48 F.2d 585 | 9th Cir. | 1931
G. G. Davis was county treasurer of (Rofefebud county, Montana, from the first Monday of March, 1923, until the first Monday of March, 1925. March 7, 1923, the board of county commissioners of the county made an order designating certain banks as depositories of county moneys and approving thfe bonds of the banks so designated; We are here only concerned with the First National Bank of Forsyth, Montana. That'bank was designated as one of the depositories’and’its bond in the sum of $100,000 Was áp'provédi The order approving the bond hu'thorize'd Dh
The foregoing summary covers the facts stipulated by the parties, so far as deemed material. On these facts the appellant contends that there was no trust ex maleficio as against the bank; that the deposit of county funds did not augment the assets of the bank; that the deposits have not been traced to the funds that came into the hands of the receiver; and that the .allowance of interest was contrary to law.
In American Surety Co. v. Jackson, 24 F. (2d) 768, 769, this court said:
“If the city funds were lawfully deposited in the. depository bank, the relation of debtor and creditor existed between the city and the bank, and it is well settled that neither the -city nor those claiming under it can under such circumstances claim any preference over general creditors. On the other hand, if the deposits were made by the city treasurer in violation of the laws of the state, it is equally well settled that the bank became a trustee, and that the city, or those claiming under it, may, recover from the receiver the amount of thp trust fund, if less than the amount of cash coming into his hands at the inception of the receivership, unless it is made to appear that some portion of the trust fund had theretofore been paid ‘out or dissipated by the bank. Spokane County v. First Nat. Bank (C. C. A.) 68 F. 979; Merchants’ Nat. Bank v. School District No. 8 (C. C. A.) 94 F. 705; Smith v. Mottley (C. C. A.) 150 F. 266; Board of Com’rs v. Strawn (C. C. A.) 157 F. 49, 15 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1100; In re J. M. Acheson Co. (C. C. A.) 170 F. 427; Titlow v. McCormick (C. C. A.) 236 F. 209. We do not understand that this rule is controverted.”
“As the matter of the amount of security was left to the discretion of the council, it was its duty, if it deemed the bond on file insufficient to protect the full amount of the deposits, to prescribe what further bond should be furnished and to so notify the treasurer, or it might with propriety have directed the treasurer, at the time it prescribed the bond for the period mentioned, not to deposit to exceed .a certain amount until further security was prescribed and approved; it did neither, and therefore, as the bond prescribed was in effect and covered all deposits made the law was complied with and the - deposits made became merely general deposits.”
Here, there was an express direction from the board of county commissioners to the county treasurer not to make deposits during his term of office in excess of the amount or penalty of the bonds approved by the board, and this explicit direction was wholly disregarded. The act of the county treasurer in making the excess deposits, and the act of the bank in receiving them were therefore clearly wrongful and in violation of law.
The contention that the deposits wrongfully made did not augment or increase the assets of the bank is apparently based on the fact that the stipulation used the term county funds instead of public moneys, as employed in the statute relating to deposits of public moneys. This contention is fully answered by the decision of this court in American Surety Co. v. Jackson, supra, where we said:
°“But, in the absence of proof to the contrary, we must presume that the city treasurer obeyed the law and that he accepted and deposited nothing but cash, or the equivalent of cash.”
The further contention, that the deposits have not been sufficiently traced, is fully answered by repeated decisions of this court which were followed by the court below, in so far as concerns the cash which actually came into the hands of the receiver upon his appointment. Thus, in Merchants’ Nat. Bank v. School Dist. No. 8, 94 F. 705, 708, this court said:
“In the former case it was held that the depositor of a fund intrusted to a bank, by which it has been misapplied, is not entitled to' a general lien upon the assets of the bank for the repayment thereof, but that he can follow the same, so far as it can be traced in the possession of the bank, either in its original form or in forms to which it has been converted, or into a general fund, with which it has been commingled, and that his right to recover it in the latter instance will depend upon whether or not a sum of money still remains in the possession of the bank equal to the amount so due him; it being the presumption of the law that, if moneys has been disbursed out of such fund, it was the money which the bank had the right to pay out, and not the money which was intrusted to it in a fiduciary capacity.”
This rule, however, would not include moneys on deposit in corresponding banks, because as to them there was no commingling of funds or property. The reason therefor is thus clearly stated by Judge Lurton in Board of Com’rs v. Strawn (C. G. A.) 157 P. 49, 52, 15 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1100:
“But the.complainant assigns as error that the court did not extend this rule to the balances to the credit of the Galion Bank in banks with which it kept a deposit account. The balances to the credit of the Galion Bank in these hanks which have been received by the receiver aggregate something, over $6,000. The balances with these several banks was shifting from day to day during the currency of the tax deposit account. The credits given to the Galion Bank are shown to have sometimes come from collections, .sometimes from proceeds of rediscounts, and sometimes from moneys sent from the vaults of the Ga-lion Bank to these reserve or corresponding banks. On the other hand, the account was drawn against'when exchange was sold and for other purposes. The trust fund is not traced into any of the rediscounts or collections, which in part made up the credits in these banks. That the moneys remitted were' not out of the trust fund is to be presumed,; for the presumption upon whieh equity acts in respect of the character of the funds drawn out of the mingled mass of money in the bank’s vaults is that the bank drew out only its money, leaving in its vaults the money which it was obligated to retain and not*588 use for any private purpose. The court below was right in holding that no part of the money deposited with the corresponding banks and which has come to the receiver’s possession has been identified.”
The court below awarded interest at the legal rate from March 1, 1923, which according to the decree was the date of the filing of the bill of complaint. The date thus fixed is manifestly a clerical error, because March 1, 1923, antedated the deposits -complained of by several months and the actual date of the filing of the complaint by three years. The error in this regard should have been corrected by motion in the court below; but it w.as error to allow interest at all prior to the final decree. This court so held in Merchants’ Nat. Bank v. School Dist. No. 8, supra, and the ruling in that case is supported by the weight of authority. Butler v. Western German Bank (C. C. A.) 159 F. 116; Poisson v. Williams (D. C.) 15 F.(2d) 582; Smith Reduction Corporation v. Williams (D. C.) 15 F.(2d) 874. Such is the rule in the state of Montana. Guignon v. First Nat. Bank, 22 Mont. 140, 55 P. 1051, 1097.
The decree of the court below is reversed, with instructions to enter a decree in favor of the plaintiff below for the sum of $5,351'.-61, with interest at the legal rate from the date of the former decree, and for costs in that court. The appellants will recover costs •in this court