278 S.W. 188 | Tex. Comm'n App. | 1925
This suit was originally brought in the district court of Coleman county, and the venue was afterwards changed to Brown county. On the 30th day of March, 1917, J. W. Gates and his wife, Alice E. Gates, being the owners of 625.6 acres of land in Coleman county, had negotiated a loan from the Bankers’ Loan & Securities Company at Fort Worth, giving the land as security, and evidencing the transaction by certain negotiable promissory notes signed by Gates and wife and the execution and delivery of a deed of trust on the land to, secure the payment of said notes at the several times of their maturity. Among these notes were three, one of which was given for $5,000, another for $4,000, and another for $3,500, payable to the Bankers’ Loan & Securities Company. The plaintiff in error, the First National Bank of Coleman, where Gates lived, was his local bank. This loan appears to have been negotiated for Gates by one B. E. Hurlbut, who was an abstracter and loan agent living at Brownwood in Brown county. Gates took these three notes to his local bank and drew in favor of said bank, the plaintiff in error here, on an ordinary customer’s form, three drafts in favor of the plaintiff in error on the Bankers’ Loan & Securities Company for the respective amounts of each note, attaching these drafts to these notes respectively. The plaintiff in error then entered upon its books a credit in favor of Gates for the full amount of the notes and sent the notes with the drafts attached to its regular correspondent, the defendant in error the Brownwood National Bank, with a letter of instructions to
Tbe defendant in error received these papers comprising seven in number, to wit, the three notes, the three drafts, and the letter of instructions. In accordance with the instructions given, the defendant in error called Hurlbut’s attention to the papers, who, after looking at them, expressed a wish to take them from the bank. This the defendant in error declined to allow him to do; whereupon, Hurlbut told the defendant in error to return the papers and he would communicate with Mr. Gates further about them. The defendant in error did return the papers to the plaintiff in error, but without any explanation. Whereupon, the cashier of the plaintiff in error called up the defendant in error by telephone and asked for the reason why the papers had been returned. The defendant in error explained that Hurlbut wanted to take the papers out of the bank and that the defendant in error was unwilling to trust the papers in Hurlbut’s possession. Whereupon, the cashier of the plaintiff in error stated that inasmuch as the defendant in error would not trust Hurlbut, it was unwilling to risk the possession of the papers with him, but that Mr. Gates would be seen about it. Gates was seen, and in the conversation Gates proposed to take the papers to Brownwood and allow Hurlbut to inspect them in his presence and then to redeliver them to the defendant in error, to which the plaintiff in error agreed. So, the plaintiff in error delivered the package of papers to Gates, who did go to Brownwood, and after allowing Hurlbut to inspect the papers, he and Hurlbut went to' the defendant in error bank and made a redelivery of the package of papers, stating that Mr. Hurlbut was assisting him in securing a loan on his land, and Hurlbut being present assented to this statement. This was on the morning of the 10th of April, 1917. In the meantime, Hurl-but had informed Gates that the Brownwood bank could not handle the $3,500 note with the draft attached in favor of the plaintiff in error drawn as it was, because it was a cash item, and requested Gates to draw a draft on the Bankers’ Loan & Securities Company for $3,500, payable to the defendant in error, which Gates did, together with his wife, and instructed Hurlbut to use either, one of the drafts which would get the money for him. This draft was in Hurlbut’s possession at the time that the package of papers was redelivered by Gates to the defendant in error, but the existence of this draft was unknown to the defendant in error as well as to the plaintiff in error.
On the same day, that is to say, on the 10th of April, 1917, some time in the evening when there were several people in the bank transacting business, -Hurlbut appeared at the cashier’s window of the defendant in error and presented this draft drawn in favor of the defendant in error by Gates and wife, to which was attached the note which Gates had originally attached to the original draft drawn in favor of the plaintiff in error, and asked that the draft be cashed and that his account be given credit with the proceeds, at the same time demanding and receiving a deposit slip showing that fact. The cashier merely looked at the draft without examining any other paper attached to it and complied with the request. On the 11th day of April, 1917, the defendant in error having forwarded this particular draft with the note attached to its correspondent at Port Worth, the same was presented to the Bankers’ Loan & Securities Company and paid; the note accompanying it being retained by the loan company.
