64 Neb. 822 | Neb. | 1902
This is a petition in error prosecuted by the city of Lincoln, an intervener in a suit brought to wind up the' Lincoln Savings Bank & Safe Deposit Company, other phases whereof have been before this court several times. The plaintiff in error by its petition in intervention sought a preference over general creditors for some $5,000 —a balance of moneys of said city loaned to the bank upon certificate of deposit by the city treasurer, in contravention of law and with knowledge on the part of the bank officers as to whose money it was. It appeared from a stipulation of the parties and from the evidence adduced that on April 9, 1895, the city treasurer placed $6,095.35 of the city’s funds in the bank, taking a certificate of deposit therefor. Afterwards $1,095.35 was paid on the
Under the rulings of this court in Morrison v. Lincoln Savings Bank & Safe Deposit Co., 57 Nebr., 225, and State v. Bank of Commerce, 54 Nebr., 725, several of the questions raised may be disposed of readily. But the former case does not of necessity iirvolve the quest ions presented
The origin of the rules now recognized with respect to following trust money which has been mingled with the personal funds of the trustee or has passed into his gen eral estate, is to be found in the opinion of Jessell, M. R.,
We are not able to agree to the rule just stated in any of the forms which it has assumed. We are satisfied that the court did well when in State v. Bank of Commerce it withdrew its support therefrom, and took a position in accord with the great weight of recent authority. The court was in error in saying (54 Nebr., 731) that the moneys which came into the hands of the receiver of the Capital National Bank on its insolvency were more than sufficient to meet the preferred claims established in Capital Nat. Bank v. Coldwater Nat. Bank, supra, and its companion cases. Such sum was greater than the pre
All of the cash on hand after the city’s money became mixed therein, with the exception of.the $1,750 used in the purchase of warrants, which wall be considered presently, and the $200 in the bank -when it suspended, was used in paying debts and expenses. The $200, as has been seen, was pledged to indemnify sureties on the bank’s bond, was afterwards paid on the judgment superseded thereby, and never - came into the receiver’s control. In other words, except said sum of $1,750, it was wholly dissipated. Although there are decisions to the effect that the mere fact of use of the money in the trustee’s general business or in paying his debts is, in effect, an increase of the assets, and suffices to create a charge thereon, that position is entirely at variance with the principle by which such cases must be governed, and is repudiated by all the
We come now to the money derived from sale of the warrants. It will be remembered that after the city’s money came into the bank it bought the warrants, using $1,750 of the moneys in which the funds of the city had been mixed, and $35,000 borrowed on security of the warrants. The receiver contends that' since there was over $40,000 in cash in the bank at the time, of which but $6,000 belonged to the city, it will be presumed that the $1,750 was the bank’s own money. Such would be the case, without doubt, had the bank withdrawn the money and dissipated it in some fashion. But it did not do this. It merely changed the form of a portion of the fund in which
We therefore recommend that the order of the district court be reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to enter a new order granting the city a preference to the extent of the proceeds of said warrants, namely, $3,334.37.
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing
Reversed and remanded.