bank became insolvent Box Butte county had on deposit in the bank $28,961.67. The bank had secured this deposit by the pledge of $10,000 in liberty bonds and three depository bonds, one of which, for $8,500, was furnished by intervener. The liberty bonds have been sold and applied on the amount of the deposit. Intervener has paid to the county the amount of the bond and has taken from the county an assignment of its deposit account to the extent of $8,500. Intervener filed with the receiver its claim, based on the assignment, asking its allowance as preferred, first, as a trust fund and preferred over claims of depositors, and, in the event the court does not so allow it, that it be classified as a valid preferred depositors’ claim.

[504]*504Intervener contends that county funds, derived from the collection of taxes, are trust funds in the hands of the county treasurer; that a bank receiving same for deposit, with such knowledge, must account for the same as trust funds, and that claims for such trust funds are entitled to payment before the payment of claims of other depositors. In support of this contention, intervener cites section 77-2506, Comp. St. 1929, which, in part, provides that the “county treasurer of each and every county in the state of Nebraska shall deposit, and at all times keep on deposit for safe-keeping in • the state, national or private banks doing business in the county, and of approved and responsible standing, the amount of moneys in his hands collected and held by him as such county treasurer.” The statute also provides for the payment of interest by the bank upon funds so deposited. It is argued that the words “for safekeeping” indicate a purpose to make it a special deposit or bailment, and that the identical funds shall be kept and preserved and returned or paid out on warrants issued by the county.

Of what value would a deposit be to a bank if it could not use the same and loan money so deposited? By what process of reasoning can it be supposed that any bank would pay interest upon a special deposit which it was not permitted to use but was required to keep separate and apart from other funds of the bank and be liable therefor without any compensation for the safe-keeping of the fund? The question answers itself. Moreover, intervener in its brief makes this statement: “That the interveners, by executing and delivering their depository bonds to Box Butte county, preserved the assets of the defendant bank by causing Box Butte county to keep on deposit in the bank large sums which were vital to the actual continuance of the bank.” How could such funds be vital to the continuance of the bank if it had no use of them? Furthermore, in Shambaugh v. City Bank of Elm Creek, 118 Neb. 817, speaking of the authority of county treasurers to make deposits in banks, it is held: “Under the [505]*505terms of the statutes referred to, general deposits alone are authorized to be made in county depositories by county treasurers, and such, the evidence discloses, were made in the instant case.” Clearly, the statute authorizes the county treasurer to place the county funds in his hands in depository banks on general deposit and provides for taking security therefor. The title to the moneys or other credits deposited passes to the bank and may be used by it as other funds deposited in the bank. It follows that the bank did not hold the deposit as a trust fund, and the court properly so determined.

Intervener contends that, as assignee of the county, it was subrogated to the latter’s rights and was entitled to have its claim classified as that of a depositor, notwithstanding the provision's of section 8-1,102, Comp. St. 1929. That section, in part, provides: “The claims of depositors, for deposits, not otherwise secured, * * * shall have priority over all other claims, except federal, state, county and municipal taxes, and subject to such taxes, shall at the time of the closing of a bank be a first lien on all the assets of the banking corporation from which they are due and thus under receivership.” Prior to the amendment of the statute in 1925 it read: “The claims of depositors, for deposits, * * * shall have priority,” etc. Intervener makes this contention: “That part of paragraph 8-1,102, Comp. St. Neb. 1929, ‘not otherwise secured’ was intended to cover a situation where a bank has deposited some of its securities as collateral to secure a deposit as distinguished from the depositor having security from an outside source; and also to cover a situation where a bonding company takes collateral from the bank to protect itself, or the assets of the bank are reduced by-the pledging of securities with the bonding company, to induce it to execute a depository bond.” It is argued that the words “not otherwise secured” were intended solely for the protection of the guaranty fund (now the depositors’ final settlement fund)..

We do not think the contention sound. It was the in[506]*506tention of the legislature, as expressed in plain language, to classify deposits into two classes, those secured and those unsecured. A deposit in a state bank secured otherwise than by the bank pledging its securities or giving a depository bon'd is not here involved nor decided. The words “not otherwise secured” were inserted in the statute after numerous holdings by this court to the effect that, where a surety on a depository bond had paid the amount to the depositor, it was subrogated to the rights of the depositor and was entitled to have its claim allowed as preferred and payable out of the depositors’ guaranty fund. Among the cases so holding are State v. Kilgore State Bank, 112 Neb. 856; State v. State Bank of Gering, 114 Neb. 213; State v. Farmers & Merchants Bank, 114 Neb. 217; Rogers v. National Surety Co., 116 Neb. 170. However, since those decisions were rendered, the statute has been amended as above noted, and the question now is: Would the county have been entitled to have its claim preferred as that of an ordinary depositor, when it had taken security both by pledge of assets from the bank and by depository bonds given by the bank ? Clearly, the language of the statute forbids.

An applicable rule is found in 25 R. C. L. 957, sec. 213, which reads: “A statute is not to be read as if open to construction as a matter of course. It is only in the case of ambiguous statutes of uncertain meaning that the rules of construction can have any application. Where the language of a statute is plain and unambiguous and its meaning clear and unmistakable, there is no room for construction, and the courts are not permitted to search for its meaning beyond the statute itself.”

Other states having laws for the guaranty of bank deposits have enacted statutes providing that deposits, otherwise secured, are not protected by the guaranty fund; and the phrase “not otherwise secured” has been the subject of judicial discussion in other jurisdictions. Kansas had such a law, and in American State Bank v. Wilson, 110 Kan. 520, decided in 1922, it was determined that any [507]*507deposit in the bank which was secured by the bank was not within the protection of the guaranty fund act.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State Ex Rel. Nebraska Beer Wholesalers Ass'n v. Young
44 N.W.2d 806 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1950)
Yale University v. Scotts Bluff County
292 N.W. 48 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1940)
Cross v. Theobald
280 N.W. 841 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1938)
Dawson County v. Whaley
279 N.W. 164 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1938)
Shamp v. Landy Clark Co.
277 N.W. 802 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1938)
Independent School District No. 1 v. Diefendorf
64 P.2d 393 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1937)
Independent School Dist. No. 1 v. Diefendorf
64 P.2d 393 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1937)
City of Lincoln v. Ricketts
84 F.2d 795 (Eighth Circuit, 1936)
Madden v. Wilde, St. Examr.
49 P.2d 637 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1935)
State ex rel. Sorensen v. South Omaha State Bank
260 N.W. 278 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1935)
State Ex Rel. Village of Warrensville Heights v. Fulton
190 N.E. 383 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1934)
State ex rel. Sorensen v. State Bank
251 N.W. 99 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 N.W. 747, 122 Neb. 502, 79 A.L.R. 576, 1932 Neb. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-sorensen-v-first-state-bank-neb-1932.