Hurlbut committed suicide on account of financial difficulties on the 18th day of May, 1917, having in the meantime withdrawn from the defendant in error bank substantially all of the proceeds of this note. The other two notes with the respective drafts attached had been approved by Hurlbut and forwarded to Port Worth, where they were duly paid and the proceeds of the payment were remitted by the defendant in error to the plaintiff in error, but for some reason not explained by the record no investigation was made with reference to the $3,500 note and the draft attached until after Hurlbut’s death, when the facts above related were made known to the plaintiff in error and a demand was made by the latter upon the defendant in error for this sum, which demand having been refused, suit was instituted by the plaintiff in error against the defendant in error and Gates.
A trial was had to a jury upon special issues, and upon the jury’s answers, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff in error against the defendant in error for the amount of the note and interest as well as against Gates and judgment over in favor of Gates against the defendant in error, from which judgment the defendant in error appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals, which, upon consideration of the case, reversed and remanded the judgment of the trial court in so far as it affected the defendant in error.
The findings of the jury in answer to several special issues submitted to them are as follows: (1) That the plaintiff in error re-, ceived the draft payable to it as purchaser; (2) that drafts and papers redelivered to Gates by plaintiff in error were not so redelivered as his property; (3) that Robertson (defendant in error’s cashier) at the time he accepted from Hurlbut the $3,500 draft, payable to the order of defendant in error, believed that Hurlbut was authorized by Gates and wife to direct the disposition of its proceeds; (4) that Gates, when he delivered to Hurlbut the $3,500 draft, payable to defendant in error, knew that if Hurlbut
The Court of Civil Appeals reversed the judgment of the trial court and remanded the case for another trial on account of the refusal by the trial court to submit the requested instructions by the defendant in error as follows:
“Did Vaughn Ray (one of defendant, in error’s agents) deliver to B. E. Hurlbut the $3,-500 note mentioned in the testimony of this case?”
“Did, J. W. Gates authorize the Brownwood National Bank or Vaughn Ray to deliver to B. E. Hurlbut possession of such of the papers delivered by Gates to said Vaughn Ray in said bank as he, the said Hurlbut, might wish to have in consummating the loans the Bankers’ Loan & Securities Company of Fort . Worth was making said Gates and wife?”
“Did Vaughn Ray deliver said $3,500 note to B. E. Hurlbut because of such authorization by the defendant Gates?”
The application by the defendant in error for the writ of error embraces §7 pages of manuscript and 24 assignments of error are presented. Manifestly, to state and discuss separately each of these assignments of error would extend this opinion beyond a reasonable length, especially since we have concluded that the vital questions presented to this court for decision are very few, and the discussion of them does not require a full statement of all the assignments of error.
The Court of Civil Appeals concluded that it is immaterial whether the plaintiff in error acquired the $3,500 draft as a purchaser at the time of its original delivery to it, and also whether it was agreed between Gates and tfie plaintiff in error that the former should not draw against the credit given him on account of the draft until the draft was paid, and also that when the draft with the note attached was forwarded by the plaintiff in error to the defendant in error, the latter had no alternative after accepting the draft for collection, as it did accept, but to follow instructions and remit the proceeds of the draft when collected to the plaintiff in error; and also that it is immaterial what particular instructions the plaintiff in error may have given to Gates when the papers were redelivered by it to him, or what, if any, conditions were attached to said redelivery. We do not agree with the statement made in this connection by the Court of Civil Appeals that Gates had apparent authority to bind the plaintiff in error and its interest in the note and draft in dealing with the defendant in error. We will incidentally discuss this question later. It may be said in passing, however, that according to the testimony as well as the findings of fact by the jury and those presumed to have been found by the trial judge as a basis for the judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff in error, Gates did not attempt to exercise any authority to bind the plaintiff in error and its interest in the note and draft in dealing with the defendant in error, and even if he had had such authority, in the absence of its exercise, the having of it would become immaterial. The Court of Civil Appeals very correctly says that—
“It is admitted by all parties to the appeal that neither of the $3,500 drafts would have been paid by the loan company unless accompanied by the $3,500 note, and that there would have been no use made by Hurlbut of the draft in favor of. the Brownwood bank, unless he acquired possession of the note so that he could attach it to the draft. In other words, it is conceded by all the parties that neither of the drafts had any practical value without the note.”
