149 Wis. 413 | Wis. | 1912
On or about November 1, 1905, tbe plaintiff left with tbe Eirst National Bank of Mineral Point, Wisconsin, for safe keeping ten bonds of tbe United States, each payable to bearer and aggregating $5,000. September 10, 1909, Phil Allen, Jr., vice-president of tbe bank last mentioned and active in its management, without authority express or implied from tbe plaintiff and under circumstances amounting to larceny, took these bonds and pledged them with tbe defendant bank as collateral security to Allen’s personal note for $5,000, and ordered tbe avails of such note to be credited to tbe bank of Mineral Point. Tbe defendant bank was one of tbe correspondents or reserve agents of tbe Mineral Point bards and carried an account with tbe latter, and credited tbe latter with $5,000 in this account. This credit was according to tbe mode of business between tbe banks, which was known to Allen, and tbe court found that tbe transaction was for tbe sole benefit of tbe Mineral Point bank. Tbis must mean that Allen, as officer of tbe latter bank, took such means to procure an additional credit of $5,000 for bis bank in tbis account.
On October 11, 1909, the Mineral Point bank was found to be insolvent and taken in charge by the United States officials under the national bank law. On October 18, 1909, this suit in equity was brought against the defendant to restrain it from selling the bonds and to recover possession thereof, and defendant was thereby fully informed of the plaintiffs ownership of the bonds and the wrongful and larcenous act of Allen by which they came in its possession. Defendant had, however, no knowledge or notice prior to this time of the title of the plaintiff or of any infirmity in Allen’s title to the bonds, and took them in pledge in due course without anything to put the defendant upon inquiry. After this action was com
Respondents argue in support of tbe judgment below tbat under sucb circumstances tbe defendant is not entitled to bold tbe bonds as against tbe plaintiff, because it bad actually and prior to tbe commencement of this action and tbe consequent notice to it of plaintiff’s title paid out nothing on account of tbe pledge and entered into no irrevocable agreement, and it was amply protected by tbe credits of tbe Mineral Point bank at all times. Tbe appellant contends tbat under tbe foregoing facts (a) tbe defendant, by crediting tbe avails of Allen’s note to tbe Mineral Point bank as requested by Allen, with tbe consent of tbe Mineral Point bank, bound itself irrevocably to Allen and to tbe Mineral Point bank; (b) tbat tbe making and acceptance of tbe reconcilement sheet on September 30, 1909, was in effect an application of all charges against tbe Mineral Point bank therein contained upon tbe earlier credit items of tbat bank appearing therein, including tbe $5,000 item in question; (c) tbat in any event tbe law would apply tbe debit charges against tbe Mineral Point bank made after September 10, 1909, to tbe earlier items of its credit, and by this legal application of payments tbe defendant bad paid out tbe avails of tbe note in question to or for tbe Mineral Point bank; (d) tbat if tbe defendant bank bad a bankers’ lien upon tbe general balance of tbe bank of Mineral Point against which it might have asserted a claim for $5,000 theretofore wrongfully credited, it was not bound to do so.
' We should first ascertain where tbe burden of proof lies, for there is no evidence showing tbat Allen paid a debt of bis to tbe Mineral Point bank by this transaction, and tbe finding of tbe trial court tbat tbe transaction was for tbe sole benefit of tbe bank of Mineral Point at least suggests tbe contrary. It appearing clearly tbat tbe title of Allen, who negotiated tbe bonds, was defective, tbe burden of proof was upon tbe de
“If the depositor becomes bankrupt bis deposit becomes security for tbe payment of bis debt to tbe bank. If this debt, be contingent in character, or if it be a claim for unliquidated damages arising out of a contract, then tbe bank may retain possession of tbe deposit until such time as tbe probable in*419 debtedness shall be ascertained, when tbe deposit may be set off against it.” Id. § 337 and cases.
A mere credit to tbe indorser in bis account witb tbe bank for tbe price of a note purchased from him by tbe bank does not make tbe bank a purchaser in due course and for value, because.it may, upon learning that a defense exists against tbe note, “tender tbe note back to tbe company and cancel tbe credit.” Manufacturers’ Nat. Bank v. Newell, 71 Wis. 309, 37 N. W. 420. Neither tbe equitable rule relating to tbe application of payments which applies payments made generally upon tbe earlier debit items of tbe account, except where such application would be unjust or inequitable, nor tbe implication of application of credits upon tbe older items of debit arising from tbe making and acceptance of tbe reconcilement sheet, affected or impaired tbe power of tbe defendant bank, at all times prior to and on October 18, 1909, to withdraw this credit from tbe bank of Mineral Point and so protect itself. If we assume as most favorable to tbe defendant that tbe instant case presented a situation where ordinarily and up to October 18, 1909, such theoretical application would be made, it was not irrevocable. Tbe defendant bank could not, we think, be required to resort to a legal action to protect tbe plaintiff. But that is not what is expected or required. Tbe defendant is here invoking tbe rule governing tbe legal application of payments to qualify itself to take tbe plaintiff’s property as an innocent pledgee in due course. Tbe rule refuses to lend its aid under such circumstances, where tbe defendant pledgee at tbe time it learned of plaintiff’s title to tbe bonds bad still in its bands, subject to its control and power of disposition, tbe credit which it gave tbe bank of Mineral Point for tbe avails of tbe Allen note and tbe pledged bonds. Tbe defendant bad as ample power to revoke any application of payments which it or tbe law bad theretofore made as bad tbe purchaser in Manufacturers’ Nat. Bank v. Newell, supra. Tbe rule governing tbe presumption of ap
We are of opinion that where a pledgee acquires negotiable securities in due course from a pledgor who has no title and who in pledge makes a larcenous disposition of tbe securities, and tbe pledgee has advanced money on tbe pledge only, by crediting, at tbe request of tbe pledgor, such moneys in tbe account of another for whose benefit tbe pledge was made and tbe money borrowed; and a credit exceeding tbis amount remains continually in such account from tbe time of pledge to tbe time of discovery by tbe pledgee of pledgor’s want of title and of tbe rights of tbe true owner, and where tbe pledgee is given by law a lien against such credit balance enforceable by offset, and has tbe right at all times up to such discovery to revoke tbe credit, be is bound to make such offset by withdrawing tbis credit by cross-entry or otherwise. This, we think, is supported by Hazard v. Fiske, 83 N. Y. 287; Smith v. Savin, 141 N. Y. 315, 36 N. E. 338; Le Marchant v. Moore, 150 N Y. 209, 44 N. E. 770; Manufacturers’ Nat. Bank v. Newell, supra; and it is not in conflict with Strong v. Bowes, 102 Wis. 542, 78 N. W. 921. In tbe latter case notice to tbe pledgee came too late to enable him to protect himself.
From what has been said, it is apparent that we do not consider tbe defendant bank, by its transaction with Allen, bound irrevocably to Allen or to tbe bank of Mineral Point to continue its credit in tbe account of tbe latter. When tbe defendant bank agreed with Allen to credit tbe avails of Allen’s note and tbe collateral bonds to tbe bank of Mineral Point, such agreement was necessarily influenced and affected by. tbe law relating to dealings between banks, and subject to tbe right of tbe defendant bank to revoke that credit whenever neces
It follows that the judgment of the circuit court should be affirmed.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.