State v. Givens

152 P. 1054, 28 Idaho 253, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 116
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 152 P. 1054 (State v. Givens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Givens, 152 P. 1054, 28 Idaho 253, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 116 (Idaho 1915).

Opinion

BUDGE, J.

The defendant, J. A. Givens, was indicted, tried and convicted in the district court of the seventh judicial district of the crime of wilfully, unlawfully, knowingly, feloniously and fraudulently making a false report of the affairs, financial condition and property of the bank of Nampa, as of April 4, 1913, and sentenced to the state penitentiary for not less than six months nor more than three years. Motion for a new trial was denied. This appeal is from the order denying a new trial and from the verdict and judgment.

The appeal is based upon the insufficiency of the evidence, erroneous admission and exclusion of evidence, unjustifiable and prejudicial remarks of the prosecuting attorney in the final argument and instructions improperly given and refused. There are seventy-four assignments of error, all of which, however, will not be discussed by this court. We have carefully gone through the entire record.

The appellant was charged with having reported to the state bank commissioner loans and discounts $375,717.36, instead of $371,833.79 as shown by the general ledger of [260]*260the bank of Nampa, or a difference of $3,883.57. This latter amount respondent insists was overdrafts and should have been so reported. The appellant in explanation of said item testified that it consisted of loans j eviously arranged for, and this item when added to the amount that appears upon the general ledger as loans and discounts totals the amount reported to the state bank commissioner.

There is no difference between the contention of the respondent and of the appellant so far as this $3,883.57 is concerned, except as to classification. Respondent insists that it should have been reported as an overdraft; appellant insists that it was properly reported as a loan, having been previously arranged for. /But whether for the purpose of the report we consider this amount as a loan or an overdraft, it was an account actually due and a resource of the bank; and as between the bank and its customers, when previously arranged for, the amount was a loan. Where a party prior to withdrawing money from the bank arranges for such a loan, even though a note is not at the time given, but the customer agrees to subsequently give his note, this transaction constitutes a loan for the purpose of furnishing temporary credit. (5 Modern Business, by Jos. T. Johnson, p. 266.)

Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, sec. 1630, states: “It is undoubtedly in the power of the bank to authorize over-checks, or checks without any funds whatever, upon negotiations with the drawer. Such dealing would be in the nature of a loan; and the bank would be bound, if the arrangements were consummated, upon a legal contract.”

The report to the state bank commissioner showed $41,-055.85 due from banks. The general ledger showed only $34,582.61, a difference of $6,473.24. This latter amount is explained by appellant and the cashier of the bank as being made up of what they termed live collections and placed to the credit of the bank of Nampa by the banks through which the collections were made, and consisted of two collections made through the Corn Exchange National Bank of Chicago and one through the First National Bank of [261]*261St. Anthony. For the amount of these collections cashier’s receipts were issued to the customers of the bank who turned the amounts in for collection, and these items appear upon the report as cashier’s cheeks outstanding. Respondent insisted that these items, aggregating $6,473.24, were not due from banks; while, on the other hand, appellant maintained that under instructions previously given him by a former bank commissioner said items were proper to be listed under amounts due from banks. It will be seen that by adding this $6,473.24 to the sum due from banks as shown by the general ledger, the total corresponds with that reported to the state bank commissioner.

This $6,473.24, being the item due from banks which is contended against by respondent, was considered by the officers of the bank as a liability of the bank and listed in the report to the state bank commissioner as cashier’s cheeks outstanding. There is evidence in the record to the effect that a former bank commissioner had instructed the officer of the bank to handle live collections in the way these were handled; and from the testimony of appellant and other officers of the bank it is fairly inferable that before listing these collections as money due from banks they had received information from the banks through which the collections were to be paid, and through which they were subsequently paid, that upon receipt of certain instruments held by the bank in escrow with sight drafts attached the money would be placed to the credit of the bank of Nampa. The bank of Nampa, considering itself liable, forwarded the instruments together with sight drafts, and immediately listed said amount as money due from banks and as a resource of the bank, and charged themselves with said amount in cashier’s cheeks outstanding. Upon receipt of the collections in the ordinary course of business, the individual customers of the bank were given credit upon the individual ledger for those amounts.

In this instance, also, the only difference between the contentions of respondent and of appellant as to this $6,473.24 item is that respondent insists it should not have been in-[262]*262eluded in the amount due from banks until it had been actually paid to the bank of Nampa, while appellant insists that, according to instructions received from a former bank commissioner and the understanding of the officers of the bank, this item is properly included as money due from banks. In short, it is a difference of opinion as to classification of accounts or the method of keeping accounts.

The next contention of respondent is as to the incorrectness of the report to the state bank commissioner in the following items:

The report shows an item of checks and other cash items $2.25 and an item of exchange for clearing-house $273.42, both of which respondent contends are incorrect, as the books of the bank show the amount of checks and other cash items on hand as of April 4, 1913, to be $1,912.97, and do not show any entry of exchange for clearing-house. Thus a discrepancy is created of $1,637.30 for these two items. The item of gold coin is shown on the report as $5,850; whi’o the books of the bank show the amount of this item to be $7,670, indicating a discrepancy between the books of the bank and the report of $1,820. The item of silver dollars and fractional coin is shown on the report as $3,232.50; while on the books of the bank this item is shown to be $5,372, or a difference of $2,139.50. The item of nickels and cents is shown on the report as $520, while the books of the bank show this item to amount to $560.20; a difference of $40.20. Lastly, the item of U. S. national currency is shown on the report as $11,058, but on the books of the bank it is shown as $5,421, a discrepancy or over-report of $5,637.

From a study of these various items appearing on the report and as shown by the books of the bank it will at once appear that the discrepant amounts of the first five items, which were all less than the amount that was actually on hand in the bank, were added to the amount of U. S. national currency shown by the books of the bank to make up this latter item on the report. In other words, the total money on hand as reported to the state bank commissioner corresponds with the total amount on hand as indicated by [263]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 P. 1054, 28 Idaho 253, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-givens-idaho-1915.