Tfie Court of Civil Appeals assumed in its opinion that Gates authorized Ray, the agent of defendant in error, to deliver the note to Hurlbut, and that Ray, in pursuance of that authority, so delivered it. An investigation of the statement of facts shows that Gates authorized Ray to deliver to Hurlbut any papers which Hurlbut might desire to have in his possession, but at the same time and in the same connection instructed Ray not to deliver any papers to Hurlbut without taking his receipt therefor; and the testimony further shows without dispute that Ray did deliver two papers to Hurlbut and
The second assignment of error is to the effect that under the pleadings, the findings of the jury, and the implied findings of the court, no other judgment was proper than that rendered by the trial court. An investigation of the record has convinced us that this assignment should be sustained and renders unnecessary a discussion of the other assignments of error. The jury found that the plaintiff in error became the owner by purchase of the proceeds of the note attached to the draft. Under this finding of fact, the plaintiff in error became entitled to direct the handling of the draft and the note attached. The testimony shows that it did in writing instruct the defendant in error, after giving Hurlbut an opportunity to inspect the papers, to present the draft with note attached to the loan company, collect the money, and remit it in due course of business to the plaintiff in error. The defendant in error having accepted the drafts and the notes attached with these instructions, it thereby became the agent of the plaintiff in error and assumed the responsibility, as such agent, to follow the instructions given by its principal in the handling of these drafts and notes. It is further seen that no other instructions were ever given by the plaintiff in error to the defendant in error with reference to the disposition of this note with the draft attached, and having failed to' carry out these instructions, and also having failed to notify the plaintiff in error of the claim of Hurlbut that he was entitled-to the proceeds of this particular note by another draft for a like sum, and having paid the proceeds of this note over to Hurlbut in violation of its instructions, it thereby became liable to its principal for any loss occasioned by its act in complying with the demands of Hurl-but. Barnes v. Cunningham, 193 Ky. 740, 237 S. W. 375. Had the Bankers’ Loan & Securities Company, to whom the note was made payable, refused to accept it and to •pay the draft attached to it when payment of the same had been demanded of it by the correspondent of the defendant in error bank, under the facts of this case, the defendant in error, would not have had any cause of action, based upon such refusal coupled with an allegation that it had paid to Hurl-but the money represented by said note for the obvious reason that the defendant in error had violated instructions given to it by the plaintiff in error. We think this possible situation pertinently presents to the mind the invalidity, legally speaking, of every defense set up by the defendant in error, and clearly establishes the right of the plaintiff in error to the judgment rendered by the trial court in so far as the same relates to the defendant in error.
