State Ex Rel. v. Trust Co.

79 S.W.2d 1012, 168 Tenn. 546, 4 Beeler 546, 1934 Tenn. LEXIS 85
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 79 S.W.2d 1012 (State Ex Rel. v. Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee 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. v. Trust Co., 79 S.W.2d 1012, 168 Tenn. 546, 4 Beeler 546, 1934 Tenn. LEXIS 85 (Tenn. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Chambliss

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this suit the state seeks a judgment against the Holston Trust Company, of Knoxville, incorporated in Tennessee, under a banking and trust company charter, in the statutorily prescribed form which confers the power to do a general banking business. The claim is for two items: (1) A balance of interest on two deposits, aggregating $60,000, made in 1927 and 1928; and (2) $250,000 and interest, being a deposit made in June, 1930. *551 Recovery is also sought against certain named individuals as sureties on two bonds executed to secure the state against loss on these several deposits. The trust company is being liquidated under a receivership in a branch of this cause.

The Holston Trust Company was operated as a subsidiary branch of Holston-'Union National Bank, of Knoxville, now also in receivership, having failed in the autumn of 1930. The same persons were officers of both institutions, and the stock of the trust company was owned by the stockholders of the national bank proportionately. While the charter granted to the trust company empowered it to do a general banking business and take deposits, it was originally restricted by action of its directors to a trust business. However, in 1927 and 1928, the trust company disregarded this restriction and entered the deposit field to the extent, at least, of accepting from the state two deposits of $50,000 and $10,000, respectively, executing, to secure the state, a bond with personal sureties of $100,000'. It appears that the principal of these sums was repaid, and the balance of the first of the items.now sued for is interest at 3 per cent, contracted to be paid on these deposits, which had been duly credited to the state on the books of the trust company.

In the year 1930 very large cash funds were realized to the state from the sale of bonds, and as part of the sale plan this money was allocated to and deposited in various banks over the state. In the carrying out of this plan, $250,000 (item two herein sued for) was deposited with the Holston Trust Company on the 30th day of June, 1930, and at the same time $500,000 with the Holston-Union National Bank.

*552 The chancellor gave a decree against the trust company for the $250,0.00 deposited in June, 1930, but denied all interest and dismissed the suit as to the individual sureties. His holding was that the receiving of the several deposits was ultra vires as to the trust company, because it never had obtained from the state superintendent of banks a qualifying permit, following an examination, to do a deposit business, that recovery could be had only for money had and received, and that the interest contract was therefore not enforceable, nor could liability be predicated on the bonds against the sureties thereon. The Court of Appeals modified this decree. Rejecting the ultra vires theory, that court held the trust company liable for an interest balance of $4,-299.65 on the original deposits, and gave judgment therefor against the sureties on the $100,000 bond executed in 1927 to secure these deposits; and also gave judgment against the trust company for the $250,000 deposited June 30, 1930, but held that the bond for $500,000 given to the state to secure that deposit had been executed conditionally and had not been bindingly approved and so accepted by the state as to designate the trust company a depository, and that therefore the sureties were not liable thereon. Certiorari was granted on petitions by both parties to the controversy, and argument has been heard in this court. The state complains of the failure of the Court of Appeals to give judgment on the bond against both the trust company and the sureties for the principal deposit with interest; the trust company challenges the amount of the judgment against it; and the sureties on the $100,000 bond deny liability for interest on the original deposits. The record is a large one, and the questions have been elaborately and ably briefed.

*553 It may be said, first, that we agree, as concurrently found by the chancellor and the Court of Appeals, although on varying grounds, that the Holston Trust Company is liable for the full sum of $250,000 deposited with it on the 30th of June, 1930. Predicated on the ultra vires theory, the argument is made that the quantum meruit rule applies, and that thereunder recovery should be limited to “benefits received,” supporting this insistence by citation of authorities. But, while these authorities announce this general rule, we are unable to agree with counsel in their application of the phrase “benefits received.”

It appears that, when this fund was transmitted to Knoxville from a Nashville bank, by direction of the state representatives, the $250,000 allocated to the trust company was placed to its credit in the Holston-Union National Bank, in whose banking quarters the subsidiary trust company had its place of business, and with whom it kept its funds. At once $100,000 of the fund was paid, by cross-entries, to the national bank, in liquidation of an indebtedness of the trust company to the national bank. The bulk of the remainder was later invested in securities of doubtful value, some since proven to be practically worthless. Now the contention made for the trust company is, as we understand it, that the decree of the state should be limited to (1) the $100,000i used by the trust company in discharging its debt to the national bank; (2) the amount of money remaining in the account ($20,771.23), after payment for the securities mentioned; and (3) the securities themselves, or their value as may be realized. In other words, that these securities were purchased for the state from its funds and became its *554 investments. In this connection we quote from, the opinion of the Court of Appeals:

“Nor are we impressed with the insistence that, having received cash or its equivalent in this deposit, the obligation can be discharged in the delivery to the State of securities, lawfully purchased with the fund, that have depreciated from what was thought, by the Trust Company, to be their value when it purchased them in the course of its ordinary business.
“Benefits should be recovered as of the hind and date received. It would operate fraudulently to allow a deposit of cash or its equivalent to be long afterwards returned in depreciated securities of any kind purchased with it, by and for the benefit of the Trust Company. It was money it received at the time, requiring no other proof as to par value. It evidently used it in settlement of its obligations and in the transaction of its legitimate business, — and while it may appear that the company needed a better guardianship than that afforded by its directors, such need, if there was such, would rather evidence their delinquency, than afford an excuse for the failure to account for the State’s money which the Company took and used, though mayhap improvidently.”

We concur with the Court of Appeals. If we should concede, as we do not, the application of the ultra vires doctrine, we would hold that the measure of the recovery is fixed by the amount of money deposited —that this was the benefit received.

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.W.2d 1012, 168 Tenn. 546, 4 Beeler 546, 1934 Tenn. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-v-trust-co-tenn-1935.