Turkey State Bank v. Estelline State Bank

259 S.W. 678
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 1924
DocketNo. 2190. [fn*]
StatusPublished

This text of 259 S.W. 678 (Turkey State Bank v. Estelline State Bank) 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
Turkey State Bank v. Estelline State Bank, 259 S.W. 678 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

RANDOLPH, J.

This suit was instituted by appellee against the Turkey State Bank and the commissioner of insurance and banking, to establish its claim in the sum of $7,-467.82, as a noninterest-bearing and unsecured deposit in the Turkey State Bank, in liquidation, and payable out of the depositors’ guaranty fund. The trial court rendered judgment for appellee, and the commissioner and the Turkey State Bank have appealed from that judgment to this court.

Appellant’s first and second assignments of error present the question that the trial court erred in not sustaining the demurrer of the commissioner to the plaintiff’s petition, because said petition shows on its face to be an action against J. L. Chapman, insurance and banking commissioner, as an officer of the executive department of the government of the. state of Texas, and because plaintiff’s petition shows on its face to be in effect a suit against the state of Texas, and no consent of the state to be sued is alleged. These questions have been settled by the Supreme Court adversely to appellant’s contentions. Kidder v. Hall, 251 S. W. 497.

The third assignment is to the effect that the general demurrer should have been sustained because the petition fails to state any facts showing that this suit was filed within six months after the rejection of ap-pellee’s claim by the banking commissioner.

An agreement between attorneys for the parties to this cause, by which it was agreed that the original petition should be left out of the transcript, appears in the transcript. It would have appeared from the file mark on that instrument when the suit was filed. But the first amended original petition contains this recital:

“Comes now the plaintiff, and leave of the court first being had and obtained, files this, its first amended original petition, in lieu of its original petition filed herein on December 16, 1921, and for amendment,” etc.

We think this sufficiently established the date of the filing of the original petition. See rules 13 and 14 for the district court, Harris’ Rules of Court.

In the case of T. & N. O. Ry. Co. v. Speights, 94 Tex. 350, 60 S. W. 659, the Supreme Court, says:

“The trial court takes notice of the true date of filing the suit on trial before it as such date appears from the original petition, and may see from an inspection of it whether or not such date is incorrectly stated in an amendment: and the appellate court, reviewing its action, may do the same thing, but to enable it to disregard a recital such as that in question, [the date of the filing of the original petition as recited in the amendment] designed by the rules to furnish the proper date, the other papers showing its incorrectness should be sent up with the record; otherwise the court must be guided by that which the rules have provided as the proper information upon such. points. Rucker v. Dailey, 66 Texas, 286, 287.”

The record showing the date of the filing of the suit and the petition alleging that the banking commissioner rejected plaintiff’s Haim on the 12th day of November, 1921, we hold that the claim was sued on within, the time required by law, unless it was a condition precedent necessary to be affirmatively pleaded.

The allegation that it had filed suit was not a necessary allegation, as the filing of suit is not a condition precedent. The statute requires that such suit be filed within the six months, it is true, but the requirement that suit be filed is no part of the cause of action. We can see no necessity fop the party filing suit saying, “I have filed this suit within six months after rejection of this claim by the commissioner of insurance and banking,” when the very thing it is doing fulfills the requirement. When the suit had been filed, and not within six months, then it would have devolved on the trial court to have sustained the appellant’s general demurrer, it appearing from the record that the suit had not been filed within the time. But, the suit appearing to have been filed in time, so far as the record discloses, if the recitals were false, it was incumbent on the appellant to have pleaded such facts and have invoked the real facts as a bar of limitation to any recovery by appellee. 21 R. 0. L. latter part of section 29, pp. 463, 464. We also cite the ease of J. L. Chapman v. Tyler County, 259 S. W. 301, recently decided by the Court of Civil Appeals at Beaumont, and State Banking Board v. Pitcher (Tex. Civ. App.) 256 S. W. 996.

The fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh assignments of error present substantially the alleged error of the trial court in rendering judgment in favor of appellee establishing appellee’s claim as a general deposit, because the uncontradicted evidence shows that at the time appellee surrendered its interest-bearing claim in consideration of the promise of the Turkey State Bank to consider its debt to appellee as a general deposit said bank was insolvent, and appellee knew that' it .was in financial distress and unable' to pay its claim; that said bank was without money to pay appellee or to represent any. *680 deposit; that such agreement to leave the moüey in the Turkey State Banls resulted in charging the depositors’ guaranty fund with the payment thereof, and was a fraud upon said fund, and void.

The Estelline State Bank, appellee, deposited in the Turkey State Bank on the 13th of August, 1920, the sum of $10,000, under the agreement that the deposit should draw 7 per cent, interest and the money was to be turned to the Estelline Bank on October 1st. It does not appear that demand was made for the money on October 1st, but Pry, the cashier of the Turkey State Bank, wrote and told the Estelline Bank that he would like to keep the money longer if that bank could spare it, and was informed that it was “all ■right.” The money at this time was still bearing 7 per cent.- interest. Along about the 1st of November Pry again wrote the ap-pellee, and said he wanted to keep the money longer, and, if appellee would let him keep it, he would pay 10 per cent, interest. The appellee wrote and refused this request, and stated that it wanted the money, but for Pry to go ahead and keep it, and they would not charge him any interest on it. No further communications passed between the parties during the month of November. Moore, the president of appellee bank, testifies that he told Pry to keep the money, and for him to repay it as he could, that is, $500 or $100 as he could get the money in. The parties saw one another some time between the 1st and 10th of December, and the account at that time was cut down from $10,-000 to $7,000 by delivery of some school warrants to appellee. At that time it was agreed that the money should remain with the Turkey State Bank as a noninterest-bearing deposit. It was agreed between' the parties in the above-mentioned written agreement that on December 1, 1920, the Turkey State Bank was insolvent, but it was not admitted that appellee knew of the insolvency. Moore, appellee’s president, who was the agent handling this deposit for ap-pellee, testified that he thought the Turkey, State Bank was just as solvent as any bank, and that he did not know of such insolvency ; that said deposit was not secured in any manner; that the deposit was purely an accommodation deposit; and that he left it in that form so that it would be subject to check.

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Related

McDonald v. Chemical National Bank
174 U.S. 610 (Supreme Court, 1899)
Earle v. Carson
188 U.S. 42 (Supreme Court, 1903)
Kidder v. Hall
251 S.W. 497 (Texas Supreme Court, 1923)
Texas & New Orleans Railroad v. Speights
60 S.W. 659 (Texas Supreme Court, 1901)
Posey, Trustee v. McManis
67 S.W. 792 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1902)
State Banking Board v. Pilcher
256 S.W. 996 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1923)
Chapman v. Tyler County
259 S.W. 301 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1924)
Francis Smith & Co. v. Ojerholm
53 S.W. 341 (Texas Supreme Court, 1899)
Owens v. American National Bank
81 S.W. 988 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
259 S.W. 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turkey-state-bank-v-estelline-state-bank-texapp-1924.