115 Kan. 412 | Kan. | 1924
The plaintiff sought to recover judgment for money received by Irwin Williams as cashier of the bank and misappropriated by him. The plaintiff asked that the money be adjudged to' have been a deposit made by it in the bank, or in the event that the evidence did not warrant such a judgment that it be declared a preferred claim against the funds in the hands of the receiver. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for $1,-172.84, the amount of money misappropriated and interest thereon, and was declared a preferred claim. The defendant appeals.
Findings of fact and conclusions of law were made as follows:
“The City of Spring Hill had a checking account in the Farmers State Bank and Irwin Williams the cashier was also the City Clerk, and under the practice of the City government the Clerk handled all the funds of the City. About December, 1920, Irwin Williams as Clerk of the City was authorized and directed to draw on the account of the City the sum of $1,090.00 and pay certain bonds of the City which were held at Topeka. On May 5, 1921, Irwin Williams as City Clerk drew on the account of the City a check for $1,090.00 and had issued to himself cashier’s checks in said amount. These cashier’s checks were held by Williams until June 22, 1921, when they were cashed by him in the Farmers State Bank, and the proceeds deposited to the credit of several customers of the bank, who had overdrafts in the bank, and the balance of $427.93 was placed in the Irwin Williams account, which I have held in another case was an account of the bank. At the time the above amount was placed in the Irwin Williams account it appears that there was considerable of an overdraft in said account. The amounts credited to the account of customers were never actually paid the customers of the bank, but it appears that these amounts were placed to the credit of the customers in order that overdrafts might not show on the books of the bank.
“Irwin Williams was duly authorized by the City to draw on the account of the City, and the transaction was fully authorized and legitimate until the cashier’s checks were returned to the bank.
"Irwin Williams as City Treasurer had no control over the books of the bank, and his manipulations of the books of the bank was wholly as cashier.
“I conclude that the plaintiff is entitled to a judgment for $1,090.00 and interest, and that the same should be held to be a trust fund and entitled to be considered a preferred claim against the assets of the bank.”
1. The defendant urges that judgment should not have been rendered in favor of the plaintiff. Williams as city clerk checked on the account of the city and received therefor the bank’s checks for $1,090. Williams as city clerk presented those checks for payment. They were paid so far as the city and Williams as city clerk were concerned, and then Williams as cashier of the bank took the pro
2. Plaintiff asked that the money be declared to have been a deposit. Plaintiff probably is looking toward establishing a claim against the guaranty fund in the hands of the state treasurer under the bank guaranty law of this state. So far as the liability of the bank is concerned, it does not matter whether it is liable to the plaintiff as a depositor or as the holder of any other obligation of the bank. To have the claim of the plaintiff against the bank declared a deposit, it is necessary to have the custodian of the bank guaranty fund in court. He is not here. W. A. Paxton, as receive?, represents the Farmers State Bank, and not the bank commissioner. Judgment against the receiver will not bind the bank commissioner. No judgment can be now rendered that will be binding against the bank guaranty fund.
3. Whether or not the money received by the bank was a trust fund and should be declared a preferred claim is determined by Investment Co. v. Bank, 98 Kan. 412, 158 Pac. 68, where this court said:
“The owner of money fraudulently obtained and used in the business of an insolvent bank, by its cashier, is not entitled to repajonent by the receiver, in preference to other creditors, except so far as he shows that the assets which reached the hands of the receiver were larger by reason of such transaction than they would otherwise have .been; it is not enough to show that the assets of the bank were increased, or that the money was used in reducing its indebtedness.” (Syl.)
In State Bank v. State Bank, 114 Kan. 463, 218 Pac. 1000, this court said:
“Before a claim can be allowed as a preferred claim against the receiver of an insolvent bank, it is necessary to establish, first, that the claim in question is a trust fund, and, second, that the fund in some form was a part of the assets of the bank which passed into the hands of the receiver.” (Syl. ¶ 1. See,*415 also, Nelson v. Paxton, Receiver, 113 Kan. 394, 214 Pac. 784, and Honer v. State Bank, 114 Kan. 123, 216 Pac. 822.)
This money never reached the receiver. It was dissipated before the receiver was appointed.
The judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $1,172.84 is affirmed, and that part of the judgment declaring the $1,172.84 a preferred claim is reversed.