134 Mo. App. 61 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
Action in equity to obtain a preference over the general creditors of the insolvent estate of the Bates National Bank. Plaintiff prevailed in the trial court and the cause is here on the appeal of defendants.
June 25, 1906, L. C. Martin and plaintiff B. T. Becker of Nevada, Missouri, entered into a written contract with plaintiff William Butcher of Mound City, Kansas, by the terms of which Butcher was to drill a certain well for Martin and Becker near Butler, Missouri. To secure the payment to Butcher of the agreed consideration for his performance of the contract, it was agreed in that instrument: “Said first party (meaning Becker) agrees to deposit one thousand dollars in the Bates National Bank of Butler, Mo., as a guarantee of its part for the use of said second party (Butcher) for such .drilling'; . . . payment to he made to said second party as follows: Each well to he paid for when it is completed and capped or when drilling is stopped.” The contract was deposited by the parties with the cashier of the Bates National Bank on the date of its execution and at the same time. Becker deposited two checks, one for $1,000 drawn by him on a Wisconsin bank and the other for $500, drawn on a hank in Nevada. A general account was opened by the bank with Becker in which the amounts of these checks were treated as so much money placed to the credit of the depositor. In due time the checks were collected by the bank. Afterward Becker was charged in this account with the following item: “Trust fund, June 29, $1,000.00.” The cashier testified concerning this item that on discovering that Mr. Becker, if he chose, might exhaust the account
“Butler, Mo., June 29, 1906.
“The Bates Rational Bank, Butler, Mo.
“Gentlemen: You will please reserve $1,000 of my account until the test well I am about to have drilled in or near Butler is down 1,000 feet unless gas be found at a less depth after completion of the well, or when it will have been drilled to a depth of 1,000 feet. Mr. Win Butcher is to be paid in full his account against myself and L. C. Martin.”
Acting on the instructions contained in this letter, the cashier made out and handed to the bookkeeper a deposit slip as follows:
“Trust fund by T. B. Becker . . . checks as follows .$1,000.00
“To be paid to Butcher when he shall have put his drill down 1000 feet. $1,000.”
We quote from the testimony of the cashier relative to this account.
Direct Examination.
“Q. That memorandum was for the information of your bookkeeper? A. Yes, sir; or anybody else that might— Q. It never was given to anybody else, just kept in the bank? A. Yes, sir; it is for the purpose of showing how that money is to be disposed of; before that it was to the credit of Mr. Becker; he could check it out; after that it wasn’t to his credit; he couldn’t check nor nobody else could until the contract which it referred to was complied with. Q. You may explain to the court
“Q. Mr. Clark, the fact of the thing is like this, then, that at the time the thousand dollars was put in there, the understanding and agreement was it was put there for the purpose of being held by the bank to pay Butcher when he complied with the contract?' A. I think that was the understanding. Q. And the bank or the officials or clerks of the bank had on file a certificate something like that, and it said B. T. Becker account? A. Yes, sir. Q. The bookkeeper, when he goes over the files at night, posted up his books at night from the files, or when he did that, he entered this thousand dollars to the B. T. Becker individual account? A. Yes, sir. Q. That then Mr. Butcher got to talking with you and called your attention to the fact that Mr. Becker could draw that money out if he wanted to? A. Very likely. Q. And then wanted to keep it so Becker could not draw it out, and for the purpose of carrying out the original intention, you changed it over to the trust fund? A. Yes, sir.”
