206 F. 41 | 8th Cir. | 1913
The Bradley Lumber Company, located at St. Louis, maintained lumber mills at Warren, Ark., and at Lumber-ton, Miss. It was a considerable purchaser of lumber lands in the vicinity of its mills. Mr. John E. Forsythe purchased for the plaintiff many of these lands and was manager of both the mills named. About the 1st of December, 1909, Mr. Forsythe applied to the Lagle Stave & Lumber Company, of Hermitage, Ark., for a loan of $5,000, and it made the loan, but to secure the money borrowed it from the defendant, the Bradley County Bank, on a note signed by the Lagle Stave & Lumber Company and indorsed by M. J. Anders, G. B. Colvin, and J. M. Adams. It is not clear whether the loan was made to Forsythe in his individual capacity, or to the Bradley Lumber Company; but the. note by the Lagle Stave &• Lumber Company to the Bradley County Bank recites that one note of the Bradlev Lumber Company for $5,-
“To take Jasper Anders draft — to apply on timber purchase — Cap Asst You [capital asset voucher] will ho issued when deal is consummated.”
On this same day the Merchants’ & Planters’ Bank forwarded the amount of the Anders draft to the Bradley County Bank and sent forward the voucher for collection, and it was subsequently paid on the 21st of March at St. Douis by the Chicago Dumber & Coal Company, who owned the Bradley Dumber Company, and was charged to its account. This voucher was never seen by the Bradley County Bank, who had been paid by the Merchants’ & Planters’ Bank long before it was presented to the Bradley Dumber Company, and neither the Bradley County Bank, the Dagle Stave & Dumber Company, M. J. Anders, G. B. Colvin, nor J. M. Adams had any knowledge that Forsythe had drawn' on his company for the money by a false voucher.
The books of the Warren branch were audited in June or July, 1910, and again in December, 1910, and January, 1911, but the fact that this voucher was false was not discovered. About June or July, 1911, M'r. Forsythe ceased to act as manager at Warren, and was succeeded by Mr. J. D. Jamison; but Mr. Forsythe continued for some time as manager at Dumberton. Dater he surrendered that position, and shortly thereafter died. The books were not again audited until in November, 1911. In the meantime, in October, 1911, the Bradley Dumber Company discovered the voucher was false; but not until March 7»
The Lagle Stave & Lumber Company, M. J. Anders, and J. M. Adams demurred to the complaint, and G. B. Colvin moved to strike his name from the complaint, which motion seems to have been treated as a demurrer, and these demurrers were all sustained. The case was then tried to a jury as against the Bradley County Bank, and at the conclusion of the evidence, both parties having asked a directed verdict, the jury, upon the direction of the court, returned a verdict for the Bradley County Bank, and the Bradley Lumber Company sued out a writ of error, assigning:
“First. Tlie court erred in sustaining the demurrers of the defendants M. J. Anders, G. B. Colvin, and J. M. Adams to the complaint, and dismissing the complaint as to them and each of them.
“Second. The court erred in not directing a verdict for the plaintiff, Bradley Lumber Company, as requested by it.
“Third. The court erred in directing a verdict for the defendant Bradley County Bank.
“Fourth. That the court erred as a matter of law and fact in finding that ‘there are equities on the part of the bank of such a substantial character that they are not overcome by the mere contention that it still has the right to go out and sue the makers, including the Lagle Company. It appears that, if it should sue and recover a judgment, it would be, in large part, at least, worthless. I feel that these facts are sufficient to defeat the equitable right, if it is so called, on behalf of the plaintiff to recover.’
“Fifth. The court erred in finding as a matter of fact that the plaintiff, Bradley Lumber Company, -was guilty of laches in the premises.
' “Sixth. The court erred in finding against the plaintiff upon the pleadings and evidence in said cause, and that said finding is contrary to law and'the facts as stated in the pleadings and evidence in said cause.”
There is no specification of errors in plaintiff’s brief as required by-rule 24 of this court. We will, however, without _ intimating that’ it will be done in other cases, consider briefly the errors assigned in the District Court.
Upon the trial it appeared that, at the time of the collection of the debt in question and the payment of the note of the Lagle Stave & Lumber Company, it was a going concern owning some hardwood and pine lands and a lumber mill and was worth $8,000. Just when it ceased to be solvent does not appear; but at the time of this suit its .mill had been burned down, and it was worth, all told, from $100 to $125, aside from a claim in a bankrupt court at Cleveland, Ohio, amounting to about $600.