The jury also found as a fact that the papers which were returned to the plaintiff in error by the defendant in error, and which were redelivered by the plaintiff in error to Gates and by Gates redelivered to the defendant in error, were so delivered by Gates as the property of the plaintiff in error. This finding is in harmony with the instructions given by the plaintiff in error to the defendant in error and was sufficient to put the defendant in error upon inquiry and notice of the conflict between its instructions received from its principal and the demand of Hurl-but when the latter demanded that the proceeds of the note attached to the draft which he presented should be credited to his account. The jury also found as a fact that the defendant in error had knowledge that the note attached to the draft had been executed by Gates and wife to get money from the loan company, and this fact, in connection with the fact that the plaintiff in error had become the owner of said draft attached to said note, was an additional sufficient reason why the defendant in error should have refused to comply with the demand of Hurlbut in delivering the proceeds of the note with the draft attached to Hurlbut, when it is remembered that the draft was not payable to Hurlbut but was payable to the defendant in error itself. This is especially true, since the draft without the note had no value. City Nat. Bank v. Martin, 70 Tex. 643, 8 S. W. 507, 8 Am. St. Rep. 632; Arkansas Bank v. Martin, 110 Ark. 578, 163 S. W. 797. If the proceeds of the note and the draft had been the property of Hurlbut, the best evidence of that fact apparently, under the facts upon which the judgment of the trial court is based, would have been a draft
One of the defenses set up by the defendant in error is that it was the custom of the local banks of that county to give credit on drafts drawn as this one was to persons holding it as Hurlbut was holding this, and the jury found in favor of this defense. But an investigation of the statement of facts shows that there is not sufficient testimony to authorize the submission of the issue, and the finding that such a custom existed is contrary to the testimony and without evidence to support it. A usage to be binding should be definite, uniform, and well-known. It should be established by clear and satisfactory evidence, so it may be justly presumed that the parties had reference to it in making their contract. Bowling v. Harrison, 6 How. 259, 12 L. Ed. 425. The president of the plaintiff in error bank testified that no such custom existed. However, other witnesses did testify that such- custom did exist where the party making the deposit and asking the credit was well-known to be financially responsible. As an illustration of the testimony on this subject, we copy the following from the statement of facts given by the witness Brooke Smith, introduced by the defendant in error. After qualifying as to his familiarity with the customs and usages of banks in regard to handling commercial paper, he says:
“If a person residing in an adjoining county who is not a customer of the bank in Brown-wood, and who owes the Brownwood- bank nothing, and who never has been a customer of that bank, draws a draft, payable to the Brown-wood bank, and delivers it to a regular customer of the Brownwood bank who has been doing business with the Brownwood bank for many years and whose reputation for integrity is good, whose financial standing is sufficient to justify credit to the extent of the amount of the draft, and that draft is presented to the Brownwood bank, with a deposit slip, prepared by the party presenting it, showing that the deposit is to be made in his name and to his credit, I would say there is a general custom or usage of banks as to how the deposit should be made; the deposit would be made to the account of the man presenting the draft to the bank and making the request; that custom or usage prevails among the banks of Brownwood; it is not only a general custom, but it is also a custom of the banks in Brown-wood.”
A mere reading of this testimony, which is as strong as that of any other on this subject, illustrates that the custom of which the witness speaks was neither definite nor uniform, although the jury found that Gates knew of it. The other defenses set up by the defendant in error bank are made sufficiently apparent from what has been said heretofore.
Even though there had been such a-custom, the defendant in error would not' have been authorized to have followed it in the face of its plain instructions to the contrary given in writing. by .the owner of the evidence of the right to demand from the loan company this $3,500. 'But the Court of Civil Appeals in its opinion finds that the trial court erred in refusing to submit to the jury at the request of the defendant in error the question whether Ray delivered to Hurl-but the $3,500 note, and also whether Gates authorized the defendant in error or Ray to deliver to Hurlbut the possession of such papers delivered by Gates to Ray as Hurlbut might wish to have in consummating the loan Gates and wife were securing from the loan company. In the first place, the testimony shows that without dispute Gates- did authorize Ray to deliver to Hurlbut any and all papers Hurlbut might wish to have, but attached’ to this statement was the condition that Hurlbut’s receipt should be taken, and the testimony further shows that Ray did deliver to Hurlbut some papers and did take his receipt, and that the note in question was not among them. The record being in this condition, no necessity existed to submit such an issue to the jury; and, moreover, the record being in this condition, there w'as no basis upon which to present the issue whether Ray did deliver to Hurlbut the note men
We are of the opinion that the mere possession of a draft by C. drawn by A. in favor of B., under the facts of this case, does not raise a presumption of implied or apparent authority in C. to demand of B. the delivery to him of the proceeds of the draft. The great weight of authorities, which we have been able to find and examine, where the point was directly involved, supports a holding that there is no such apparent or implied authority in the holder of such a draft to demand payment to him of the proceeds from the party in whose favor the draft is drawn.