There is nothing in evidence to show that the particular $1,000 placed to the trust fund account was to be kept separate^ from the other funds in the bank. It was not so segregated, but was treated by the officers of the bank as were the moneys received from other depositors. In September of that year, the bank went into liquidation and a receiver of its assets was appointed by the Comptroller of the Currency of the United States. Butcher and Becker had a lawsuit over the drilling of the well which resulted in a judgment in favor of Butcher for about $250. Afterward, they joined as plaintiffs in the bringing of this suit. In the judgment entered, the court found “that on June 25, 1906, plaintiff B. T. Becker deposited with said bank the sum of one thousand dollars, as a special deposit and trust fund, to be held by said bank for the special purpose of paying the same to plaintiff Win Butcher upon the compliance on
The trade of a banker is to receive money and use it for profit. He is guilty of no breach of trust or impropriety in thus employing the funds coming into his custody from general depositors and his relation to them in no sense is to be treated as that of trustee and cestui que trust, but is that of debtor and creditor. Consequently, in the distribution of the funds of an insolvent bank, all general depositors stand upon one ground. None is entitled to any preference or priority over others. This rule applies to a deposit made by one who sustains fiduciary relations to the funds and this, too, where the deposit is received with knoAvledge on the part of the banker of the existence of such relation but without an understanding that the bank is to treat the funds as a special deposit. Such was the view entertained by the Supreme Court in Paul v. Draper, 158 Mo. 197, where it was said:
“The fact that the deposit was of a trust fund, and known to the bank to be such, would not of itself make the bank a trustee of the fund for the benefit of the cestui que trust. In order to have that effect there must have been something in the circumstances of the deposit to constitute it a special, as contradistinguished from a general, deposit, into which two classes all deposits in commercial banks may be divided. If the deposit belonged to the former class the fiduciary relation might well arise; if to the latter, in the absence of mala fides, it could not do so, for by a general deposit in good*69 faith the title to the fund deposited passed. The bank became the owner thereof, the relation of debtor and creditor, and not that of trustee and cestui que trust, was created.”
A general deposit is where the bank is giyen- custody of the money deposited with the intention expressed or implied that the bank is not to be required to return the-identical money but only its equivalent. In such cases, the legal title to the money passes to the bank, and the depositor 'divested of his title must rely on the obligation of the bank to repay him. In the case of a special deposit, the bank merely assumes charge and custody of the property without authority to use it and the depositor is entitled to receive back the identical thing deposited. . The title remains with the depositor and if the subject be money, the bank has no right to mingle it with other funds. [Alston v. State, 9 So. 732; Morse on Banks and Banking (4 Ed.), section 183, et seq.; 7 Words and Phrases Judicially Defined, section 6574, and cases cited.]
In the absence of proof to the contrary, a deposit is presumed to be general and it devolves on the party who claims it is not to show that it was received by the bank with the agreement expressed or clearly implied that it should be kept separate from the other funds of the bank and the identical money returned to the depositor. The deposit under consideration, we think, was general, not special. There was no intention or thought entertained by Becker, Butcher or the bank that the funds deposited were to be kept separate and the bank deprived of their use. It was the idea to put the money beyond the control of the depositor Becker to protect the contingent interest in it given to Butcher by the contract, but when the time should come for the money to be paid out, the obligation of the bank was to make the payment ont of its general funds and not to return the identical money. The legal title , thus was vested in the bank and it was
The facts that the hank was to recognize Butcher as the owner of the beneficial interest in the deposit only on the happening of a certain event and that until then, Becker should have no control over the deposit, did not alter the character of the bank’s relation to the deposit. In making it in the manner he did, Becker was acting both for himself and as the agent of Butcher to the extent' of the contingent interest the latter had in the money. The bank became the debtor of both parties, was bound to pay the money out at any time on their joint check and, until the occurrence of the determinative event, was not entitled to honor the individual check of either. This arrangement did not constitute the bank a technical trustee of the deposit. Such transactions are common in banking and our attention has not been called to any principle which sustains the contention-that restrictions of such nature on the.drawing out of a deposit are sufficient in themselves to deprive the bank of the use of the money deposited.
There is nothing to change our conclusion that this was a general deposit in the fact that the bank entered the transaction on its books in what it called “a trust fund account.” That was a mere name used in bookkeeping, and while its use has some evidentiary significance, it is not conclusive of the question of whether the account was general or special and is overborne by facts and circumstances of overwhelming weight which show that the deposit was intended to be general.
The judgment is reversed.