Waverly Independent Consolidated School District No. 1 v. Young

253 N.W. 480, 62 S.D. 434, 1934 S.D. LEXIS 49
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1934
DocketFile No. 7524.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 253 N.W. 480 (Waverly Independent Consolidated School District No. 1 v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waverly Independent Consolidated School District No. 1 v. Young, 253 N.W. 480, 62 S.D. 434, 1934 S.D. LEXIS 49 (S.D. 1934).

Opinions

RUDOLPH, J.

This action is brought by the Waverly independent consolidated school district for the purpose of having certain warrants, issued by it and now in the possession of the defendant, county treasurer of Codington county, returned to the school district. During all of the times mentioned herein, the State Bank of W'averly was a banking corporation doing business in ffie town of Waverly. M. T. Antony was the cashier of the bank, and also clerk of the school district. The wife of M. T. Antony was assistant cashier of the State Bank of Waverly, and also treasurer of the plaintiff school district. The school district kept its deposit in the State Bank of Waverly, and at all of the times mentioned herein had on deposit therein more than $15,000. The amount of the warrants involved in this action is approximately $2,000, which warrants 'had been issued by the plaintiff school district. These warrants had been taken to the State Bank of Waverly by the holders, the 'warrants indorsed, and the bank paid to the holder the amount of the warrants. Mrs. Antony in each instance signed a printed form on the back of the warrants to the effect that the warrant had been presented and! paid, and her books, as treasurer of the school district, showed the payment of these warrants. However, the account of the school district in the bank was never debited! on account of the payment, and the school district account with the bank remained the same after the holders of these warrants had received the cash as it was before.

The county treasurer had a deposit with the State Bank of Waverly, and required the bank to in some manner secure this deposit. M. T. Antony thereupon had his wife draw a line through the form on the back of the warrants to the effect that they had been redeemed and paid, which form Mrs. Antony had previously signed, and caused her to sign her name to the form on the back of the warrants, which was to tire effect that the warrants had *436 'been presented for payment and not paidl for want of funds. The warrants in question were then turned over to the county treasurer as security for the county deposit. This was all done without the knowledge or consent of the school board, and the school board had no knowledge or notice of the purported transfer of these warrants to the county treasurer until after the closing of the State Bank of Waverly.

In July, 1931, the State Bank of Waverly suspended and was taken over by the superintendent of banks. At the time of the suspension the school district still had its deposit in the bank, and the county treasurer was holding the warrants in question as security for the county deposit. The county treasurer then undertook to withhold tax money in the possession of the county belonging to the school district in an amount equal to the school district warrants the county held. This action was brought to recover posséssion of the warrants. The court made findings of fact, conclusions of law, and entered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendants have appealed.

Because of the decisions of this court in the case of Lewis v. Rutland School District, 60 S. D. 163, 244 N. W. 102, 104, it is earnestly urged that the warrants in question were not in fact paid at the time they were presented! at the Waverly bank and the holders thereof received in cash the amount of the warrants. We do not 'believe it necessary, however, to pass upon this question of payment in this case. There is another feature of the case which we believe to be controlling.

By the judgment it is decreed: “* * * That the said plaintiff is entitled to an equitable offset and the said plaintiff is hereby decreed to be entitled to an equitable set-off for the amount of said warrants in issue in this action as against the indebtedness shown to be owing to said plaintiff from said State Bank of Waverly being the amount of the deposits as the same appears in favor of the plaintiff herein on the books and records of the said State Bank of Waverly at -the time of the suspension thereof.” If these warrants were not paid when they were presented at the State Bank of Waverly and money received thereon, which for the purposes of this opinion we may concede they were not, then it is evident that -the bank at the time it advanced the money on these warrants *437 and took the warrants into its possession, in effect, purchased the warrants from the holders thereof, and the bank thereafter held and owned a valid and subsisting claim against the plaintiff school district. Had the bank retained these warrants, the school district would have been entitled to offset its deposit in the bank against the warrants in the hands of the bank after the bank’s failure. Holman v. Bank, 50 S. D. 524, 210 N. W. 730; Schaeffer v. Ruden, 61 S. D. 64, 246 N. W. 105; Ruden v. Dalkin, 62 S. D. 66, 251 N. W. 807. We are, therefore, confronted with the question of whether the transfer of these warrants by the bank to the county treasurer denied to the school district this right of set-off, to which the trial court decreed the plaintiff school district entitled.

At this point it is important to note one material distinction, in so far as set-off is concerned, between the facts found by the court in this case, and the facts found by the court in the case of Lewis v. Rutland School District, supra. In the Rutland Case, the court found: “That the Board of Education of said defendant school district was at all times kept informed as to- the condition of the .treasury of said district and as to the outstanding warrants as herein described and had knowledge at all times as to the warrants described herein having been presented and endorsed as not paid for want of funds and that the same had been sold to said Farmers’ Savings Bank of Rutland, South D'akota, and that the said treasurer, Carl H. Norberg, made monthly reports to the said Board of Education as required by the statutes of this state, setting forth the amount of said outstanding warrants and that said Board of Education by resolution, duly adopted and approved 'said reports and confirmed and ratified the presentation, endorsement and sale of said warrants as made by said Treasurer, * * * and that the said Board of Education 'had knowledge of the warrants owned and held by the plaintiff at all times until the closing of the Farmers’ Savings Bank.” In response to the above findings, this court in the opinion in the Rutland Case said! as follows: “Under the findings of the court which are amply sustained by the evidence the defendant district had notice of the transfer of the warrants 'by the bank to the plaintiff and this information came to the notice of the defendant district prior to the closing of the bank. There was no matured liability of the Rutland bank to the defendant district existing at the time of or before notice of the -transfer *438 of the warrants 'to the .plaintiff, and the defendant was not entitled to a set-off.”

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253 N.W. 480, 62 S.D. 434, 1934 S.D. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waverly-independent-consolidated-school-district-no-1-v-young-sd-1934.