In addition to the findings of the jury and those impliedly found by the trial judge, the draft itself on its face imported to the bank that it was the property of Gates, and giving to the facts found by the jury and the uneontroverted facts disclosed by the testimony the weight to which they are entitled, it is our opinion' that the draft itself contained an explicit direction that the proceeds when collected were to be placed to the credit of Gates in trust for the plaintiff in error. Had this been done and Gates had received and appropriated the money wrongfully, we believe still that the plaintiff in error could have held the defendant in error responsible for its failure to obey the instructions given it by the plaintiff in error when it is remembered that the defendant in error had all of the papers in its possession, including the letter of instructions, at the time that this $3,500 draft was presented by Hurlbut. The material facts found by the jury and those undisputed in the record do not warrant the conclusion that the defendant in error was authorized to suppose that Gates by drawing the draft in its favor and placing it in the hands of Hurlbut thereby intended to pay to Hurlbut $3,500 or to place Hurlbut for any purpose in possession of the funds. If Gates so intended, the draft would have been made payable to Hurlbut’s order and there would have been no need of the agency in the transaction on the part of the defendant in error. The use of the defendant in error’s name as payee of the check indicated the drawer intended to lodge the money when collected from the loan company in its custody and to place it under its control to be kept until the true owner of it should demand it, and nothing further than this was inferable from the language of the draft under the admitted facts known at the time by the defendant in error. The draft by its term authorized the defendant in error to demand and receive from the Bankers’ Loan & Securities Company a certain sum of money for a. purpose fully disclosed to the defendant in error by information in its possession at the time. The defendant.in error could have refused to have received from Gates the papers or act as his agent in collecting from the aforesaid company the money apparently sought to be collected by means of the draft, but having accepted this trust, it was bound to keep in its custody said money so collected from the said company until it received instructions from Gates and from the plaintiff in error as to its disposition. Had Gates attemped to dispose of the money out of harmony with the instructions given to the defendant in error by the plaintiff in error, then it would have been the duty of the defendant in error to notify the plaintiff in error of the conflict and govern itself according to the facts disclosed by its investigation. Nothing of this sort was dona Hurlbut could not occupy any more favorable position than Gates. Having accepted the agency to collect the draft and deliver the note to the loan company, the defendant in error could not safely pay out 'the proceeds of the note represented by said funds except under the direction of their lawful owner. In other words, we are constrained to believe that the legal principles involved in this transaction are applicable more to questions of agency than those of commercial law. We believe that the defendant in error was the lawful agent of the plaintiff in error, having full and direct instructions as to what disposition should be made of the note with the draft attached, and having violated those instructions to the detriment of its principal, it is liable for the damage occasioned by its negligence. The following authorities as well as those heretofore cited, support the conclusion we have reached: Commercial Bank v. Jones, 18 Tex. 811; Givens v. Carter (Tex. Civ. App.) 146 S. W. 323; Kuder v. Greene, 72 Ark. 504, 82 S. W. 836; Bristol Knife Co. v. First Nat. Bank. 41 Conn. 421, 19 Am. Rep. 517; Sims v. Trust Co., 103 N. Y. 472, 9 N. E. 605; Bank of Venice v. Clapp, 17 Cal. App. 657, 121 P. 298; Bowles v. Clark, 59 Wash. 336, 109 P. 812, 31 L. R. A. (N, S.) 613; Camp v. Sturdevant, 16 Neb. 693, 29 N. W. 449; Plow Co. v. Davidson, 16 Neb. 374, 20 N. W. 256.
We therefore recommend that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals reversing the judgment of the trial court and remanding
The judgment recommended in the report of the Commission of Appeals is adopted and will he entered as the judgment of the Supreme Court.