Sturdivant Bank v. Stoddard County

58 S.W.2d 702, 332 Mo. 568, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 489
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 21, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 58 S.W.2d 702 (Sturdivant Bank v. Stoddard County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sturdivant Bank v. Stoddard County, 58 S.W.2d 702, 332 Mo. 568, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 489 (Mo. 1933).

Opinion

*570 ATWOOD, J.

The Sturdivant Bank sued Stoddard County on 389 county warrants and recovered a judgment for $7,167.92 covering all of said warrants except three. The trial court found that defendant was entitled to off-set its liability on these three warrants, which aggregated $395.08, with an equal amount of defendant’s deposit which it had in the Bloomfield Bank and Trust Company as county depositary in the name of E. E. Good, County Treasurer, when said bank closed its doors because of insolvency on December 2, 1930, and said items of indebtedness were adjudged to off-set and cancel each other. Plaintiff appealed from the judgment, and the propriety of the allowance of this off-set is the only question before us. We have jurisdiction because respondent is a political subdivision of the State. [Sec. 12, Art. YI, Constitution of Missouri.]

The three warrants in question were issued by the County Court of Stoddard County in the month of April, 1928, for the principal sum of $108 each, payable to the Bloomfield Bank and Trust Company and drawn against the general revenue of said county for the year 1928. On or about the date of issue these warrants were duly presented to the County Treasurer of Stoddard County who refused payment and, pursuant to Section 12171, Revised Statutes 1929, dated and subscribed the following certificate on the back of each of said warrants: "The within warrant presented for payment and no money in the treasury for that purpose.” Thereafter, and prior to said closing of the Bloomfield Bank and Trust Company, appellant Sturdivant Bank acquired these warrants by blank indorsement and not in compliance with Section 12172, Revised Statutes 1929.

It appears from the evidence that the Bloomfield Bank and Trust Company was duly made the county depositary of Stoddard County on May 6, 1929. On that date and until after the closing of said depositary E. E. Good was the treasurer of said county. It appears from the evidence that said bank kept the county’s general revenue of 1928 with other county funds in one account carried in the name of E. E. Good, Treasurer of Stoddard County, and that when the bank closed its doors on December 2, 1930, this account contained $12,638.49 consisting of county revenues of 1928 and 1929 and county road and bridge funds. It further appears that these various funds were separated on records kept by the county treasurer, and he testified that when said depositary closed he had on deposit in this account the sum of $869.23 of the county’s general revenue of 1928 and the sum of $7,068.31 of the county’s general revenue of 1929, but that this deposit of the county’s general revenue of 1928 was insufficient to meet all other outstanding and unpaid warrants which had been drawn against the same revenue and duly presented for payment and certified because of no funds for that purpose *571 prior to the presentment and certification of the three warrants here in question. The only notice that he ever received, prior to the failure of the depositary bank, that any of defendant’s warrants had been acquired by the Sturdivant Bank was a letter from the latter’s president, dated February 25, 1930, advising him that the Sturdivant Bank had about $6000 of Stoddard County warrants, but giving him no information as to the number or dates of issue, and on that date there was in said account in said county depositary the sum of $1,087.74 of Stoddard County’s general revenue of the year 1928, which was insufficient to meet all then outstanding warrants which had been presented and certified before presentment of the three warrants aforesaid.

Respondent concedes that these warrants are non-negotiable instruments and that “the defendant is entitled as against the plaintiff to every just set-off or other defense which existed in its favor at the time of being notified of such assignment.” Appellant’s entire argument is thus briefly stated: “If the Bloomfield Bank and Trust Company could not have charged these warrants to the account of the county treasury in the Trust Company at the time it closed its doors, certainly the county will not now be permitted to off-set the warrants with county revenue on deposit in the Trust Company wffiich was not applicable to the payment of these warrants. The element of mutuality required by Section 837, Revised Statutes 1929, is lacking.”

¥e have held that a county warrant is a non-negotiable instrument (Isenhour v. Barton County, 190 Mo. 163, 170, 88 S. W. 759), and Section 838, Revised Statutes 1929, provides that in actions on “assigned accounts and non-negotiable instruments, the defendant shall be allowed every just set-off or other defense which existed in his favor at the time of his being notified of such assignment.” So much for the legal propositions conceded.

It does not appear from the evidence that defendant had notice of the assignment of the particular warrants here in question until some time after the county depositary was closed on December 2, 1930. It was frankly alleged in plaintiff’s petition that none of the warrants sued on “bear the endorsement thereon required by statute, and by reason thereof the legal title did not pass from the several payees named in said warrants,” but plaintiff was alleged to be the equitable owner thereof and recovery in a lump sum was sought on the ground of avoidance of a multiplicity of suits. Counsel for defendant apparently acquiesced in this procedure, and at the trial abandoned every defense pleaded except the right to off-set its liability on the three warrants made payable to the Bloomfield Bank and Trust Company. So, the exact question for determination is whether at the time the insolvent county depositary closed its doors *572 on December 2, 1930, Stoddard. County had the right to set off its aforesaid deposit to the extent above mentioned against its three warrants previously issued and made payable to said county depositary and presented to the county treasurer and marked presented for payment and no money in the treasury for that purpose, but not then payable out of said deposit because of other outstanding warrants drawn against the same revenue and similarly certified prior to their -presentment and certification.

Counsel for appellant say that no such right existed because the payee bank at the time it closed its doors “could not have charged these'warrants to the account of the county treasury.”

Section 837. Revised Statutes 1929, relating to set-off, is quite broad and reads as follows: “If any two or more persons are mutually indebted in any manner whatsoever, and one of them commence an. action against the other, one debt may be set off against the other, although such debts are of a different nature.” The right to assert set-off at law is of statutory creation, but courts of equity from a very early day have been accustomed to grant relief in that regard independently as well as in aid of statutes upon the subject. [Scott v. Armstrong, 146 U. S. 499, 507.] They usually put the same construction on such statutes as do courts of law, and generally follow'the law in regard to matters of set-off, unless a relaxation of, or departure from, the rules obtaining in courts of law is necessary to prevent wrong and injustice (57 C. J. p. 362, sec. 6; Barnes v. McMullins, 78 Mo. 260, 271; Turner v. Mountain View Bank (Mo. App.), 19 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.W.2d 702, 332 Mo. 568, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sturdivant-bank-v-stoddard-county-mo-1933.