Talley v. State

180 S.W. 330, 121 Ark. 4, 1915 Ark. LEXIS 457
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 180 S.W. 330 (Talley v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Talley v. State, 180 S.W. 330, 121 Ark. 4, 1915 Ark. LEXIS 457 (Ark. 1915).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

The Bank of Rogers, a domestic corporation doing business at Rogers, Benton County, Arkansas, received on deposit the funds of said county, including school district funds, as depositary of the county, pursuant to the terms of a special statute enacted in the year 1905, authorizing the county court of that and certain other counties to select a depositary, and said bank executed as stich depositary a bond with appellant Talley and others as sureties thereon, as provided by said statute. The Bank of Rogers failed and ceased to do business on July 16, 1914, having on deposit at that time the following funds held as such public depositary, towit:

School district funds................$39,344.78

County road funds.................. 5,896.06

County bridge funds ............... 100.00

County general funds............... 4,478.84

Total................................................$49,819.68

The (State Bank Commissioner took charge of the assets .and affairs of the defunct bank on the day of the failure, and subsequently a demand was made on him ■as the representative of the bank to pay over the funds to the county treasurer. This action at law was then instituted in the name of the State of Arkansas, for the use of Benton County and the school districts whose funds were held by the bank on deposit, against the sureties on the bond to recover said amount so held. The defendants answered separately, and a trial of the cause resulted in a judgment against all of the defendants for recovery of the full amount named.

(1) It is not denied that the bond sued on was duly executed by all of the defendants and approved by the county court, nor that the public funds to the amount named were received on deposit by the bank as alleged; but it is contended that no order was formally made by the county court designating the Bank of Rogers as county depositary. The governing statute provides that “upon the .approval of said bond the county court shall make an order designating the successful bidder as the depositary of all the funds of said county for a period ending thirty days after the time fixed for another selection of a county depositary, and it shall be the duty of the county treasurer immediately to transfer to said depositary all funds belonging to the county.” Section6, Act 113, Acts of 1905, p. 302. No order of the .county court is shown formally designating the Bank of Rogers as depositary, but there was an order approving the bond which recites the ¡fact that the bank had been,duly designated by the county court as such county depositary, and the funds qf the county were paid over to the bank. The bank and its sureties are estopped to deny that there had never been a designation of the bank as such depositary. Hennepin County v. State Bank, 64 Minn. 180, 66 N. W. 143.

(2) It is .also contended that the right of action against the sureties on the bond was not complete because no demand had been made on the principal. There was a demand made on the bank commissioner, who was the legal .representative of the insolvent bank; and even if that was not sufficient, no demand was necessary, since the b¡ank had ceased to do business .and put itself out of power to perform the terms of the bond by becoming insolvent and going into the hands of the State Bank Commissioner. St. Louis County v. American L. & T. Co., 75 Minn. 489, 78 N. W. 113. A demand would have been ia vain 'thing when there was no possibility of compliance therewith.

The right of set-off was asserted to the extent of the sum of $7,936.47 on account of warrants of the county held by the bank. It appears from the evidence that the Biank of Rogers had purchased warrants on the bridge fund of the county aggregating the sum of $4,-926.00, which said warrants were held by the bank at the time of its failure. The bank also held Avar rants in the sum of $3,010.00 on the general revenue fund of the county at the time of the failure. In other words, the bank was the OAvner of warrants of the kind mentioned, and the sureties on the bond claimed the right of set-off to the extent of those warrants. So far as concerns the warrants on the county general fund, it is conceded in the brief of plaintiff’s counsel that since the judgment Avas rendered those AAarrants have been turned over to the treasurer and credited on the judgment, so the judgment will be modified to that extent, and that eliminates the question of those Avarrants from the controversy.

(3) The bank held the bridge warrants the same as if they had been in the hands of any other holder who merely had the right to. present them to the county treasurer and receive payment out of funds appropriated for that purpose. It appears from' the evidence that the depositary had only $100.00 of that fund, which was insufficient to meet the warrants, or, so far as the evidence discloses, either one of them. There was, at any rate, no right of set-off, for even if there had been funds in the county treasury to ¡meet the warrants, the only right the bank had, as the holder of the warrants, was to present them to the treasurer for payment in the same manner that .any other holder of warrants could have done. The obligation of the bank, as the depositary of public funds, and the sureties on its bond was to pay the money over on demand, and a failure to pay over the money cannot be justified pro tanto by showing that the depositary was the owner at the time of county •warrants.

(4) Defendants claim that there was a payment made in the sum of $20,027.22 to which they are entitled as a credit on the amount of public funds held by the depositary. The facts disclosed by the evidence are that the bank closed its doors at one o’clock p. m. on July 16, 1914, and caused a notice to be posted on the doors, in compliance with the statutes, that “this bank is in the hands of the bank commissioner.” About two o’clock p. m. on that day J. E. Felker sought the county treasurer at his office in Bentonville and delivered to him the county scrip hereinbefore mentioned and drafts drawn by the bank of Rogers against certain other banks aggregating the sum of $20,027.22. One of these drafts was drawn on a bank in St. Louis, in the sum of $1,000.00, and was subsequently collected by the treasurer.

After the State Bank Commissioner took charge of the bank, through one of his deputies, he instituted a suit in the chancery court of Benton County against the treasurer to compel the latter to surrender to the bank commissioner said assets of the bank alleged to have been wrongfully delivered to him by Felker. The chancery court rendered a final decree in accordance with the prayer of the complaint, and the treasurer complied with it by surrendering to the bank commissioner all of said assets. Tt is insisted now that the delivery of those assets constituted a payment to the treasurer to which the county was hound and which entitled the defendants in this action to a credit on the amount of their liability on the bond. In other words, they claim that it' constituted a payment which inured to the benefit of the sureties on the bond. We are of the opinion that the delivery of those assets cannot be treated as a payment. The chancery court, by its final decree, directed the treasurer to surrender the assets to the bank commissioner, and correctly so.

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Bluebook (online)
180 S.W. 330, 121 Ark. 4, 1915 Ark. LEXIS 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talley-v-state-ark-1915.