Western National Bank v. White

131 S.W. 828, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 374, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 229
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 20, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 131 S.W. 828 (Western National Bank v. White) 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
Western National Bank v. White, 131 S.W. 828, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 374, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 229 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

LEVY, Associate Justice.

Appellee sued J. G. Swofford, sheriff of Hood County, and the Hood County State Bank and the Western National Bank of Fort Worth to recover damages for his alleged false arrest upon a charge of swindling the Hood County State Bank. By the ■petition all the defendants below were jointly charged with making the arrest maliciously, and the Western National Bank was also charged with the ratification of the arrest after it had been made. The suit as to the sheriff was dismissed hy appellee, and in a jury trial the court peremptorily instructed a verdict in favor of the Hood County State Bank, and, in accordance with the verdict of the jury, entered judgment in favor of appellee against the Western National Bank. The Western National Bank appeals, and seeks under proper assignments to revise the judgment against it.

The evidence shows that in the latter part of August, 1907, appellee *376 already had a deposit of $287.50 to his credit in the Western National Bank at Fort Worth, and in September made a further deposit of $112.50, which gave him a credit of $400. The proper officer of the appellant hank issued to him a deposit slip showing that additional credit of $112.50, but by mistake of an individual bookkeeper in extending this credit on the books of the bank the sum was placed to the credit of J. E. White, another depositor in the bank, whose name was. on the line just below or just above that of appellee; and in this way and on account of this clerical error and mistake of the bookkeeper the- books of the bank showed to the credit of appellee only the sum of $287.50 instead of $400. Afterwards, on September 5, 1907, appellee applied to the cashier of the Hood County State Bank to have his $400 transferred to said bank. Whereupon, at the suggestion of the cashier, so as to save expense to appellee, the appellee drew a check on appellant bank for the '$400 to be forwarded by the Hood County State Bank for collection, it being understood and agreed between the cashier and appellee that appellee would not be paid any of the money until the check was heard from. This check was sent by the Hood County State Bank to its correspondent at Dallas, and from that point it was forwarded to the correspondent of the Dallas bank in Fort Worth, and by oversight of one of the officers of appellant it was stamped paid. But during banking hours it was discovered that the books showed only $287.50 to the credit of appellee, and this was corrected through the clearing-house during banking hours on that day. However, the correspondent at Dallas of the Hood County State Bank had reported to the latter giving it credit for the full amount of the check as a cash item. Whereupon appellee, after having been informed that the check had been paid by the cashier of the Hood County State Bank, personally drew out the money. After appellee drew the money he went to Cleburne on business. The cashier of the. Hood County State Bank then got another report from the correspondent of his bank at Dallas informing him that the credit previously given to this bank had been cancelled and the item charged back to it, the check having been dishonored by appellant for lack of sufficient funds. Thereupon the cashier of the Hood County State Bank reported the matter to the sheriff and county attorney of Hood County, and the sheriff at once, by phone to the city marshal of Cleburne, caused appellee to be arrested. Ho complaint had been filed nor any warrant issued against appellee. The county attorney, after investigation of the facts, decided that there was no ground for criminal prosecution in as much as appellee had made no false representations and the money had been paid to him by the cashier on the advice of the Dallas correspondent. There is a conflict in the testimony as to whether the arrest was contrary to the instructions of the county attorney and the cashier of the Hood County State Bank. The sheriff testified that the arrest was in accordance with instructions, and the county attorney and the cashier testified to the contrary.

All the testimony affirmatively and positively shows, and with no at *377 tempt at dispute to the contrary, that the appellant bank was in no wise a. party to or even knew of the arrest at the time, or even knew of the payment of money by the Hood County State Bank to appellee. Immediately after the arrest of the appellee he was, at his request, taken to the telephone office, where he called up the appellant bank for the purpose of knowing why his check had been dishonored; and being unable to clearly understand over the phone, he requested the city marshal to do the talking for him, which he did. Appellee was told by the marshal that he arrested him on order of the sheriff of Hood County on a charge of swindling the Hood County State Bank out of $400. The marshal in his conversation over the phone informed an officer of the appellant bank that he had appellee under arrest by virtue of a warrant held by the sheriff of Hood County charging him with swindling the Hood County State Bank, and that appellee wanted to know the state of his account with appellant bank; and further stated that appellee had slips showing the two items of deposit in the bank. Whereupon the officer of appellant bank told the marshal that its books showed only $387.50, and that he went by the books, and on that account the check had been dishonored for $400. Immediately thereafter the officers of the appellant bank set its entire force to work to see if they could discover any mistake, and looked through all deposit slips for September, which resulted in the discovery of the mistake of $113.50. Thereupon appellant bank promptly communicated the fact to the Hood County State Bank and the city marshal at Cleburne. It was an hour and a half from the time the city marshal was talking to the appellant bank until the appellant bank informed him of the finding of the error. But in the meantime, on instructions from the sheriff of Hood County, the city marshal had released appellee from custody upon his placing in a bank in Cleburne the $400 drawn out of the Hood County State Bank and $3.50 to cover the expenses of telephone messages.

The appellant bank was not the correspondent of the Hood County State Bank and had no connection with it, and the officers of this bank were not even acquainted with the cashier of the Hood County State Bank and had made no communications whatever to such cashier in reference to appellee’s account or in connection with appellee. Appellant had no connection whatever with requiring the appellee to deposit the $400 to be released, and was not informed of it, and did not procure the detention of the appellee under arrest after his arrest. The city marshal told appellee that he arrested him on order of the sheriff of Hood County and would not release him except upon the order of such sheriff, and that he would have to have the sheriff give him such order before he would be released.

After stating the case.—The court passed the case to the jury for findings upon two grounds of recovery against the appellant, and each ground is properly complained of here. The first required the jury to return a verdict for the mental pain, anguish and humiliation caused by such further detention in arrest upon the finding that appellant bank was *378

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Bluebook (online)
131 S.W. 828, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 374, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-national-bank-v-white-texapp-1910.