Walton Bank & Trust Co. v. American Hereford Cattle Breeders

129 S.W.2d 1090, 233 Mo. App. 1243, 1939 Mo. App. LEXIS 46
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 19, 1939
StatusPublished

This text of 129 S.W.2d 1090 (Walton Bank & Trust Co. v. American Hereford Cattle Breeders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walton Bank & Trust Co. v. American Hereford Cattle Breeders, 129 S.W.2d 1090, 233 Mo. App. 1243, 1939 Mo. App. LEXIS 46 (Mo. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinions

American Hereford Cattle Breeders Association, whom we will call petitioner, sought a preferred claim against the assets of Walton Bank Trust Company, a defunct banking corporation, whom we will call respondent. The circuit court allowed petitioner a common claim and denied it a preference. From the order denying the preference, petitioner has appealed.

The case is here on an agreed statement of facts and the sole question presented is whether or not the claim should have been allowed as a preference. *Page 1245

Respondent is the successor of the Missouri State Bank and of the Walton Trust Company, which institutions were merged on May 6, 1931. It operated under restrictions from March 15, 1933, until it suspended business May 9, 1934. It engaged in the general banking business and also carried on the business of the Walton Trust Company, to which it succeeded, such business consisting, in part, of making loans on real estate and of selling said loans to investors. Petitioner had been an investor of the Walton Trust Company and after the merger it continued such relationship with respondent. Respondent sold mortgage loans and as a part of the consideration for the purchase price thereof it collected the interest and principal of said loans for investors, making no charge therefor, and it looked after leasing and collecting rentals on foreclosed lands owned by investors, charging a fee for such services. Petitioner carried no checking account with respondent, but two accounts to its credit were carried for years in the mortgage department with the knowledge, but not with the specific consent, of petitioner.

The first such account resulted from collections of interest and principal of loans and from collections of income from property serviced by respondent for petitioner, less the amounts paid out by respondent, from time to time, for taxes, insurance, abstract fees, and other expenses of a like nature. The ledger sheet of respondent, covering this account, is included in the record before us, and covers a period of time beginning July 7, 1931, and ending March 15, 1933, and shows collection and credit of sixty-two items, ranging in amounts of from $2.20 up to the sum of $1500. The balance on hand July 7, 1931, was $1879. Collections accumulated therein until, on September 30, 1931, the balance was $2911.54, which was remitted in full to petitioner. The account began to accumulate again on October 6, 1931, and ran until July 3, 1932, when the balance then on hand was remitted in full. It again began accumulating on July 11, 1932, and continued until August 23, 1932, when the entire balance was remitted. On August 25, 1932, it began accumulating and ran until February 3, 1933, when the entire balance was remitted. The balance which accumulated after the last mentioned date, and which was on hand from and after February 25, 1933, less an item paid out March 15, 1933, was the sum of $1931.25.

Respondent also carried, in its mortgage department, another account for petitioner, which is referred to by the parties as the oil royalties account. Petitioner was the owner of a note and mortgage on certain Oklahoma lands, purchased from Walton Trust Company, which mortgage note became delinquent as to interest in 1927. In April, 1930, respondent collected some oil royalties on this land and in June, 1930, petitioner advanced the sum of $1416.68, which, together with oil royalties previously collected, was used by respondent to pay the accumulated back taxes on the land. Thereafter respondent *Page 1246 continued to collect royalties and, in July, 1930, it wrote petitioner that it had collected $57.60 in royalties "now held in trust fund to be applied as part reimburement to you for advancement of taxes". Such royalties continued to accumulate in this fund, by monthly collections, until March, 1933. During this period respondent paid out of said collections two items, one for insurance and one for oil tax, and, on March 15, 1933, there was a net balance in this account, due petitioner, in the amount of $925.75.

The items mentioned in the last two preceding paragraphs total the sum of $2856.98, and were carried in the mortgage department of respondent. The record does not disclose that these funds were deposited by respondent to the credit of petitioner, in the sense generally recognized, but merely that an account of receipts and disbursements was kept in the mortgage department of respondent. The record discloses that petitioner never at any time drew on either account, or checked on same, or that it had the right or power so to do. All withdrawals from these accounts were by remittance from respondent to petitioner on account of these accounts were made by respondent.

It is petitioner's contention that the agreed statement of facts discloses that the original relationship existing between the parties is one of principal and agent, growing out of the acts of the agent in looking after its principal's business, in the matter of collecting interest, rents, royalties, etc., and in paying taxes, insurance, abstract fees etc.; that the relationship did not begin by the deposit of any funds, but by reason of petitioner entrusting respondent with collections growing out of investments purchased from it; that, since the original relationship was that of principal and agent, all funds collected by respondent were thereafter held in trust for petitioner until remitted; and that this relationship could not be changed by the acts of respondent alone in failing to remit promptly upon collection, but that it required the positive consent of petitioner in agreeing or consenting to any claimed changed relationship.

Respondent contends that the relationship of principal and agent, as between a bank and another doing business with it, may be changed to relationship of debtor and creditor if the bank is permitted to withhold collections made in its capacity as agent, for an indefinite time, and to use same and commingle same with its general assets with the knowledge of its principal. Respondent contends that this is what occurred here, and that because petitioner permitted respondent to retain money collected for long periods of time it has waived any claim to a preference it might have had, based on the original relationship. In its argument respondent concedes that the original relationship was that of principal and agent and it follows that, unless that relationship was changed to one of debtor and creditor petitioner is entitled to a preference.

Respondent relies strongly on Greene County Building Loan *Page 1247 Ass'n v. Cantley, 62 S.W.2d 931, l.c. 932. In that case a preference was denied, but the court stated that the bank received payments of customers of plaintiff at its windows, under an arrangement whereby said payments were deposited to the credit of plaintiff, and that "plaintiff had the sole right todraw against the fund so deposited, but no checks were drawn at any time except the monthly draft and commission check." [l.c. 942.] (Italics ours.) In the case at bar no deposit was ever made by petitioner, and it is not shown that any deposit on the banking side of respondent's business was ever made by any one. In the concluding paragraph of the above opinion said: "Had the bank collected the money, and held the same intact as a trust fund, the result would have been different." That case differs from the case at bar.

The second Missouri case relied on by respondent is that of Missouri Utilities Company v. Scott County Bank, 62 S.W.2d 933.

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Related

Greene County Building & Loan Ass'n v. Cantley
62 S.W.2d 931 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.W.2d 1090, 233 Mo. App. 1243, 1939 Mo. App. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walton-bank-trust-co-v-american-hereford-cattle-breeders-moctapp-1939.