Tradesmen's State Bank v. Ft. Worth Elevators Co.

214 S.W. 656, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 955
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 26, 1919
DocketNo. 9092.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 214 S.W. 656 (Tradesmen's State Bank v. Ft. Worth Elevators Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tradesmen's State Bank v. Ft. Worth Elevators Co., 214 S.W. 656, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 955 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

*657 BUCK, J.

On the date named H. L. Tank-ersley, a cotton broker at Hunnewell, Kan., doing business under the name of H. L. Tankersley & Co., deposited with, the State Guaranty Bank of Blackwell, Okl., the following draft:

“H. L. Tankersley & Co., Hunnewell, Kansas.
“Dec. 30, 1916.
“Account-Car No. 30257 A T. Pay to the order of ourselves $1,890.00, eighteen hundred ninety and no/100 dollars, value received, and charge the same to account of
“H. L. Tankersley & Co.,
“By H. L. Tankersley. “To the Ft. Worth Elevators Co.,
“Ft. Worth, Texas.
“% Farmers’ & Mechanics’ Natl. Bank.’’

Attached to this draft was a bill of lading purporting to have been issued by the Atch-ison, Topeka & Santa Fé Railroad Company at Hunnewell December 30, 1916, covering 71,000 pounds of bulk wheat consigned to the order of H. L. Tankersley, destination Galveston (for export), notify the Galveston Wharf Company at Galveston, state of Texas, car initial A., T. & S. F. car Ho. 30257. This purported bill of lading had the name of H. N. Stannard signed thereto as the agent of the railway company. H. N. Stannard was the agent of the A., T. & S. F. By. Co. at Hunnewell, but did not sign his name to said purported bill of lading, nor did any one else acting for said railway company sign the same, and it was admitted that said signature was a forgery. The State Guaranty Bank of Blackwell, Okl., had a checking account with Tankersley, and upon the deposit of said draft and bill of lading with said bank, and upon the indorsement of the draft by Tankersley, by signing “H. L. Tank-ersley” on the back thereof, Tankersley’s account was credited with the amount of the draft, $1,890. Credit was given on January 2, 1917, which was the first business day following the deposit of the draft. The draft and bill of lading attached was sent by the State Guaranty Bank to the Tradesmen’s •State Bank of Oklahoma City, and by the latter bank forwarded to the Stockyards National Bank of Ft. Worth, to be collected and credited in the usual way. At the time the State Guaranty Bank had to its credit funds in the Tradesmen’s State Bank sufficient to cover any deficit that might be created by reason of the draft in question not being paid, and in accordance with its custom in such transactions the Tradesmen’s State Bank gave the Guaranty Bank credit for the amount of the draft, and when the Tradesmen’s State Bank forwarded the draft to the Stockyards National Bank, the latter named bank was charged with the amount of said item. Upon receipt of the draft and bill of lading from the State Guaranty Bank, the appellant bank acknowledged its receipt in the following communication:

“The Tradesmen’s State Bank.
“Oklahoma City, Jan. 2, 1917.
“Tour favor of Dec. 30 is received with inclosures as stated.
“We credit as follows: 1890.
“In receiving items payable elsewhere than in Oklahoma' City, this bank acts only as your agent and assumes no responsibility further than to use diligence through its ordinary and regular facilities in forwarding. Cash items credited on receipt subject to final payment.
“O. M. Bosworth, Cashier.”

On January 3,1917, said draft was paid by the Ft. Worth Elevators Company, and remittance to cover was made by the Stockyards National Bank to the Tradesmen’s State Bank, and by the latter to the State Guaranty Bank. On the back of the draft when presented to the Ft. Worth Elevators Company there were the following indorse-ments:

(1) “Pay to any bank or banker. H. L. Tankersley.”
(2) “Pay to any bank or banker, all previous indorsements guaranteed.
“86-152 Dec. 30, 1916. 86-152.
“The State Guaranty Bank,
“Blackwell, Oklahoma.”
(3) “Pay any bank or banker, all previous indorsements guaranteed.
“39-15. Jan. 2, 1917. 39-15.
“Tradesmen’s State Bank,
“Oklahoma City, Okla.”
(4) “Received payment through Ft. Worth Clearing House.
“No. Jan. 3, 1917. 12.
“Stockyards National Bank,
“Ft. Worth, Texas.”

On the back of the bill of lading was the same indorsement of appellant bank as that placed on the back of the draft; the bank’s indorsement on the bill of lading being made by mistake of one of its employés. There was also indorsed the name “H. L. Tankers-ley,” written by Tankersley himself.

Jule G. Smith; president of the Ft. Worth Elevators Company, testified that in paying the draft he was under the belief that the till of lading attached represented a car of wheat; that this belief was based upon the signature of the agent, the indorsement of the -shipper, and its coming through the bank, and that on the strength of the indorsements he paid the drait; that the Ft. Worth Elevators Company had no.contract with H. L. Tankersley or H. L. Tankersley & Co. for the payment of this draft; that it had bought no wheat from Tankersley for which this bill of lading had been issued, and had no funds in its hands at the time belonging to Tankersley or Tankersley & Co. with which to meet the payment of the draft sued upon; that, acting for the Ft. Worth Elevators Company, he -purchased the draft, believing that it covered -a car of wheat, and that it had been regularly issued and properly indorsed *658 by the bank and tbe skipper; that, if the bill of lading attached to the draft had not contained the indorsement of the Tradesmen’s State Bank, said draft would not have been paid; that the first intimation that he had that there was anything wrong with this draft or bill of lading was about February 15, 1917. Upon failure to locate the car of wheat, and upon information that it had not reached Galveston and could not be found, he wired the railway agent at Hunne-well, and later went to Hunnewell, Kan., and Blackwell, Okl., and made a personal investigation, and found that the bill of lading was a forgery.

The evidence further shows that H. L. Tankersley in March, 1913, opened an account with the State Guaranty Bank, and continued to do business with that bank under that name until his disappearance in February, 1917; that on April 14,1917, Tank-ersley’s account was closed by the bank’s depositing $424.69 to the credit of Tankers-ley, to cover an overdraft, and 'Charging the same up to loss. Plaintiff has never been reimbursed for any part of the amount paid for the draft and has never received any shipment of wheat described in the bill of lading.

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Related

Behringer v. City Nat. Bank
296 S.W. 674 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1927)
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1923 OK 757 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1923)

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214 S.W. 656, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 955, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tradesmens-state-bank-v-ft-worth-elevators-co-texapp-1919.