Stockyards Nat. Bank of St. Paul v. First Nat. Bank of Towner

249 F. 421, 161 C.C.A. 395, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 2224
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 23, 1918
DocketNo. 4917
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 249 F. 421 (Stockyards Nat. Bank of St. Paul v. First Nat. Bank of Towner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stockyards Nat. Bank of St. Paul v. First Nat. Bank of Towner, 249 F. 421, 161 C.C.A. 395, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 2224 (8th Cir. 1918).

Opinion

TRIEBER, District Judge.

For convenience we shall refer to the plaintiff in error as the plaintiff, and the defendant in error as the defendant, as they appeared in the court below. The facts are practically undisputed. The Farmers’ State Bank of Towner, N. D., borrowed from the plaintiff the sum of $8,6p0, and to secure the same [422]*422hypothecated and delivered to it as collateral 15 notes of its customers, all of them payable at the Farmers’ State Bank, in Towner, N. D. Shortly before these notes became due, the plaintiff, at the request of the Farmers’ State Bank, sent these notes to the Farmers’ State Bank for collection and remittance, and when collected and remitted to be credited on the principal note. When these notes were sent, the Farmers’ State Bank executed its receipt therefor, which reads as follows:

“Received for collection from Stockyards National Bank, South. St. Paul, Minn., the following list of notes, held as collateral to note of T. J. Cummings, the proceeds of which are to be remitted to said Stockyards National Bank, and indorsed on indebtedness here.”

It then gives a list of the 15 notes received by it from the Stockyards National Bank. Three of these notes, amounting to $912.25, were collected by the Farmers’ State Bank and remitted to the Stockyards National Bank and credited on the note. Each of these notes had been indorsed in blank by the Farmers’ State Bank, by stamping on the back:

“Pay to the order of .......without recourse. [Signed] Farmers’ State Bank of Towner, by T. J. Cummings, Cashier.”

The loan to the Farmers’ State Bank was evidenced by a note of the cashier of that bank, but it is conceded by all parties that the loan was made for the sole use of the Farmers’ State Bank, was credited to it on the books of the Stockyards National Bank, and drawn out by it in the usual course of business.

On November 9, 1915, the Farmers’ State Bank, in pursuance of a proposition in writing made on October 28, 1915, by the defendant bank, sold its loans and bills receivable, fixtures, lease on the building, and good will to it, but retained all other property, which consisted of some real estate and some other assets. In consideration of this sale the First National Bank agreed to assume the payment of the Farmers’ State Bank’s deposit liabilities, but none other. The agreement also provided that the loans purchased must be satisfactory to the First National Bank, an examination of them to be made by at least two of the directors of the First National Bank, the loans to be listed and scheduled, and the accrued interest to be figured on all notes on which interest was from date, unearned interest was to be discounted where it had been paid in advance, and the notes to be taken at their present worth. The agreement further provided that, .if the bills receivable accepted by the First National Bank are insufficient to pay all deposit liabilities assumed and list of them to be furnished, the Farmers’ State Bank was to pay the defendant, in cash or acceptable paper, the difference, which was found to amount to $1,952.33, which was paid by the Farmers’ State Bank to the First National Bank by draft and cash. The Farmers’ State Bank also obligated itself not to enter into1 the banking business at Towner, where both banks were located, for 10 years, and that its bank would be liquidated and dissolved as a corporation.

The 12 notes amounted to $7,564.60 after the credit of the $912.25, which had been previously collected by the Farmers’ State Bank and [423]*423remitted to the plaintiff. Nine of these collateral notes were past due at the time they were transferred to the defendant; three of them, amounting to the sum of $1,499, were not yet due. The First National Bank collected these notes, and the plaintiff brought this action to recover the balance due it on its note; the First National Bank having collected more than sufficient from these collateral' notes to pay it. There was a trial to a jury, and the court granted a peremptory instruction directing a verdict for defendant.

When the examination was made by the directors of the First National Bank, the notes in controversy, and which had been theretofore pledged with the Stockyards National Bank, were claimed hv the president of the Farmers’ State Bank to be the property of that bank. These were the only notes, so far as appears from the evidence, held by the Farmers’ State Bank at that time, which bore the indorsements hereinbefore set out. The bills receivable book of the Farmers’ State Bank, which was offered in evidence by the plaintiff and by the court excluded, showed that all these notes in contro1 versy had been erased, thus showing that they were no longer the property of the Fanners’ State Bank. The collection register of the Farmers’ State Bank, which was also offered in evidence by the plaintiff and by the court excluded, showed that these notes were held by the Farmers’ State Bank for collection for the plaintiff bank.

Counsel for defendant, in their oral argument, concede that no claim of bona fide purchaser under the law merchant is made, but it based its claim upon an estoppel of the plaintiff bank, by reason of the fact that it had intrusted the notes to the Farmers’ State Bank without any indicia on the notes that they were its property, or that they were sent to the Farmers’ State Bank for collection only, and upon the additional ground that, the plaintiff having parted with the possession of the notes to the pledgor, it lost the pledge, so far as purchasers from the pledgor without notice are concerned.

[1-4] In our opinion the court erred in excluding the bills receivable and collection registers of the Farmers’ State Bank, when offered in evidence by the plaintiff, and in directing a verdict for the defendant. The pledgee of promissory notes, residing in a city other than where the notes are payable, the notes in controversy being payable at the bank of the pledgor, does not lose title to the pledged notes by sending them to the pledgor for collection, the pledgor receiving them for that purpose only, unless they are assigned for value, before maturity, and without notice to a bona fide purchaser, in due course of business. Clark v. Iselin, 21 Wall. 360, 368, 22 L. Ed. 568; J. M. Radford Gro. Co. v. Powell, 228 Fed. 1, 142 C. C. A. 457. In Commercial National Bank v. Canal Bank, 239 U. S. 520, 36 Sup. Ct. 194, 60 L. Ed. 417; Ann. Cas. 1917E, 25, it was held that one who has no1 title cannot transfer title, unless the owner has given authority, or is estopped; nor can he, in the absence of such au'thority or estoppel, transfer title by warehousing the goods and indorsing the receipt, although such receipts are negotiable under the Uniform Warehouse Act of Eouisiana. As these notes were undoubtedly the property of the plaintiff, the debt for which they were pledged being then unpaid, and it had given no authority to the Farmers’ State [424]*424Bank to sell them, that bank could not by an unauthorized sale pass title to a purchaser who is not a bona fide purchaser under the law merchant.

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Bluebook (online)
249 F. 421, 161 C.C.A. 395, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 2224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stockyards-nat-bank-of-st-paul-v-first-nat-bank-of-towner-ca8-1918.