Trustees of the University of North Carolina v. State National Bank

3 S.E. 359, 96 N.C. 280
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 3 S.E. 359 (Trustees of the University of North Carolina v. State National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trustees of the University of North Carolina v. State National Bank, 3 S.E. 359, 96 N.C. 280 (N.C. 1887).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

Robert W. Lassiter, treasurer of the plaintiff, having in custody its funds for safe keeping, deposited with the defendant, the State National Bank, five several bonds of the State, as collateral security for moneys advanced to him, or, as the parties describe the transaction, hypothe-cated them for that purpose.

Of these bonds, two, numbered 640 and 387, were sold by the Bank on December 8th, 1875, and the three others, numbered 11, 473 and 1854, were in like manner sold, sometime between the 3d day of August and the 14th day of October, 1878, and the proceeds of sales applied according to the conditions of the deposit.

Kemp P. Battle succeeded said Lassiter in office, and on February 24th, 1874, became treasurer and secretary of the University, and continued to be such until June, 1876, when he was elected president, but he still exercised his former functions as treasurer and secretary, until the Fall of 1883.

Soon after his election as treasurer, he demanded from his predecessor in office the books, papers and property belonging to the University, of which the two first mentioned were surrendered, but not the seal nor the public securities.

Plaving information that three of the State bonds belonging to the land scrip fund, and held by the University under the act of Congress, 12 U. S. Stat. at Large, ch. 130, had been hypothecated with the defendant Bank by Lassiter, he *283 made inquiry of Williams, its president, when the latter stepped back to the vault, and returned, giving him the numbers 640, 887 and 1854 of the bonds that had thus been deposited with the bank as collateral security. The witness ascertained that two others had been taken from the box in which they were kept, leaving thirty-eight of the forty bonds that belonged there, parcel also of the land scrip fund; he again called on the bank president, and found that those numbered 11 and 473 were also in its possession, having been left there on similar conditions as the others.

In both interviews, which we take it were soon after his appointment to the vacated office, and at least during the year 1874, witness infomed Williams that these securities constituted part of the land scrip fund of the University, and that “ Lassiter had no right to hypothecate or to sell them,” and he understood that the Bank claimed the possession by reason of the hypothecation. They were not then nor afterwards demanded, nor, so far as the testimony goes, did the Bank indicate any disposition to give them up, except on the terms of such deposit.

For this misapplication of the trust fund, the University brought suit against Lassiter and the sureties on his bond, the summons issued in which was served on the former and the surety Jones, in March, 1876, and on the surety Win-stead, one of the present plaintiffs, on.May 30th thereafter, and recovered judgment in Wake Superior Court at February Term, 1879, for $4,913.01.

The judgment had been nearly paid when this action was begun on July 30th, 1880, and the residue has been since paid by said Winstead, the only solvent debtor.

Among other defences, not in the view we take of the case necessary to be considered on the appeal, the defendant, in its answer, relies upon the bar interposed by the lapse of time since its liability, if any, was incurred, counting the interval in which the statute was running up to the institu *284 tion of the suit, and as against the plaintiff Winstead up to February 23d, 1884, when he filed his amended complaint.

We do not propose to pursue the course of argument of •counsel, and discuss, as they have done, with ability and learning, the numerous exceptions taken and points made ■during the progress of the trial in the Superior Court, since the controversy will be disposed of in considering the preliminary obstacle to the maintenance of the action arising from the delay in bringing it since the right to sue accrued.

If the first misapplication of the funds was without authority and tortious on the part of Lassiter, it would seem not to be less so in the misappropriation to its own use and for the security of the advances made to him on the part of the Bank, for both participate in the tort.

If this use of the fund by Lassiter was rightful, the Bank would not be in fault in retaining possession until the conditions of the hypothecation were met. While making this suggestion, we do not propose to treat the original deposit as per se wrongful, since it seems to have had the sanction of the Trustees of the University, but to consider whether the •claim made by the Bank, when advised of the want of power in Lassiter to make the disposition of the bonds and that they were the property of the University, to retain them and appropriate the proceeds of their sale for its reimbursement, accompanied with a virtual refusal to restore them, is not a conversion, which instantly exposed them to an action by the owner for their recovery.

“A conversion in the sense of the law of trover,” is defined by Mr. Greenleaf in the 2d volume, §642, of his Law of Evidence, as consisting “either in the appropriation of the thing to the party’s own use and beneficial enjoyment, •or in its destruction, or in exercising dominion over it in exclusion or defiance of the plaintiff’s right, or in withholding the possession from the plaintiff, under a claim of title inconsistent with his own.”

*285 The correctness of this definition is affirmed by Nash, J., who quotes it almost in totidem verbis, in delivering the opinion in Glover v. Riddick, 11 Ired., 582.

In Carraway v. Burbank, 1 Dev., 306, the defendant administered on an estate, and took into his possession as among the effects, a horse which the intestate held as bailee, and at the sale he bid in the horse himself. The question was, did this amount to a conversion; and the Court so decided. In his opinion, HendersoN, J., says : “ Conversion is an act of ownership, exercised over the personal chattel of another,, inconsistent with the owner’s right. It must be an act — bare words will not do.” In the same case, Taylor, C. J., declares : “ If a person purchase another’s goods from one having no right to sell them, and takes them into possession, it is assuming upon himself the property and right of disposing of another’s goods, and amounts to a conversion.”

In Hare v. Pearson, 4 Ired., 76, Daniel, J., thus expresses himself on the subject: “ The defendant on the day of sale set up a claim to the corn, as his property, but he had shown no title. The plaintiff gave notice to the defendant that he should take away the corn, which he had purchased at the officer’s sale. The defendant said that he should not have it, and that he would break every bone in his body before he should carry it away. The Judge charged the jury, that this ioas in law a conversion. * * * We think the charge of his Honor was correct, for a wrongful dominion and assumption of property in the chattels, is a conversion, and if there be a deprivation of the property by the defendant, it is a conversion.”

Mr.

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3 S.E. 359, 96 N.C. 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trustees-of-the-university-of-north-carolina-v-state-national-bank-nc-1887.