222 P. 588 | Or. | 1924
In this suit the plaintiff seeks to compel the defendant, Frank C. Bramwell, as state superintendent of banks, to deliver to plaintiff a promissory note for $7,000 payable to its order, which note was executed and delivered to plaintiff by one L. C. McLeod and was by plaintiff indorsed without recourse and delivered to the defendant bank. Subsequent to the indorsement and delivery of said note the defendant bank bcame insolvent, and, pursuant to statute, the superintendent of banks, on February 16, 1922, took over its property and business for the purpose of administering- its assets and liquidating- its indebtedness.
It appears from the testimony that in June, 1921, the Petersburg- Lumber Company, a corporation, was a customer of the defendant bank and was indebted to it in an amount equal to, if not in excess of, the amount that the bank had authority to loan; that in order to make an excess loan to the Petersburg Lumber Company, the defendant bank, which was the Portland correspondent of the plaintiff bank, arranged with the plaintiff bank to take over and hold for the defendant bank a trade acceptance for $7,500, to be issued by said lumber company, and agreed to take in exchange for said trade acceptance and hold for the plaintiff bank, securities belonging to it equal in amount to that of the trade acceptance, and at the same time promised and agreed to re-exchange the securities if desired by plaintiff, upon demand.
There are some circumstances attendant upon the transaction from which it could reasonably be in
Moreover, each state bank is required by statute to make not less than five verified reports each year showing the condition of its affairs, to transmit these reports to the superintendent of banks and to publish a copy of the same in a newspaper of general circulation in the city where the bank is located. Although there is no proof to that effect, presumably these reports were made as required by statute; but whether made or not, by the very acts of the plaintiff in this transaction, the plaintiff enabled the defendant bank, if, as now contended for, the note in question is the property of the plaintiff, to hold itself out as and claim to be the absolute owner of the note in question. It thereby enabled the defendant bank not only to make an excess loan in violation of statute, but also to deceive and mislead the superintendent of banks and the depositors and stockholders of the bank as to the ownership of the note.
It is a maxim of the law that “where one of two innocent parties must suffer for the fraud of another, he who has enabled the fraud to be committed must be the sufferer.” The rule in equity applicable
In Fiore v. Ladd & Tilton, 22 Or. 202 (29 Pac. 435), this court, in effect, held that if the owner of property negligently or intentionally gives the control of his property to another and thus places him in a position to defraud a third party in relation to the property, and a loss occurs thereby, without the fault of the third party, the loss should fall upon the owner of the property, even if he intended no wrong, rather than on the third party, because by his acts the owner facilitated the fraud. The proper application of these principles to the facts disclosed in this case would operate to defeat any equitable relief if even this were a case over which equity had jurisdiction.
The decree of the Circuit Court denying equitable relief to the plaintiff must, therefore, be affirmed.
Affirmed.