Walker & Brock v. D. W. Ranlett Co.

93 A. 1054, 89 Vt. 71, 1915 Vt. LEXIS 189
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 15, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 93 A. 1054 (Walker & Brock v. D. W. Ranlett Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker & Brock v. D. W. Ranlett Co., 93 A. 1054, 89 Vt. 71, 1915 Vt. LEXIS 189 (Vt. 1915).

Opinion

Taylor, J.

The case is here on exceptions by the trustee and claimant to the judgment of the county court holding the trustee liable on the commissioner’s report. The trustee, the Citizens Savings Bank & Trust Co. of St. Johnsbury, Vermont, having filed a disclosure denying liability and The First National Bank of Boston, Mass., having entered as claimant, a commissioner was appointed under the statute to take-the disclosure of the trustee. The commissioner has found and reported the following facts:

The plaintiffs are grain dealers doing business at West Barnet, Vermont. The defendant, a corporation having its principal office at Boston, Mass., conducts a grain brokerage business. Prior to Sept. 9, 1912, the plaintiffs ordered a carload of corn from the defendant. On Sept. 9, 1912, the defendant made an “arrival” draft on the plaintiffs for $750.25, the price of the corn, payable to the order of The First 'National Bank of Boston, Mass. To this draft was attached the order bill of lading covering the shipment of corn. On the same day the defendant deposited the draft at the claimant bank. As shown by the exhibits attached to the report, this draft was one of the ten drafts aggre[73]*73gating $11,248.97 deposited that day by the defendant. The draft was indorsed by the claimant payable to the order of any bank, banker or trust company and with the attached bill of lading was forwarded to the trustee for collection. On the arrival of the shipment the plaintiffs paid the draft and immediately brought this suit against the defendant and trusteed the Citizens Savings Bank and Trust Co.

The commissioner reports that the defendant was a regular customer of the claimant bank; that the draft was delivered to the claimant in the ordinary course of business and for collection; that the amount of said draft less exchange was immediately credited to the defendant in its general account subject to check; that on the day of the deposit of said draft the defendant, by checks, reduced its general account therein to seven hundred dollars; that the relation of claimant and defendant permitted the defendant, in the usual course of business, to draw cheeks against drafts so deposited in anticipation of their collection; that the arrangement with the defendant was such that claimant was to charge interest on the amount of the draft at the end of the month for the time the draft was outstanding, and, upon failure to make collection of said draft, to charge it up to defendant’s account.

The commissioner also reports that no discount was charged and the draft was not purchased by the claimant “unless the transaction as stated.imply a purchase’’ and that claimant’s title to and rights in said draft and the proceeds thereof are “only such as are imputed by law from the nature of the entire transaction.’’ The concluding paragraph of the report is as follows: “I find that upon payment of said draft by plaintiff to trustee, as aforesaid, that the trustee thereupon became debtor to claimant for the amount of said payment (seven hundred fifty-one and 25/100 dollars); that defendant 'had no title or interest therein upon which it could have based suit against trustee. I find that the trustee ought to be discharged and the claim of The First National Bank of Boston, as claimant ought to be allowed.”

The county court accepted the report of the commissioner and rendered'judgment thereon “that the funds in the hands of the trustee are funds of the defendant” and held the trustee chargeable. Did the court below err in its judgment on the report? The judgment does not follow but disregards the decision of the commissioner. We do not deem it necessary to consider [74]*74how far the conclusions of the commissioner are controlling when the report is accepted, as the ease can be disposed of without reference to his decision.

By the decided weight of authority a deposit by a general depositor of a draft indorsed in blank or made payable to the bank where deposited and placed to his credit subject to check, prima facie, passes the title to the draft and creates the relation of debtor and creditor. Burton v. United States, 196 U. S. 283, 49 L. ed 482, 25 Sup. Ct. 243; Metropolitan Nat. Bk. v. Merchants’ Nat. Bk., 182 Ill. 367, 55 N. E. 360, 74 Am. St. Rep. 180; Metropolitan Nat. Bk. v. Loyd, 90 N. Y. 530; Taft v. Quinsigamond Nat. Bk., 172 Mass. 363, 52 N. E. 387; Aebi v. Bank of Evansville, 124 Wis. 73, 102 N. W. 929, 68 L. R. A. 964, 109 Am. St. Rep. 925; Downey v. Nat. Ex. Bank, 52 Ind. App. 672, 96 N. E. 403; Notes 47 Am. St. Rep. 389 and 7 L. R. A. (N. S.) 695 and cases cited. Thus, nothing to the contrary appearing, the presumption in those circumstances is that the parties intended that title to the draft should pass; but this presumption is rebuttable and their apparent purpose will yield to their real intention if shown. The question must necessarily depend upon the facts of the particular case. If the parties intend that the paper shall be treated as cash, the title passes immediately upon receipt of the deposit. On the other hand, if it is intended that the bank shall not be responsible except as agent for collection, title remains in the depositor. See note 86 Am. St. Rep. 775 and cases cited; also 3 R. C. L. 524 where the leading cases on the subject of title to checks and drafts deposited are digested.

The commissioner has not expressly found on the question of intention. The report is silent on that subject except that his decision negatives any inference drawn by him to rebut the presumption that title to the draft passed to the claimant. Will this court presume in aid of the judgment below that the county court inferred as a fact an intention of the parties that the title should not pass? The rule is that when the court below sends up its decision accompanied only by the report on which it was based, this Court only presumes in aid of its judgment that it inferred such facts from the report as on examination it can see that the county court ought to have inferred. It is not sufficient that the facts reported have some tendency to establish the required fact. An inference which this Court will presume must [75]*75be a fair and legitimate conclusion arising from the facts reported. Pratt v. Page et al., 32 Vt. 13.

The deposit by the defendant, a general depositor, of the draft made payable to the claimant and immediately placed to the credit of the defendant subject to its checks, prima facie, passed title to the claimant. It remains to consider whether there is anything in the report, construed in the light of all the findings, that fairly tends to negative this presumption, from which the county court ought to have made such an inference.

The finding that no discount was charged when the draft was deposited is. of no force to rebut the presumption in view of the finding that interest was to be charged at the end of the month on the amount of the draft for the time that elapsed before judgment. The maturity of the draft depended upon the arrival of the shipment at its destination. Its time to run could not be ascertained in advance. The arrangement for. interest may well have been in lieu of discount; at least, it was entirely consistent with an intention that title to the draft should pass to the claimant.

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Bluebook (online)
93 A. 1054, 89 Vt. 71, 1915 Vt. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-brock-v-d-w-ranlett-co-vt-1915.