It is manifest that, if this draft had not been paid, the entire note could have been collected of the Lagle "Stave & Lumber Companjr, and therefore nothing would have been collected from the indorsers who were upon it, Messrs. Anders, Colvin, and Adams. The mistake was in no sense attributable to the Bradley County Bank. It was in this transaction a mere agent for the collection of the Anders draft, and received the money as such agent, and subsequently by agreement credited it upon the Lagle Stave & Lumber Company note. The mistake was in.no sense attributable to the Bradley County Bank, the Lagle Stave & Lumber Company, or to Anders, Colvin, or Adams. .It .was solely attributable to the misconduct of the plaintiff’s agent,
•‘Assumpsit for money liud and received is an equitable action to recover back money which the detendant iu justice ought not to retain, and it may be said that it lies in most, it not all, cases where the defendant has moneys of the plaintiff which, ex ¡rquo et bono, he ought to refund.” Nash v. Towne, 5 Wall. 689, 702, 18 L. Ed. 527.
In such cases, if the defendant may in good conscience retain the money in his hands, there can be no recovery. Barr v. Craig, 2 Dall. 151, 1 L. Ed. 327; Morris v. Tarin, 1 Dall. 147, 1 L. Ed. 76.
In Cary v. Curtis, 3 How. 235, 246, 11 L. Ed. 576, Mr. Justice Daniel said:
"The action of assumpsit for money had and received, it is said by Lord Mansiield (Burr. 1012, Moses v. Mael'arlen), will lie in general whenever the defendant has received money which is the property of the plaintiff, and which the defendant is obliged by the ties of natural justice and equity to refund. And by Buller, Justice, in Stratton v. Rastall, 2 T. It. 370, ‘that this action has been of late years extended on the principle of its being considered like a bill in equity, and therefore, in order to recover money in this form of action, the party must show that he has equity and conscience on his side, and could recover In a court of equity.’ These are the general grounds of the action as given from high authority. There must be room for implication as between the parties to the action, and the recovery must be ex sequo et bono, or it can never be. If the action is to depend on the principles laid down by these judges, and especially by Buller, a ease of hardship merely could scarcely be founded upon them; much less could one of injustice or oppression, nor even one which arose from irregularity or indiscretion in tho plaintiff’s own conduct. So far as the liability of agents in this form of action appears to have been .considered, the general rule certainly is that the action should be brought against the principal, and not against a known agent, who is discharged from liability by a bona fide payment over to his principal, unless anterior to making payment over he shall have bad notice from the plaintiff of his right and of his intention to claim the money. The absence of notice will be an exculpation of the agent in every instance. And with regard to the effect of the notice in fixing liability upon the agent, that effect is dependent on the known powers of the agent and the character of his agency. If, for instance, the agent was known to be a mere carrier or vehicle to transfer to his employer the amount received, payment to the agent with such knowledge, although accompanied with a denial of the justice of the demand, would seem to exclude every idea of an agreement express or implied on the part of the agent to refund, and could furnish no ground for this action against the agent who should pay over the fund received to his principal.”
Quite persuasive upon this subject is the opinion of the Supreme Court of’Michigan delivered by Cooley, Judge, in First Nat. Bank of Detroit v. Burkham, 32 Mich. 328. It is there said:
“The beauty and value ‘ of the rules governing commercial paper sonsist in their perfect certainty and reliability. They would be worse than useless if the ultimate responsibility for such paper, as between payee and drawee, both acting in good faith, could be made to depend on the motives which influenced the latter to honor the paper. The' best view that can be taken of this case for the plaintiffs below is that there was a mutual mistake of fact under which the bank discounted and the drawees paid the bill. Conceding this, why should the drawees be allowed to transfer the loss to the bank? Usually, when one of two parties equally innocent must suffer, the law leaves the loss where it has chanced to fall; but in a case like this, if the law should assist either party on the ground of mutual mistake, it certainly should not be the drawees. This suit seeks to reverse the rule of commercial law, and transfer from the acceptor to the payee the responsibility which the former assumes by acceptance, and which the law leaves there.”
Somewhat to a similar effect is the opinion of the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Second Circuit in Riverside Bank v. First Nat. Bank of Shenandoah, 74 Fed. 276, 20 C. C. A. 181, in which it is said:
. “Upon principle, where the holder of a note presents it at the bank at which it is made payable, receives the money, and surrenders the paper, the transaction is, in effect, a purchase from the holder. It is a completed transaction, which cannot be rescinded, except for fraud, or in case of mutual mistake.”
We are convinced that neither equity, good conscience, justice, nor right compels the defendants to refund, and the judgment of the District Court is affirmed.