State v. Grand Rapids Savings Bank

7 N.W.2d 220, 304 Mich. 55, 1942 Mich. LEXIS 342
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1942
DocketDocket No. 72, Calendar No. 42,134.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 N.W.2d 220 (State v. Grand Rapids Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan 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. Grand Rapids Savings Bank, 7 N.W.2d 220, 304 Mich. 55, 1942 Mich. LEXIS 342 (Mich. 1942).

Opinion

North, J.

Defendant Grand Rapids Savings Bank was designated “a depositary of part of the *57 surplus funds belonging to the State of Michigan” in January, 1933, by the State treasurer, Theodore I. Fry. Four surety bonds totalling $285,000 were given to insure the safekeeping and payment on demand of State money to be deposited. In addition to these four bonds the bank gave the State additional security by entering into an agreement for depositing with the State collateral security consisting of municipal and government bonds and notes. A copy of the contract wherein the bank was designated as a depositary accompanied and was made a part of each of the four surety bonds and of the collateral security agreement. These five copies of the depositary agreements, some dated January 1, 1933, and some January 2, 1933, are otherwise identical, mth one exception which is wholly immaterial in the instant ease. Deposits of State money were made and entered from time to time in two separate accounts. One was designated the “surety” account, and the other the “collateral” account. The bank having closed its doors February 14, 1933, and two of the sureties having since gone into receivership, a declaratory judgment under the statute was sought by the State on the questions as to whether the collateral deposited by the bank with the State secured repayment of all funds deposited by the State with the bank or secured only the so-called collateral account; and also as- to what extent the State was entitled to dividends declared by the bank. The Grand Rapids Savings Bank has appealed from a decree which sustained plaintiff’s contentions.

All copies of the depositary'agreement contained the following language:

“The said party of the second part agrees to receive and safely keep all such surplus funds of said *58 Stateof Michigan, as may be offered or deposited by said State Treasurer, and to reimburse and pay the same to the said State treasurer, or his successor in office, or whoever may be lawfully entitled to receive the same whenever called for; and to pay interest on such surplus funds so deposited, at the rate of one and one-half per cent, per annum.”

The one collateral instrument contained the following :

“Whereas, in accordance with the foregoing contract the Grand Rapids Savings Bank of Grand Rapids, Michigan, has been designated by Theodore I. Fry, the treasurer of the State of Michigan, as a depositary of part of the surplus funds belonging to the State of Michigan, the said bank does hereby deposit with the said State treasurer, as collateral security for the safety and payment upon demand of all moneys belonging to the said State of Michigan, in accordance with the said contract, the securities enumerated in the schedule made a part hereof and does hereby give the said State treasurer authority to sell all or any part thereof, at public or private sale at his discretion, without advertising the same, or giving the undersigned any notice, and to apply so much of the proceeds thereof as may be necessary to repay such deposit with all interest due thereon, and also to pay all expenses attending the sale of the said collateral security.”

As noted above, the banko carried the deposits of the State’s surplus funds in two separate accounts, one designated as the “surety” account, and the other as the “collateral” account. In the same manner, the State treasurer carried these deposits in two separate accounts on his books, and he filed two separate proofs of claim with the receiver of the bank. When the bank closed its doors February 14, 1933, there was on deposit by the State treasurer the sum of $285,000 in the surety account, and the sum of $110,500 in the collateral account. The *59 surety account was secured by surety bonds to tbe extent of $285,000 in tbe following companies: Aetna Casualty & Surety Company of Hartford, Connecticut, $50,000; American Surety Company of New York, $50,000; Central West Casualty Company, $85,000; Wayne Surety Company, $100,000. Tbe collateral account was secured by deposit of notes and bonds having a par value of $150,800. .

Tbe balance due to tbe State treasurer on tbe surety account bas been reduced to tbe sum of $87,875 by tbe following payments: 5 per cent, released May 11, 1933, amounting to $14,250; receiver’s dividend of 50 per cent., October 18, 1933, totalling $135,375, based on proof of claim filed by State treasurer; payment by American Surety Company and Aetna Casualty & Surety Company of $23,750 each on January 15,1936, in full of tbeir pro rata liability on tbeir depositary bonds “with waiver of any claim against participation or additional credit resulting from tbe sale and liquidation of tbe collateral security furnished by tbe bank on tbe collateral account.”

In accordance with tbe terms and provisions of tbe collateral instrument, tbe State treasurer sold tbe collateral securities for $54,242.29 in excess of tbe amount then due to tbe State on tbe so-called collateral account, but tbe State' treasurer did not deliver to tbe receiver this excess amount, claiming that tbe collateral deposited with tbe State was legally applicable to all moneys belonging to tbe State on deposit with tbe bank, including tbe amount in tbe so-called surety account. Tbe receiver on tbe other band claims this $54,242.29 cannot be applied on any but tbe so-called collateral deposit.

■The parties have stipulated that tbe receiver of the bank bas declared an additional 7 per cent, dividend payable to all creditors, including tbe State *60 treasurer, but that this additional dividend in the sum of $18,952.50 on the surety account has been withheld by the receiver of the bank pending judicial determination of the right of the State treasurer to apply on the surety account the balance of the proceeds from the sale of the collateral securities.

The trial judge found and decreed that the col- ' lateral was deposited to secure repayment of all funds deposited by the State and not just'the so-called “collateral” account. He also decreed the further relief sought by plaintiff relative to payment of dividends by the bank’s receiver. After quoting the contract as to the use of the collateral, the trial court said:

“It seems to me that this language cannot be regarded as ambiguous. The specific reference to £ all moneys belonging to the said State’ appears to be an unequivocal expression of the intention of the parties. The depositary agreement contained no limitation as to amount, nor did it contain reference to any other undertaking between the State and thé bank. I think we must assume that had the parties at the time intended a limitation on the indicated scope of the lien, such intention would have been expressed in the agreement. The fact that the bank, and also the State department, entered deposits made from time to time in two accounts may not be given the effect of modifying or changing the obvious meaning of the written contract. It must be said that such entries were matters of bookkeeping only. In the final analysis the aggregate amount of deposits in the bank constituted a single debt to the State of Michigan. No contractual undertaking between the parties can be construed as an attempt to provide otherwise.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 N.W.2d 220, 304 Mich. 55, 1942 Mich. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-grand-rapids-savings-bank-mich-1942.