105 Mo. App. 168 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904
This action is to recover what is termed an overdraft charged to have been made by defendant. The judgment was for defendant in the trial court.
Plaintiff is engaged in the banking business in Joplin. Defendant is a meat packing establishment át St. Joseph, Mo., and one King was its agent at Joplin to sell meat, collect accounts and remit proceeds to defendant at St. Joseph. We will assume, as contended by plaintiff, that the evidence shows that he opened an account with the plaintiff bank in the name of the defendant, “The Hammond Packing Company — W. A. King,” and that he made sales of meat for defendant and collected the price thereof. That he deposited such collections with plaintiff to the credit of the account thus opened. He would from time to time draw his check on this account in his individual name and send it to defendant at St. Joseph, as proceeds of his sales of meat. He, however, also deposited his individual funds in this account and checked on it in his individual business. This mode of business continued for several months, when, finally, he drew two checks aggregating $1,581, which overdrew the account that amount. Defendant refused to pay it on the ground that it never authorized the opening of the account with plaintiff and that it did not know it, had been opened until plaintiff demanded payment of the overdraft.
The trial court sitting as a jury found (and it could not have well done otherwise) that defendant never authorized King to open an account with plaintiff and that it knew nothing of it. King was not shown to have any other authority to represent defendant than to sell its meat products and collect and remit the proceeds of such sales. Such agency did not authorize him to open a bank account for defendant, nor to borrow money for it. Nor did such agency confer an apparent authority on King justifying plaintiff in believing real authority ex
But it is said that defendant received King’s checks on the plaintiff bank and must have known of the account. The' checks were notice to defendant that King had an account with plaintiff, but not that it had. Indeed King’s individual checks could not lead one to suppose they were drawn on his principal’s account, for such checks would not authorize payment out of the principal’s money. Ihl v. Bank, 26 Mo. App. 129.
There was nothing shown from which it can be inferred that defendant ratified King’s act in overdrawing. As has been already stated, the defendant did not know that King had opened an account in its name. It did not know that the money which it received was an overdraft on such account. It received and accepted the money as money due from King which he had collected from customers. Money is a current fund which any i. one, without notice, has a right to receive in good faith Ain payment or a debt, without inquiry into the source from which it comes; and the person so receiving it can not be compelled to restore it to him who was the true owner. Stephens v. Board of Education, 79 N. Y. 183; Hatch v. Bank, 147 N. Y. 184; Justh v. Bank, 56 N. Y. 478; Smith v. Bank, 107 Iowa 620.
But it is said by plaintiff that defendant received and kept the money represented by the overdraft. That fact does not create a liability against defendant. If money due a principal from his agent is obtained by such agent by the unauthorized use of the principal’s name and paid over to the principal, who receives it in good faith, without notice, he is not liable to the party from whom the agent got the money. The fact that he
The judgment should be affirmed.