Walters Nat. Bank v. Bantock

1913 OK 737, 137 P. 717, 41 Okla. 153, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 87
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 20, 1913
Docket3320
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1913 OK 737 (Walters Nat. Bank v. Bantock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walters Nat. Bank v. Bantock, 1913 OK 737, 137 P. 717, 41 Okla. 153, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 87 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

BREWER, C.

The defendant in error, Bantock, as plaintiff below, sued the Walters National Bank for the sum of $1,000, and upon a trial before a jury was given a verdict for the sum claimed. The defendant bank has appealed on case-made to this court.

Bantoek employed the W. E. Wilson Realty Company, a copartnership, composed of W. E. Wilson and W. W. Graves, to sell á farm belonging to his mother-in-law. The realty company found a purchaser who lived in Nebraska, who agreed to take the farm for $5,450, and sent to the realty company a draft for the sum of $1,000 to be applied to the purchase. This draft arrived in Walters, Okla., October 28, 1907, simultaneously with *155 what has been called the bankers’ panic of that year. The farm proposed to be sold was a homestead entiy, in the name of plaintiff’s mother-in-law, and the final proof had not been completed; at least, title could not at the time be conveyed. As to the handling of the sale and the use of this $1,000 draft out of which this suit arose, the evidence is conflicting. Plaintiff’s evidence shows: That, when this draft was received, Mr. Sultan, the cashier of defendant bank, was shown the same and was told about the land sale and the purpose of the draft, and insisted that, as the bank needed exchange badly, the draft be deposited in the bank, and it could be used in the land trade through a check against it. That it was so deposited on October 28, 1907. That next day, plaintiff and the members of the realty firm went into the bank and showed the cashier a contract that had been entered into providing for the - sale of the farm, one of the provisions of which was that each party, Bantock upon the one hand, ánd the realty firm on the other, should deposit $1,000 to insure faithful performance of the contract of sale. To accomplish this the realty company executed its check for $1,000 and Bantock executed his for a like amount, and these checks and the contract of sale were read and understood by the cashier of the bank. That one of the realty men and also Bantock asked the cashier if that check would be good for the money upon plaintiff’s completing the sale, and that the cashier assured them it would, and stated he would fix it so it would be good, and, taking the check which had been already prepared, inserted in its face'the words “in escroe.” That the cashier then took the papers, put them- in an envelope, and held them for the parties. About April, 1908, Bantock had the farm conveyed, in everything fulfilling the contract so to do, and the contract and checks were delivered to him by the bank. The check for the $1,000 was presented, and the bank refused to pay it on the ground- of “no funds.” The bank explained the disappearance of the fund by saying that the $1,000 deposited by the W. E. Wilson Realty Company had been appropriated by the bank towards the liquidation of the individual notes of the partners in the realty firm.

*156 The circumstances of the deposit of the $1,000 are best told by W. E. Wilson of the realty firm, who, after stating that he received the draft from the purchaser of the farm in Nebraska, made payable to W. E. Wilson Realty Company, and told the cashier of the matter, says:

“A. Well, I told Mr. Sultan I had a draft there. I had been out to see Mr. Bantock, and he was to come in next day, and I told Mr. Sultan. * * * A. I told Mr. Sultan I had a $1,000 draft for Bantock, and Mr. Sultan asked me to deposit the draft. I says, T don’t feel like depositing the draft until he comes in and fixes the deal up,’ but he says: ‘You go ahead and deposit that draft, I want this draft in exchange.’ * * * A. Well, I went and talked to Mr. Graves (his partner), and we deposited the draft in our name, but we had it understood with Mr. Sultan it was Mr. Bantock’s money, and he told us we could check on this thousand dollars and close the deal next day,” etc.

This deposit was the only one ever made by the realty company. The cashier of the bank in a way denies this evidence. The next day after making the deposit, the plaintiff, Bantock, also both Wilson and Graves, of the realty firm, testify that they went into the bank and met the cashier, Sultan, and explained the nature of the contract for the sale of the farm; showed him the contract, which he read; and Mr. Wilson states what was done as follows:

“A. When I and Mr. Bantock and Mr. Graves went to see Mr. Sultan about this deal, I says to Mr. Sultan, I says, ‘Was our check good for a thousand dollars to Mr. Bantock?’ and Mr. Sultan' says, ‘Most assuredly it is,’ and Mr. Bantock asked him then if it is good, and he says, ‘Give me the check and I will make it good,’ and he takes it and wrote that word in there taking it to the desk, and took his pen and wrote that on the check, and Mr. Bantock accepted the check.”

The words referred to as having been written in the check by the cashier are “in escroe.” That this was written by the cashier to satisfy Bantock that the check would get the money upon the completing of the contract is positively stated by the three witnesses mentioned. Mr. Sultan denied writing the words in the check; in fact, he set up an alibi and disclaimed any knowledge, at the time, of the escrow agreement.' For the purpose of *157 comparison of handwriting, the cashier introduced a number of papers he had written in which the word escrow appears. The court and jury evidently had the benefit of a comparison of these . writings with the one in dispute; but we have not the same opportunity, as nothing but typewritten copies are before us. Six of these exhibits have the word escrow on them spelled “escroe,” as it was on the check in suit.

We do not understand this to be the usual way of spelling the word, and this circumstance that the cashier had spelled- the word in this peculiar manner in the exhibits may have had weight with the jury. At all events, we take it the jury found against defendant on this point, as well as on the point that the cashier understood the nature and purposes of the draft deposited, whom it came from, and how it was to be used, and that it was not the property of the real estate firm, for .the reason that a general finding in favor of a party by a jury includes a finding in his favor on all the material issues in the case.

The assignments of error go to: (1) The refusal of the court to direct a verdict for defendant. (2) The admission of incompetent evidence. (3) The refusal to give certain instructions. (4) The giving of certain instructions. The greater part of the brief is devoted to the first of these assignments.

Notwithstanding the vast amount of industry and ingenuity employed by appellant to convince this court otherwise, from a study of the facts of this case, it does not seem to us that many words are required to show that the bank can assert no justification in law or equity for withholding this deposit and appropriating it as has been done. Assuming that plaintiff’s evidence is time, as evidently believed by the jury, the bank in receiving this deposit full well knew that it was not the property of the realty company; that in fact it was the property of the Nebraskan placed in trust with the realty company, to become the property of plaintiff, upon the completion of the sale of the land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 737, 137 P. 717, 41 Okla. 153, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walters-nat-bank-v-bantock-okla-1913.